Author:John Hill

As author

 * Lucine sine Concubitu (1750), a letter addressed to the Royal Society
 * A Dissertation on Royal Societies (1750)
 * Review of the Works of the Royal Society of London (1751)
 * The Oeconomy of Human Life (1751)
 * "The Inspector" (1751–1753), a daily column in the London Advertiser and Literary Gazette
 * The Impertinent (1752)
 * Letters from the Inspector to a Lady with the Genuine Answers (1752)
 * Various articles in the Cyclopaedia and its Supplement (1753)
 * The Useful Family Herbal (1755)
 * Thoughts Concerning God and Nature (1755)
 * The British Herbal (1756–1757)
 * Eden, or, A Compleat Body of Gardening... (1757)
 * Outlines of a System of Vegetable Generation (1758)
 * The Virtues of Honey in Preventing Many of the Worst Disorders (1759)
 * The Vegetable System (1759–1775)
 * Hortus Kewensis (1768; 2nd ed. 1769)
 * The Construction of Timber from Its Early Growth (1770)
 * Virtues of British Herbs (1771)
 * A Decade of Curious Insects (1773)

As editor

 * British Magazine (1746–1750)

As translator

 * Theophrastus's History of Stones (1774)

Misattributed

 * Hannah Glasse, The Art of Cookery (1747), often misattributed to Hill as it was published anonymously

Works about Hill

 * [Anonymous] (1779), Short Account of the Life, Writings and Character of the late Sir John Hill.
 * Smart, Christopher (1753), The Hilliad
 * a mock epic poem written as a literary attack on Hill; part of the Paper War
 * Henry Woodward (1752), A letter from Henry Woodward
 * an attack on Hill; part of the Paper War
 * Hill, Thomas George (1913), "John Hill 1716—1775" in Oliver, Francis Wall (ed.), Makers of British botany:84–107.
 * Hill, Thomas George (1913), "John Hill 1716—1775" in Oliver, Francis Wall (ed.), Makers of British botany:84–107.