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Have Some Flowers mod adds living plants with useful harvests to The Sims 4

A small houseplant mod can do more for immersion than a giant overhaul, and Have Some Flowers proves it with living decor, harvests, and cozy routines.

Sam Ortega··5 min read
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Have Some Flowers mod adds living plants with useful harvests to The Sims 4
Source: snootysims.com

A small mod that changes how a house feels

Have Some Flowers is the kind of Sims 4 mod that looks modest on paper and then quietly takes over the vibe of a house. Instead of adding a giant new system, Hiole’s Corner turns four common houseplants, Lavender, Daisies, Tulips, and Basil, into living objects that ask for attention and pay it back with little storytelling moments.

That is the real win here. The plants are not just set dressing for a windowsill or kitchen counter. They need watering every couple of days, and if you ignore them long enough, they wilt. That simple loop gives a furnished lot a pulse, because suddenly a room is not finished when the last chair is placed. It keeps asking for a tiny bit of care.

Why this fits The Sims 4 so well

Have Some Flowers works because The Sims 4 already understands plant care. Gardening is a core skill, and the base game already gives you the familiar routine of watering, harvesting, weeding, fertilizing, and selling plants. This mod leans into that language instead of trying to reinvent it, which makes the whole thing feel immediately readable in live play.

That matters for builders and storytellers in particular. If you like making homes that feel occupied rather than staged, this mod gives you a reason to revisit rooms after the build is “done.” A planter on the counter or a pot by the window stops being a static prop and becomes part of the household rhythm, which is exactly the kind of low-key friction that makes a save feel lived-in.

What the four plants actually do

The four plants each serve a slightly different role, even though they share the same basic care loop. Daisies and Tulips are the simplest additions if you want soft decorative touches that still behave like real plants. Basil and Lavender go a step further and start pulling the mod toward practical gameplay instead of pure decoration.

Basil can be harvested for leaves that you can later use in cooking. Lavender can be used to extract essential oils, which is where the mod starts to feel more layered than a typical decor pack. Those details matter because they turn a pretty object into a source of ingredients, and that gives you a reason to keep it around in day-to-day play.

The soap-making connection makes the whole thing stronger

The Lavender oils become especially interesting if you also use Hiole’s Corner’s Soap Making mod. That separate mod is part of the creator’s cozy crafting lineup, and Have Some Flowers is clearly built to sit beside it instead of standing alone. If Soap Making is installed, the oils can feed into that crafting chain.

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Photo by Peter Vang

If you do not use the soap mod, you do not lose anything you need to worry about. The related interaction simply does not appear, so the plant mod stays clean and low-maintenance rather than cluttering your game with dead-end references. That kind of restraint is one reason the mod feels useful instead of overdesigned.

A good fit for heavily modded saves

The other big selling point is practical: Have Some Flowers is base-game compatible, and the creator says it does not conflict with other mods. It is also described as designed to stay stable through future patches, which makes it especially appealing if your save already leans hard on custom content and you are tired of babysitting your load order.

That is a different kind of value than the usual big gameplay overhaul. A smaller mod like this can be easier to trust, easier to keep in a long-running save, and easier to fold into whatever style you already play. If you spend a lot of time juggling legacy households, cozy builds, or cottagecore interiors, the appeal is obvious: you get more atmosphere without taking on a whole new system that demands constant attention.

The update matters as much as the original idea

A later update also cleaned up some of the rough edges. It fixed lighting issues, especially for players using Sunblind, adjusted the Basil buff, and restored a missing interaction string. Those are the kinds of fixes that keep a compact mod feeling polished, because tiny presentation problems are exactly what can make a decorative gameplay piece feel sloppy.

That update also reinforces what this mod is trying to be: simple, useful, and easy to live with. It is not trying to dominate your save or replace the game’s gardening system. It just wants to make the objects in your home behave like part of the household instead of scenery.

Why this sort of mod sticks in memory

Hiole’s Corner posted Have Some Flowers on Patreon on February 16, 2026, and the creator page showed about 39,870 members, which is a strong sign that this style of cozy, interconnected Sims 4 content already has a real audience. That makes sense, because the mod lands in a sweet spot between build mode and live mode. It softens empty surfaces, gives kitchens and windowsills a purpose, and creates tiny care loops that make a house feel like someone actually lives there.

That is why a small mod like this can hit harder than a larger overhaul. It does not ask you to relearn anything. It just turns four ordinary plants into part of the story, and in The Sims 4, that is often all it takes to make a save feel fresh again.

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