Best Hedge Shears for Tidy Borders
Powered hedge trimmers are loud, leave a bruised cut, and are completely unnecessary for the small box, lavender or rosemary borders most home gardens actually have. A good pair of manual hedge shears is faster than you'd think, cuts cleaner, and lets you hear the cicadas. We use these almost weekly in spring and autumn.
Our team’s top picks
Bahco P51H Topiary Shears
- Forged Swedish steel, wavy edge
- Fibreglass handles, bumper at the pivot
- Adjustable pivot tension
- Magnificent on box and lavender
Fiskars PowerLever Hedge Shears
- PowerLever action multiplies grip
- Steel blades, soft-grip handles
- Excellent value at the price
- Light enough for long sessions
Tobisho Topiary Shears (Japan)
- Hand-forged Japanese steel, walnut handles
- Holds an edge for entire seasons
- A true heirloom from a small workshop
- Slow to ship — worth waiting for
Spear & Jackson Razorsharp Hedge Shears
- Long ash-style handles for fast straight runs
- PTFE-coated steel blades
- Wavy edge on one blade
- Sound mid-range option
Okatsune Single-Hand Sheep Shears
- Sprung single-hand design
- Magnificent for finicky topiary
- Japanese hand-forged steel
- Drop-tested and serviceable
What to look for in a manual hedge shears
- Forged steel blades — never stamped — keep their geometry through resharpening.
- A wavy edge on one blade is a serious upgrade for soft growth like buxus and lavender.
- A bumper between the handles absorbs shock at the bottom of the cut and saves your wrists.
- Total length matters: shorter (50 cm) for delicate work, longer (60–65 cm) for fast straight runs.
- Adjustable pivots let you re-tension as the shears wear in — a sign of a tool built to be kept.
Frequently asked questions
Manual shears or powered hedge trimmer?
For borders under 30 m total, manual is faster, quieter, gives a cleaner cut and saves you charging or pulling a cord. Powered trimmers earn their keep on long boundary hedges and tall conifers.
How often should I sharpen hedge shears?
Every 10–15 hours of use during the season is plenty. A diamond card or fine mill file along the bevel does it. Don't bother with the back of the blade — that surface stays flat.
When should I cut box and lavender?
Box (Buxus) goes well with two cuts a year — late spring and early autumn. Lavender is best cut after flowering and again lightly in early spring; never into old wood.
Why do my shears stick mid-cut?
Either the pivot is dry (a drop of oil fixes it), the pivot tension is loose, or sap has built up between the blades. Wipe the blades, oil the pivot and re-tension.
Bottom line
If you only take one thing from this guide, it is that quality matters more than spec on paper. The picks above have been chosen because our team uses them or trusts them — not because they are the most expensive or have the flashiest marketing. Buy once, garden often.



