{"title":"How to Prune Hydrangeas (All Varieties, Step-by-Step)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/gardening/how-to-prune-hydrangeas","category":{"slug":"gardening","name":"Gardening"},"creator":{"name":"Northlawn Flower Farm and Gardens","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKVTJcDfZgSWjMhsRb6BNdQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOUSBTraQEo"},"tldr":"Pruning a hydrangea wrong cuts off the whole summer's blooms. Identify your variety first, then make the right cut at the right time. Full step-by-step guide.","totalDurationSeconds":633,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Bypass pruning shears (Felco F-2 or similar)","Gardening gloves","Rubbing alcohol or 10% bleach solution for sterilizing blades"],"materials":["Mulch (2-3 inches for around the base)","Hydrangea or balanced shrub fertilizer (optional)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Identify New-Wood Hydrangeas (Panicle and Smooth)","text":"Walk up to the plant and look at the flower shape. Panicle hydrangeas (Hydrangea paniculata - varieties like Limelight, Pinky Winky, Vanilla Strawberry) make cone-shaped flower heads that start white and often age to pink or red. They get tall, the stems go woody, and the plant looks more like a small tree than a bush.Smooth hydrangeas (Hydrangea arborescens - varieties like Annabelle, Incrediball, Invincibelle) have round mop-head blooms in white or pink on softer, greener stems. The whole shrub is shorter and looser. Both of these are new-wood bloomers. That single fact means you can cut them back hard every year without losing a single flower - the canes that grow this spring are the ones that will bloom this summer."},{"number":2,"title":"Identify Old-Wood Hydrangeas (Bigleaf, Mountain, Oakleaf)","text":"Bigleaf hydrangeas (Hydrangea macrophylla - the most common one in nurseries) are the classic blue, pink, or purple mop-heads. They have thick glossy leaves and the color shifts with your soil pH. Mountain hydrangeas (Hydrangea serrata) look similar but smaller and tougher. Oakleaf hydrangeas (Hydrangea quercifolia) are easy to spot - their leaves are shaped exactly like oak leaves, and they make cone-shaped white-pink blooms.All three of these set the buds for next summer on this year's growth. That woody stem standing there in March already has the 2026 flowers tucked inside it as tiny buds. Cut the stem in spring and you cut off the entire summer's bloom. This is the single biggest reason home gardeners get a bushy green plant with zero flowers."},{"number":3,"title":"Time Your Pruning By Variety","text":"For panicle and smooth hydrangeas, prune in late winter or very early spring when the buds along the canes are just starting to swell. In most of the US that is late February through early April. Wait until you can see the fat green buds and you will know exactly where the live wood ends and the dieback starts.For bigleaf, mountain, and oakleaf, do nothing in spring. Wait until the plant finishes flowering in mid-to-late summer, then prune within two or three weeks of the last bloom fading. Cut later than that and you start removing the buds the plant just set for next year. If you missed the window, leave it alone for a full year - one bushy season is better than two bloomless ones."},{"number":4,"title":"Sharpen and Sterilize Your Pruners","text":"Use bypass pruners - the kind with two curved blades that slide past each other like scissors. They make a clean cut that heals fast. Anvil pruners (one blade pressing onto a flat plate) crush the stem and leave a ragged wound that invites disease. Save the anvils for dead wood only.Wipe the blades with rubbing alcohol or a 10% bleach solution before you start, and again between plants if you are working on more than one hydrangea. Hydrangeas are susceptible to a fungal cane disease called botryosphaeria, and dirty blades will move it from a sick plant to a healthy one in seconds. If the blades are dull, sharpen them first - a sharp pruner needs much less force and gives a cleaner cut."},{"number":5,"title":"Cut Just Above a Healthy Bud","text":"Find a healthy bud or a pair of buds on the cane. Buds look like small swollen bumps along the stem, usually paired on opposite sides. Position the bypass blade about a quarter inch above the bud, with the angle of the cut sloping slightly away from the bud. The blade side of the pruner should face the part of the cane you are keeping.Make the cut in one clean motion - do not saw back and forth. The angled cut sheds water away from the bud and the bud directly below will push the new flowering shoot. Cut flush to the bud and you kill it. Cut too far above the bud and you leave a dead stub that rots back into the live wood and invites cane disease."},{"number":6,"title":"Reduce Panicle and Smooth Hydrangeas by One-Third","text":"On panicle and smooth hydrangeas, the goal is to remove about one-third of the plant's overall height each year. Work in from the outside of the shrub. Take the thinnest weakest canes all the way down to the ground - those skinny pencil-sized stems will not hold up a flower head. Then shorten the strongest canes back to a healthy outward-facing bud, taking off the top third.Also remove anything dead, damaged, diseased, or crossing through the center of the plant. Dead canes are gray and brittle and snap when you bend them. Crossing canes rub against each other in the wind and create wounds where disease enters. You are aiming for an open vase shape with five to ten strong upright canes and good airflow through the middle."},{"number":7,"title":"Deadhead Old-Wood Hydrangeas and Mulch the Base","text":"For bigleaf, mountain, and oakleaf hydrangeas, the only spring pruning is deadheading the spent flower heads. Hold the dried bloom in one hand, trace the stem down to the first pair of fat healthy buds you can see, and snip or snap the stem off about a quarter inch above those buds. Leave the rest of the stem alone - those buds are this summer's flowers.Once any hydrangea is pruned, water it deeply at the base and spread two to three inches of mulch around the root zone, keeping the mulch a few inches off the actual stem. Mulch locks in moisture for the spring growth surge, keeps the soil cool through summer, and slowly feeds the plant as it breaks down. A handful of balanced shrub fertilizer raked into the mulch in early spring covers the season's feeding for most hydrangeas."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-23T15:47:57.108Z","published":"2026-05-23T15:42:27.746Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}