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Best Garden Forks for Turning Compost

A border fork is a vegetable bed tool. A digging fork is a soil tool. A compost fork is its own thing — usually four narrow tines, sometimes five, designed to slide into a heap of half-rotted hay, leaves and kitchen scraps without scooping up half the pile. If you turn compost more than twice a year, the right fork transforms the chore.

Our team’s top picks

Editor's Pick

Spear & Jackson Traditional Stainless Compost Fork

  • Mirror-polished stainless slides into matted material
  • Hardwood D-handle, riveted socket
  • Long enough for three-bay systems
  • A forever tool
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Best for: serious heap turners
Best Budget

Truper 4-Tine Manure Fork

  • Forged steel head, fibreglass shaft
  • Honest tradesman's tool at a fair price
  • Square-back handle takes a full grip
  • Great first compost fork
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Best for: backyard heaps
Best 5-Tine

Bully Tools 5-Tine Mulch Fork

  • 14-gauge steel, American hickory shaft
  • Five tines move noticeably more bulk
  • Well-suited to leaf mould and straw
  • Lifetime warranty
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Best for: leaf mould and straw bales
Best Premium

DeWit Forged Compost Fork

  • Hand-forged Dutch stainless tines
  • Slim profile slides through anything
  • Generous ash D-handle
  • A pleasure to use, an heirloom to pass on
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Best for: a lifetime of heap turning

What to look for in a garden fork for compost

  • Five tines move the most volume; four tines slide easier into matted material.
  • Tines should taper to a point — square-ended tines drag instead of slipping in.
  • Stainless and titanium-coated tines are easier to keep clean (compost is mildly acidic).
  • A D-handle gives more wrist control than a T-handle for the lifting-and-flicking motion of turning a heap.
  • Length: a slightly longer shaft (around 110–115 cm) helps avoid stooping over a low-walled bay.

Frequently asked questions

How often should I turn compost?

For a hot heap, every five to seven days for the first month, then weekly for another month. Cold heaps can be turned monthly or simply left to break down over a year.

4 tines or 5 tines for compost?

Five tines move more volume per stroke and suit straw, leaves and dry stuff. Four tines slip into matted, wet material with less effort. Most market gardens own both.

Can I use a digging fork instead?

You can, but a digging fork has thicker, square-section tines that drag through sticky compost. A compost (or "manure") fork is faster and easier on your back.

How do I clean a fork to prevent rust?

Knock off the bulk material, dunk the head into a bucket of dry sand mixed with a slosh of vegetable oil, work it up and down a few times, and stand it head-up to drain. Two seconds of care, years of life.

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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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