{"title":"How to Prune Tomato Plants for Maximum Yield (8-Step Guide)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/gardening/how-to-prune-tomato-plants","category":{"slug":"gardening","name":"Gardening"},"creator":{"name":"Epic Gardening","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSbyncU597LMwb3HhnAI_4w","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4IUhZMA9O0"},"tldr":"Prune tomato plants in 8 steps. Identify suckers, remove low growth, choose your leaders, and top before frost for bigger, healthier fruit.","totalDurationSeconds":828,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Pruning shears","Garden gloves","Tomato cage or stake"],"materials":["Isopropyl alcohol (for sterilizing shears)","Garden ties (soft cloth or stretch tape)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Determinate or Indeterminate? Identify Your Plant First","text":"Pruning rules differ by tomato type, so this is the step that has to come before anything else. Determinate varieties grow to a set height, usually four to five feet, and finish with a flower bud at the very tip of the main stem. They fruit all at once over a short window. Indeterminate varieties have no terminal bud and just keep growing until frost knocks them down.Check the seed packet, the plant tag, or look up the variety name. If the tag is gone and the plant has already topped itself with a cluster of flowers at the highest point, it is determinate. If the central leader keeps reaching upward with no end in sight by midsummer, it is indeterminate."},{"number":2,"title":"Spot a Sucker Without Cutting the Main Stem","text":"A sucker is a small shoot that grows at a 45-degree angle from the V where a leaf branch meets the main stem. Find one, then look above it on the same main stem. You should see another leaf node, and probably a flower bud forming. That confirms what you are looking at is a sucker and not the main leader itself.This is the cut that gets people in trouble. Snip the wrong stem and you have decapitated the plant. Take ten seconds to trace the path before every cut, especially on younger plants where the main stem and a strong sucker can look almost identical."},{"number":3,"title":"Prune Determinate Tomatoes (Below the First Flower Cluster Only)","text":"On a determinate plant, find the first flower bud cluster on the main stem. Remove every sucker and lower leaf below that point. That is it. Anything above the first flower cluster stays - cutting it off just deletes fruit you would have eaten.Young suckers like the one in this photo pinch right off between your thumb and forefinger. Older, woody suckers need clean shears. Also strip any leaves that are touching the soil. Leaf-to-soil contact is how soil-borne diseases get a foothold."},{"number":4,"title":"Sterilize Your Shears Between Plants","text":"Tomato diseases like early blight, septoria leaf spot, and tobacco mosaic virus ride on the blades of your pruning shears. Cut a diseased plant, then cut a healthy one, and you have spread the infection across the row.Wipe both blades with a cloth dampened in isopropyl alcohol between every plant. It takes two seconds and saves you from losing the back half of your crop in August. Carry the bottle and the cloth in a back pocket while you work."},{"number":5,"title":"Indeterminate Plants - Start With a Bottom Cleanup","text":"Before you start picking which suckers to keep, do a basic cleanup pass. Remove every leaf and branch in the bottom twelve inches of the plant. Anything touching or splashing onto the soil comes off. Anything that looks yellow, spotted, or chewed comes off.This opens up airflow at the base where disease loves to take hold, and it gives you space to interplant low growers like basil, lettuce, or marigolds underneath. The plant will not miss those lower leaves - they were getting shaded out anyway."},{"number":6,"title":"Choose How Many Leaders to Run","text":"Indeterminate plants give you a choice. A single leader means you snip every sucker so the plant runs one strong main stem. A double leader keeps one strong sucker as a second main stem. Triple leader keeps two. Four is the practical limit - past that, you are not really pruning anymore.For most home growers, double or triple leader is the sweet spot. Single leader gives the cleanest, tallest plant but the lowest total yield. Three leaders gives you more fruit with manageable airflow. Pick now and stay consistent through the season - do not flip back and forth."},{"number":7,"title":"Stake or Cage the Plant for Support","text":"Pruning leaves the stem more exposed and a heavy fruit cluster on a thin leader will snap in a windstorm. Put a cage or stake in place now, while the plant is still small enough to thread through the wires without breaking branches.If you stake, tie soft cloth strips or stretch tape loosely around the stem and the stake every twelve inches as the plant grows. Loose is the key word - a tight tie cuts into the stem and girdles the plant. The tie should hold the plant upright, not strap it to the post."},{"number":8,"title":"Top Indeterminate Plants Four Weeks Before Frost","text":"This is the cut you avoided all season. About four weeks before your average first frost date, cut off the very tip of every leader. The plant gets the signal that the growing season is over and stops putting energy into new leaves and flowers.All that energy redirects into ripening the green fruit already on the vine. Without topping, you end up with dozens of unripe tomatoes still on the plant when the first freeze hits. With topping, more of them finish."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-22T18:32:59.242Z","published":"2026-05-22T18:32:45.060Z","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."}