Buying GuidesGardening

Best Cordless Hedge Trimmers

Cordless hedge trimmers have all but replaced petrol for home use. Modern brushless 40–60V models cut as fast as the old 25cc petrol units, weigh half as much, and don't fill the garden with two-stroke smoke. The only real choice now is bar length — match it to your hedge, not to your enthusiasm.

Our team’s top picks

Editor's Pick

EGO Power+ 24" Cordless Hedge Trimmer

  • 56V battery, brushless motor
  • 24" bar with 32 mm tooth gap
  • Quiet enough for early starts
  • Long runtime per charge
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Best for: most hedges
Best Budget

Greenworks 40V 24" Hedge Trimmer

  • Solid 40V power
  • Honest pricing
  • Battery shares with Greenworks tools
  • Light enough for long sessions
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Best for: typical garden hedges
Best Premium

Stihl HSA 130 R Cordless Hedge Trimmer

  • AP-system pro battery
  • 600 mm bar, 38 mm tooth gap
  • Built for daily commercial use
  • Quiet at 81 dB
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Best for: serious hedge work
Best Long Reach

Worx 20V Cordless Pole Hedge Trimmer

  • Telescoping pole reaches 8 feet
  • Pivoting head for top cuts
  • Light for one-handed use
  • Detaches into a regular trimmer
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Best for: tall hedges and tops

What to look for in a cordless hedge trimmer

  • Bar length: 50 cm for box and lavender, 60–70 cm for typical privet, 70+ cm for tall conifer screens.
  • Tooth gap: 24–30 mm for soft growth, 30+ mm for thicker shrub stems.
  • Brushless motors run cooler and longer than brushed.
  • A pivoting rear handle is genuinely useful for vertical cuts on the top of a hedge.
  • Battery weight matters — keep total tool weight under 4 kg for comfortable extended use.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a cordless hedge trimmer last?

On a 4 Ah battery, 40–60 minutes of continuous trimming. That's 80–100 m of typical privet hedge done at a steady pace. With a second battery you're comfortably set for any home job.

Cordless or petrol hedge trimmer?

Cordless for everything under 1 hour of continuous use. Petrol only earns its keep for paid contractors who run for 4+ hours a day.

What bar length do I need?

Match it to your tallest, thickest hedge. 50 cm for box and lavender, 60 cm for typical privet, 70+ cm for conifers and tall screens. Too long is harder to handle; too short makes long hedges glacial work.

How do I keep the blade sharp?

Wipe sap off with kerosene at the end of each session, run a diamond card down each tooth bevel once a season, and dab oil on the blade rails before storage. A sharp trimmer cuts cleaner and pulls less battery.

READ  Top Gardening Tools

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.

Marcus Linden

Marcus covers power tools, lawns, and the hose-and-water side of Garden Care. He lives outside Bendigo on a one-and-a-half acre block, half kitchen garden and half native paddock that he is slowly bringing back from blackberry. Marcus spent twelve years working as a landscaper before he tore his shoulder lifting a flagstone in 2019 and pivoted to writing. He still does occasional consulting for clients he likes — gates, retaining walls, big drip systems for olive groves. He is the divorced father of two teenage sons (Henry, who is finishing a diesel mechanic apprenticeship, and Owen, who wants to be a vet and has fish in every spare jar in the kitchen). Marcus knows two-stroke engines the way some people know songs, can resurface a chainsaw chain in his sleep, and is currently rebuilding a 1986 Victa lawnmower that he insists is better than anything new. He writes in the shed in the mornings and walks the boundary fence with his two border collies, Ginger and Skink, every afternoon. On weekends he plays bass in a covers band that mostly does eighties Australian rock; the band is, in his words, 'two pubs above terrible.' He drinks his coffee black and his beer cold and has firm opinions about tyre pressure on garden carts.

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