Don’t Make These 5 Tomato Pruning Mistakes
How much or how little to prune tomato plants varies depending on the tomato type and your cultivating preferences. Avoid these five common tomato pruning mistakes for a bountiful harvest at the end of the season.

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A few simple rules make tomato pruning an easy task. Whether you’re growing indeterminate, determinate, or semi-determinate tomatoes, some healthy practices ensure rapid, even, and successful ripening of the fruits.
With all the tomato pruning advice out there, you may wonder what is true and what is a mistake disguised as clickbait. Wonder no more, as we’ll clear up the confusion. Using tried, tested, and certified techniques, you can turn a bushy, overgrown tomato plant into a beautifully pruned one.
5 Tomato Pruning Mistakes
Consider these five tomato pruning mistakes before taking the pruners into your garden. Information is knowledge, and knowledge is power. Prune your tomatoes correctly to promote healthy branching, large fruits, and spot-free leaves.
<.div>Using Dirty, Dull Pruners

A clean, sterile, and sharp pruning blade is best for successful pruning. When the blade is dirty, it may spread diseases onto each plant you prune. A dull blade can cause jagged, uneven cuts that heal slowly. Their slow healing time allows for pests and diseases to enter the plants.
For the best results, sharpen and clean your pruners before using them. Using a handheld sharpening tool to sharpen the blades. Push the sharpener against the sharp part of the blade three or four times, then dust off any little metal shavings.
To clean the blade, use a wire brush or sponge and some rubbing alcohol. Coat the pruners in alcohol, then rub the brush along the dirt and grime to get rid of it. The alcohol sterilizes the blades in the process, killing any pesky bacteria or fungi.
Topping Seedlings

Some guides may advise you to “top” the tomato seedlings to promote branching. This is an unnecessary pruning step early in the growing season. “Topping” is a term for chopping the tips of the seedlings when they’re young. Though helpful for promoting branching in pepper plants in areas with long growing seasons, it’s not helpful for tomato plants.
Avoid pruning tomatoes until they’re thriving in your garden. Removing leaves or stems from young plants is unnecessary. You’ll want to prune them after they flower and grow side shoots.
Topping, though undesirable early, is helpful late in the season when the last few fruits are ripening. It’ll promote quick ripening, turning the tomatoes red before the first frost arrives in autumn.
Not Pruning

Not pruning at all is also not helpful! This is especially true for indeterminate tomatoes because they continue flowering and fruiting until the first frost arrives. They’ll produce bushy, leggy growth that crowds out the tomato fruits.
Determinate types, though they stop growing after they produce tomatoes on their ends, also benefit from pruning. Tomatoes tend to sucker, which means they sprout ample shoots from low on their stems. Suckers are helpful when they sprout up high, but they’re not ideal low on the stems.
For best results, always remove suckers or side shoots that sprout below the first flowering cluster. For determinate tomatoes, that’s all you’ll need to do. For indeterminate types, let side shoots grow if you’d like them to form new stems. If you’d prefer fewer main stems, cut them off.
Overpruning Determinate Types

Determinate tomatoes are like June-bearing strawberries—they produce their fruit all at once and stop growing afterward. They produce a finite number of stems that bear tomatoes. You may remove suckers below the first flowering cluster, but you’ll want to leave the ones growing above that point.
Any suckers above the first flower cluster will turn into fruit-bearing stems. Leave them be so they can grow fresh, juicy, and tasty tomato fruits!
Indeterminate types are different. How little or how much to prune them depends on your preferences. If you’re training them up a single pole, you’ll want to remove all side shoots. If, however, you’d prefer many fruit-bearing stems on multiple supports, you should let a few side shoots grow into flowering stems.
Forgetting the Support System

Pruning and trellising are equally important. Without support, the benefits of pruning are short-lived. The stems can fall to the ground, where they’re prone to slug and cutworm damage. Tomatoes aren’t like peas, which climb on their own, as they need ties or supports to stay vertical.
Tomato cages are a great tool to support the plants. They have windows where the foliage can push through, and horizontal metal bars to support the top-heavy stems.
Other creative ways of supporting tomatoes are available. Try tying them onto bamboo poles, arbors, or tepees. Some growers like to tie strings vertically, onto which they’ll latch the stems with locks or ties.
Regardless of the method you use, supporting tomatoes is essential for a bountiful harvest. Combine a strong support system with a regular pruning regimen to influence your plants and promote big, bountiful harvests.
Key Takeaways
- Sterile, sharp pruners are best—don’t use dirty, dull ones.
- Topping is good for other plants, but not tomatoes. Leave those seedlings alone!
- Some tomato pruning is beneficial; remove low-growing suckers below the first flower cluster.
- Quick-growing tomatoes need a strong support system. Use trellises, cages, or poles to support them.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can pruning kill tomato plants?
Too much pruning can slow the tomatoes’ growth, though it’s rare that it’ll kill them. Removing side shoots won’t harm the plants. Topping can slow seedling growth, so avoid chopping the tips of young plants.
What part of tomato plants should be pruned?
The lowest-growing suckers below the first flowers are the best parts to remove.
Which leaves are best to remove from tomato plants?
You shouldn’t have to remove any leaves from your plants. You may need to remove the lowest two leaves during transplanting to bury the stems. The other reason to remove leaves is if they have too many pests or disease symptoms.