How to trim tomato plants for more fruit

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit

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Tomatoes are America’s favorite garden “vegetable” to grow. Botanically a fruit, the tomato was classified as a vegetable by the U.S. tariff law of 1887 because it’s served with dinner, not as dessert.

Today, there are more than 10,000 varieties in many shapes, sizes, and colors. Given the right conditions—full sun, good soil, adequate water, drainage, and some support, tomato growing is pretty easy.

Plant care includes proper tomato pruning to increase airflow, thereby reducing fungal problems, and to encourage efficient photosynthesis for better growth and bigger yields. But novice gardeners are sometimes guilty of harmful pruning mistakes that can damage the plants and reduce the yield.

The Correct Way to Prune a Tomato Plant

It might seem like a fine line between a perfectly pruned tomato plant and an over pruned tomato plant, but improper tomato pruning can result in problems. If you’re not sure how to prune tomato plants or have had mixed results with tomato pruning in the past, read on for tips.

Simple Pruning

Suckers, which grow in the “V” between the main stem and the branches, need to be pruned to save energy for main branches (and the fruit they produce). It also can prevent the plant from crowding itself and the space around it. Suckers grow quickly, but if left to grow into side stems, they tend to be spindly and produce inferior fruit. When they’re small (under 2 inches), they can be pinched off, but if they’re bigger, pruners are necessary.

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit

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Missouri Pruning

In Missouri pruning, a gardener pinches off or snips only the tip of the sucker, leaving a couple of leaves behind to help protect developing fruit from sunburn. This method is used when things have “gotten out of hand” and a tomato plant has grown large suckers. In this situation, removing just the tip is less of a shock to the plant than removing large side stems, particularly when the weather is hot. The downside is that the remaining portions of the suckers will grow new suckers, requiring ongoing pruning.

Related: This Is the Best Time to Plant Tomatoes

Tomato Pruning Mistakes to Avoid

Pruning is necessary for optimal tomato plant health and yield, so don’t be afraid to prune! Just know the proper way and time to prune a tomato plant to avoid damaging the plant and jeopardizing your harvest. Here are some common tomato-pruning mistakes to avoid.

1. Pruning determinate tomato plants.

Determinate tomato plants don’t need pruning, other than removal of suckers below the first flower cluster. Pruning above the first flower cluster results in loss of potential fruit because determinate tomato plants have a predetermined number of stems, leaves, and flowers hardwired into their genetic structure.

During its initial phase, all stems and most of the leaves form, creating a defined pattern. After the plant flowers and sets final leaf expansion, there’s no additional vegetative growth. Thus, there’s no need for additional pruning. Fewer tomatoes are determinate types, but most are more compact and require less staking. If you are unsure, just search the tomato variety name on a reputable site.

Related: The Best Fertilizers for Tomatoes

2. Pruning when the plants are wet.

Pruning tomato plants when it’s raining or when they’re wet promotes the spread of disease—specifically, bacterial and fungal pathogens. One purpose of pruning tomatoes is to improve air circulation to thwart fungus. To further reduce chances of moisture causing disease (such as tomato blight, a soilborne disease that causes rot), prune the lower leaves of the plant if they are touching the ground, particularly in wet climates where heavy rain saturates the soil.

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit

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3. Pruning with dull or dirty tools.

A pruner, or garden clipper, is the best tool to use on tomato plants. These spring-loaded hand tools can cut stems up to 1 inch in diameter. With use, they can collect dirt, moisture, sap, and debris, which causes them to become dull or rusty. They also can spread disease from one plant to another. Applying a lubricant to the blades helps prevent rust and can make them easier to use.

Re-sharpening the blade with a knife sharpener (or replacing the blades) ensures they’ll give a clean cut. Dull blades will crush the stem rather than cut it, damaging the stem tissue.

4. Waiting too long to prune tomato plants.

If you put off pruning too long, those little suckers will grow into large, heavy branches that can weigh down the plant and prevent sunlight and air from getting to the center of the plant.

When you prune the bigger branches, garden clippers may no longer provide sufficient force; you might need loppers to get the job done. Pruning early when suckers are small is easier. Keep in mind that you’ll have to check and prune repeatedly as new suckers grow.

In addition, those suckers-turned-branches used up a lot of the plant’s energy that could have been diverted to producing more and bigger fruit.

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit

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5. Over pruning.

Over pruning tomato plants removes too many shade-producing leaves, resulting in the fruit being exposed to the hot sun, causing sun scald. Removing more than one-third of the foliage at a time can do more than burn the fruit; it can result in the plant dying. Instead, prune them lightly after they finish setting fruit to keep the plants smaller and encourage new growth, which leads to more flowering and fruiting.

Hint: Tomatoes don’t set fruit in extremely hot temperatures, so the shade from those branches (and maybe some shade cloth) can cool down the tomato plant.

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit

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6. Not topping the main stems at the end of the growing season.

When time is running out at the end of the growing season, topping the growing tips will redirect the sugar the plant is producing to the setting fruit. It should be done about 30 days before the first frost for best results.

Called “topping the plant,” it involves pruning the terminal shoot just above the last blossom, and will help achieve a bigger harvest of red tomatoes, as opposed to mostly green tomatoes as the season winds down. Your pruning will help developing fruit get the nutrients that would have gone into new growth, which is unnecessary this late in the growing season.

Related: When to Pick Tomatoes for the Best-Tasting Homegrown Produce

How to prune early season tomatoes

Left on their own, tomatoes will grow into shrubby, multi-stemmed plants that topple under the weight of their fruit. Fruit and foliage are more prone to attack by pests and disease when they're sprawled on the ground. Pruning and using plant supports can help create healthier, more productive tomato plants.

Advantages to pruning:

  • Keep plants compact and prevent sprawl.
  • Make it easy to support plants using Tomato Ladders and other supports.
  • Maximize production.
  • Minimize disease problems by improving air circulation.

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit
Suckers are the shoots that form where side branches meet stems.

Tradeoffs when pruning:

  • It removes leaves that would otherwise feed the plant.
  • Removing foliage can expose fruit to sunscald.

There are several ways to prune tomato plants, depending on the type of tomato and the support you use. As a rule, pruning is most helpful for indeterminate tomato varieties ? large plants that continue to grow taller and produce fruit until killed by frost. Determinate, or bush tomatoes, tend to be smaller and more manageable.

Most tomato pruning involves removing suckers ? the shoots that form in the axils where side branches meet the stem. Remove suckers when they're small by pinching them off or snipping them with pruners.

If your goal is to maximize the harvest, prune suckers sparingly. A good compromise is to remove all suckers that grow below the first flower cluster. This helps keep the main supporting stem strong, but it doesn't remove upper suckers that will eventually produce flowers and fruit.

Prune sparingly, too, if you live in a place with intense summer sun, which can cause sunscald on fruits (fruit with tough, thickened skin and discolored areas).

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit
Plants grown on Tomato Ladders and other narrow supports benefit from pruning.

How to prune tomatoes late in the season to encourage ripening.

If space in your garden is at a premium, or if you're supporting plants with tomato ladders or stakes, it's best to prune your tomatoes to one or two main stems. To do this, pinch out all suckers. Otherwise, suckers will grow into additional stems and create a wide, bushy plant. The remaining main stems will grow strong and sturdy and will be easier to secure to the supports' uprights with plant ties.

Gardeners using Tomato Cages or Tomato Towers to support plants often pinch out the suckers on the lower stems but allow suckers higher up on the plant to grow.

How to trim tomato plants for more fruit
With Tomato Cages, it's good practice to leave some of the suckers on the higher branches.

Last updated: 09/16/2021

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