Lavender should be looked after to ensure it regrows stronger and more beautiful in the following year, according to a gardening expertChloe Dobinson Digital Production Editor, Angela Patrone Senior Lifestyle Reporter and Sam Dimmer East Midlands Head of Brand

07:08, 07 Nov 2025

Sustainable agriculture. Producing natural and organic lavender oil. Beautiful rural landscape of blooming flower field with unrecognizable person.Cutting back lavender in early autumn is essential to stop the plant becoming overgrown(Image: Oleg Breslavtsev via Getty Images)

Lavender remains a garden favourite thanks to its stunning blooms and soothing fragrance, and it’s relatively straightforward to maintain provided you prune it at the correct time.

Trimming back lavender in early autumn is vital to prevent the plant from becoming overgrown whilst encouraging it to redirect energy away from dying flowers towards producing spectacular displays next year.

Alexandra Campbell, gardening expert and founder of The Middlesized Garden, maintained that the “absolutely best way” to prune lavender involves cutting it back hard to achieve stronger flowering. She said, “I used to prune my lavender rather warily. I was too frightened I’d kill it.

“But when I followed this advice, from 2010 to 2014, my lavender sprawled. It became leggy and never looked as good as my neighbour’s lavender.

“But there are always different views and different ways of doing things. I now cut my English lavender back hard. And it comes back looking good year after year,” reports the Mirror.

According to Alexandra, numerous myths surround proper lavender pruning techniques, which she warned can result in plants becoming “leggy and woody”.

She said: “When you read instructions on how to prune English lavender, you’ll always see: ‘never cut lavender back to the wood’.

“That’s because lavender doesn’t regenerate from old wood. Sometimes you’ll be told to leave about one-third of the new green growth. Or ‘trim lightly’.”

English lavender should ideally be pruned back to approximately nine inches in height, leaving only a few green shoots on the woody stems.

Alexandria explained: “This exposes tiny buds to the sunlight so they can spring up, almost from the base of the plant. And although the plants looked quite brown, they plumped up with new foliage in a few months. They made elegant grey mounds for the winter garden.

“If you prune English lavender back hard, you create these neat sculptural mounds in winter. It adds to the winter structure.”

Alexandria disclosed that her lavender, now 15 years old, has “flowered beautifully” and maintains a “brilliant blue” colour, thanks to her boldness in pruning it back severely.

It’s crucial to use sharp, clean secateurs and only prune once the lavender blooms have faded and turned grey.

The best time to prune lavender is when there are no pollinators, such as bees or butterflies, buzzing around the stalks.

According to Alexandria, it’s perfectly fine to cut into the lavender wood, but avoid cutting into the buds as this could prevent the plant from growing back.

She said: “Look closely at your plant. You will see tiny blue-grey shoots. They are just little dots, often almost at the bottom of the stem. You do need to cut just above those tiny shoots, because if you cut the lavender down below them, it won’t regenerate. It will probably die.

“So take a good thick bunch of lavender in one hand. Chop down to just above where you see those tiny little lavender shoots in the brown wood.”

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