Buying GuidesGardening

Best Loppers for Thick Branches

Loppers cover the gap between hand pruners (anything you can squeeze with one hand) and a pruning saw (anything you'd actually be sweating to cut). For most home gardens that means cutting back ornamental branches up to 50 mm thick — fruit tree side branches, hydrangea hard-prune, lilly pilly suckers, the lot. The wrong loppers will fight you on every cut. The right ones turn it into a quiet afternoon.

Our team’s top picks

Editor's Pick

Fiskars PowerGear2 Bypass Loppers

  • Patented PowerGear2 mechanism cuts 50 mm wood with surprising ease
  • Hardened steel blade, low-friction coating
  • Light fibreglass handles
  • Replaceable blade for the long haul
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Best for: most home gardens
Best Budget

Tabor Tools GG12 Compound Loppers

  • Compound mechanism punches above its price
  • Solid through 38 mm green wood
  • Generous comfort grips
  • Lifetime replacement programme
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Best for: occasional pruning
Best Telescoping

Spear & Jackson Razorsharp Telescopic Loppers

  • Extends from 70 cm to 96 cm
  • Reach into dense shrubs without climbing
  • Geared head adds bite
  • Replaceable blade
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Best for: hedges and tall shrubs
Best for Heavy Wood

Corona AL 8483 Forged Bypass Loppers

  • Forged aluminium head, 50 mm cut
  • Hot-forged steel blade replaceable
  • US-made — strong build quality
  • Self-cleaning sap groove
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Best for: dense wood and roots

What to look for in a loppers for thick branches

  • Bypass action for live wood, anvil action for dead wood. Most gardeners want bypass.
  • Compound or geared action multiplies your grip three to five times — vital for harder timber.
  • Telescoping handles help you reach without a ladder, but every joint is a wear point.
  • Cutting capacity is rated optimistically. Buy one rated at least 10 mm above your real-life jobs.
  • Counterweighted heads feel lighter than they are because the balance sits at the grip.

Frequently asked questions

How thick a branch can a lopper cut?

For most quality bypass loppers, comfortably up to 35–40 mm in green wood. Compound (geared) loppers will do 50 mm with effort. Anything thicker, switch to a pruning saw — you'll save time and the lopper's blade.

Bypass or anvil for thick branches?

Bypass for live (green) wood — it cuts cleanly so the wound heals. Anvil for dead wood, where a clean cut doesn't matter and the anvil action gives more leverage.

How do I keep loppers from sticking?

Wipe the blade clean of sap after each session, run a diamond card down the bevel once a month during the growing season, and dab a drop of light machine oil on the pivot. Most "stuck" loppers just need this one minute of care.

Telescoping or fixed-length loppers?

If you have a small garden with mature trees, telescoping is the right call. If you're mostly working at chest height, fixed-length is lighter and faster, with one less joint to fail.

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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