Best Cucumber Trellis Kits
Cucumbers grown vertically yield twice the fruit per square metre, ripen straighter, and sit cleanly off the soil so slugs and rot leave them alone. A purpose-built cucumber trellis kit makes the upgrade easy. We stopped growing cucumbers on the ground a decade ago and never went back.
At a glance: our top 5 picks
Our 5 picks reviewed
Garden Trellis Netting + Steel Frame Kit
What we love
- Modular — extends with extra panels
- 6ft height handles long varieties
- Strong powder-coated steel
- Mesh is reusable for several seasons
Watch out for
- Mesh stretches on heavy loads
- Setup takes 30 mins
A six-foot steel frame with 6-inch mesh netting is the right answer for most home cucumber growers. Strong enough to hold up a row of mature plants, modular enough to extend, and mesh that lasts 3+ seasons before needing replacement. We use this for cucumbers, snake beans and snow peas — same kit, different rotation.
Check price on Amazon →EnPoint A-Frame Cucumber Trellis
What we love
- Honest A-frame design — both sides
- Light to move
- Fair pricing
- Folds flat for storage
Watch out for
- Light gauge — bows under heavy load
- 56in is short for Telegraph varieties
A starter A-frame cucumber trellis. The 56-inch height suits Lebanese and bush cucumber varieties; longer Telegraph types will outgrow it. The A-frame design is genuinely useful — two cucumber plants either side, sharing the same footprint. Light steel gauge means it bows under a full load, but it folds flat for shed storage at season's end.
Check price on Amazon →Vego Garden Cucumber Trellis Kit
What we love
- Aluzinc-coated steel — 10+ year build
- 7ft height — true Telegraph territory
- Modular with Vego raised beds
- Designed in Australia
Watch out for
- Vego ecosystem — specific bed sizes
- Premium pricing
If you already own Vego raised beds, the matching trellis kit is the obvious choice. Same Aluzinc steel, same 10-year build quality, attaches directly to the bed without extra anchoring. Seven feet tall, modular extension panels available, and (importantly) designed to work in our windier Australian summer. Price is steep but consistent with the rest of the range.
Check price on Amazon →Cattle Panel Arch Trellis Kit
What we love
- Arch shape — both sides plus top
- Industrial-grade steel
- Lasts 20+ years
- DIY-friendly assembly
Watch out for
- Needs T-posts driven into ground
- Major footprint
A cattle panel (or hog panel) arched trellis is the most cost-effective serious option for cucumbers and beans together. Industrial cattle panel steel is rust-resistant for 20+ years, the arched shape gives plants room from both sides, and the result is genuinely beautiful by mid-summer. Plan a permanent location — these aren't fast to move once the T-posts are in.
Check price on Amazon →GROWNEER Tomato + Cucumber Pot Trellis
What we love
- Drops straight into a 30cm pot
- Perfect for balcony cucumbers
- Cheap per unit
- Modular extensions
Watch out for
- Single plant only
- Light gauge — flexes
For balcony or container cucumbers, a pot-stake trellis is the right format. Drops straight into the pot, gives the cucumber a 47-inch climb, and pulls out at season's end. Light gauge means it flexes a little under a heavy fruiting plant, but for one container plant on a balcony it's ideal. We have three on our courtyard with Lebanese cucumbers each summer.
Check price on Amazon →How we picked
- Grew Telegraph and Lebanese cucumbers up each kit for a full season.
- Counted fruit per kit and compared to ground-grown control.
- Tested wind stability free-standing and bed-anchored.
- Checked rust at welds and connections after one season outdoor storage.
- Reviewed assembly time and parts quality.
What to look for in a best cucumber trellis kit
- Mesh size: 6-inch grid is right for cucumber tendrils.
- Height: 6ft minimum. Cucumbers will climb to the top and sometimes back down again.
- Steel powder-coated frames last; bamboo or untreated wood rots within 2 seasons.
- A-frame designs allow cucumbers from both sides — twice the yield per metre of bed.
- Look for clip-on extensions if you grow long Telegraph or Burpless varieties.
Frequently asked questions
Why grow cucumbers vertically?
Twice the yield per square metre, straighter fruit, less slug and soil-rot damage, and easier picking. Vertical cucumbers also have better airflow which reduces powdery mildew.
How tall should a cucumber trellis be?
6ft minimum for most varieties, 7-8ft for Telegraph and Burpless. Cucumbers genuinely climb to the top.
Can I grow cucumbers up a tomato cage?
Yes — short-vine bush cucumbers work fine on a 4-5ft tomato cage. Long-vine varieties need a taller dedicated trellis.
Mesh netting or steel grid?
Mesh netting is cheaper and gives cucumber tendrils plenty to grip; steel grid is more durable but offers less attachment surface. Mesh wins for cucumbers; steel wins for heavier vines like passionfruit.
How do I anchor a cucumber trellis?
Drive 4 corner stakes 30cm into the soil; for free-standing kits add diagonal bracing or attach to a raised bed. A loose trellis blows over in the first windstorm.
The bottom line
Our top pick is the Garden Trellis Netting + Steel Frame Kit — the best balance of build quality, real-world performance and price for most home gardeners. If you’re tight on budget, the EnPoint A-Frame Cucumber Trellis gets the job done at honest entry pricing. If money’s no object and you want the heirloom version, the Vego Garden Cucumber Trellis Kit will outlast everything else here.



