Pinching out tomatoes

Difficulty: Easy · Time: approx. 10 minutes

'Pinching out' means removing the small side shoots that grow in the leaf axils (between stem and leaf). For most cordon tomatoes it's worth it: the plant then puts its energy into fruit instead of ever more leaf mass.

It's quick and you need no tools – just remember to do it regularly, ideally once a week.

What you'll need

  • Your fingers (best in the morning)
  • Optional: clean scissors for thicker shoots
  • Optional: gloves

Step by step

  1. 1

    Spot the suckers

    Find the small shoots growing diagonally from the axil between the main stem and a leaf stalk – those are the suckers (not the flower trusses!).

  2. 2

    Pinch out small ones

    While the shoots are small (a few cm): just snap them off sideways with two fingers. The wound is small and heals fast.

  3. 3

    Cut larger ones

    If they're already thicker, cut them off close to the stem with clean scissors to avoid tearing.

  4. 4

    Keep it up

    Check once a week – suckers grow back fast. Work in the morning/in dry weather so the wounds dry off better.

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Frequently asked questions

Sucker or flower truss – how to tell?
The sucker grows in the AXIL between stem and leaf and looks like a mini plant with its own leaves. Flower trusses grow directly off the stem and bear flowers – leave those!
Do I have to pinch out every tomato?
No. Cordon tomatoes (most grown up a cane) yes, bush/determinate varieties no – they fruit on the side shoots.