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Best Mini Tillers for Raised Beds

A full-size rotary tiller is the wrong tool for a 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed — too heavy to lift in, too aggressive on bed walls, and impossible to manoeuvre between paths. A mini tiller — also called a cultivator — is the right call. They turn over the top 100–150 mm of soil quickly, mix in compost without effort, and weigh under 15 kg. Here are the units we use season to season.

Our team’s top picks

Editor's Pick

Sun Joe TJ604E 16" Electric Tiller

  • 13.5-amp motor, 16" tilling width
  • 8" depth — perfect for beds
  • Light at 27 lb
  • Honest workhorse for raised beds
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Best for: most raised beds
Best Budget

Earthwise TC70001 11" Tiller

  • 8.5-amp, 11" width — fits narrow beds
  • Very light at 21 lb
  • Quiet for an electric
  • Simple, reliable build
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Best for: narrow beds
Best Cordless

Greenworks 40V Cultivator

  • No cord — better for back gardens
  • Adjustable 8.25"–10" tilling width
  • Battery shares with Greenworks
  • Forward rotation only
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Best for: cordless converts
Best Premium

Mantis 4-Cycle Tiller

  • Honda 25cc engine — petrol but tame
  • Tines reverse for cultivation mode
  • Folds for storage
  • The reference home cultivator
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Best for: market gardeners

What to look for in a mini tiller for raised beds

  • Tine width: 22–28 cm matches typical raised-bed widths. Wider tines waste effort.
  • Tine depth: 20 cm is plenty for raised beds. Deeper tines are for new ground.
  • Electric (corded or cordless) is quieter and lighter than petrol — usually the right call for raised beds.
  • A reverse function helps escape if the tines bind on a buried root.
  • Adjustable handlebars matter more than you think — the right working height keeps your back happy.

Frequently asked questions

Will a mini tiller damage my raised-bed walls?

Not if it's sized right (under 30 cm tine width) and you keep the tines clear of the timber. Wider tillers do nick the walls; mini tillers are designed to work tight.

Electric or petrol mini tiller?

Electric for raised beds — quieter, lighter, no fuel mixing. Petrol only if you're also breaking new ground or have multiple distant beds.

How deep should I till a raised bed?

For routine bed prep, 100–150 mm is plenty. Deeper tilling (the sort needed for new ground) brings up dormant weed seeds and breaks down soil structure. No-dig advocates prefer not to till at all — fork-loosen and top-dress with compost.

Can I use a tiller for weeding?

Yes — that's the cultivator mode many models offer. A shallow pass with the tines just nicks the surface and dispatches seedling weeds. Avoid tilling near established perennials.

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.

Harriet Greenfield

Harriet runs the edible-bed and soil coverage for Garden Care. She and her partner Tom (a primary school teacher) live in the Adelaide Hills, on a 1,200 sqm market garden Harriet took over from her parents fifteen years ago. The block sits in a frost pocket about fifty minutes east of the city, with a cool-temperate climate that is brutal on tomatoes in October and gentle on brassicas in July. Harriet grew up walking the rows with her father — a third-generation grower — and likes to say she learned to weed before she learned to read. These days she runs the kitchen garden almost single-handedly, sells excess at the local farmers' market each Saturday, and writes for us on weekday mornings before the heat hits the polytunnel. She has strong opinions about hot composting (yes), no-dig (mostly yes), and the marketing copy on commercial seedling tags (no). Her current obsession is heritage tomato seed saving — she has a freezer drawer of envelopes labelled in her father's handwriting going back to the 1970s. She gardens with a kelpie cross called Wattle and two laying hens, Phyllis and Rita. If she is not in the garden, she is probably reading Eliot Coleman or arguing with the Diggers Club newsletter.

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