Buying GuidesGardening

Best Pole Pruners for Tree Branches

Reaching into a tree from a ladder is the single most dangerous job in a home garden. A good pole pruner — manual or powered — keeps both feet on the ground and turns a one-day job into an afternoon. The trade-off is fatigue: every gram at the top of a 4 m pole tells in your shoulders by the third tree. These are the poles our team trusts when an arborist is overkill.

Our team’s top picks

Editor's Pick

Fiskars Power-Lever Extendable Pole Saw & Pruner

  • Fibreglass pole extends 2 m to 4 m
  • Power-Lever cutting head, 32 mm capacity
  • Pull-rope pruner plus saw blade
  • Manual — nothing to charge
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Best for: most home gardens
Best Budget

Tabor Tools GG12A Pole Pruner

  • 7.6 ft fixed pole, no telescoping
  • Compound action, 35 mm cut
  • Saw included
  • Honest, sound build for the price
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Best for: occasional use
Best Battery

Greenworks 40V Cordless Pole Saw

  • 8-inch chain bar, 2.5 hours of cutting on a charge
  • 2 m to 2.4 m extending pole
  • Tool-less chain tension
  • Very quiet for a powered saw
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Best for: regular cutting
Best Premium

Silky Hayauchi Telescoping Pole Saw

  • Japanese hand-saw blade, devastating cut quality
  • Extends to 6.3 m — true tall-tree reach
  • No bypass action — pure saw
  • A favourite of professional arborists
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Best for: tall fruit trees

What to look for in a pole pruner for tree branches

  • Manual rope-and-pulley pruners are quietest and have nothing to charge — best for occasional use.
  • Battery-powered pole saws are lighter than petrol and quiet enough for suburban gardens.
  • Telescoping fibreglass poles are lighter and don't conduct lightning or power-line electricity.
  • Look for a hook above the cutting head — a missed cut where the head falls into the canopy is a nightmare.
  • Most pole pruner accidents come from kickback, not ladder falls. Always cut with the pole below shoulder height.

Frequently asked questions

How thick a branch can a pole pruner cut?

Manual pole pruners cut up to about 30–35 mm. A pole saw will tackle anything you have the patience to saw — most homeowners draw the line around 100 mm before calling an arborist.

Battery, manual or petrol?

Manual for occasional use, battery for regular pruning of fruit trees, petrol if you have multiple acres. Petrol is heavy and overkill for most home use.

How do I avoid pole pruner accidents?

Cut with the pole below shoulder height, never under power lines, never on a windy day, always look up before cutting (the branch above might be hung up), and wear safety glasses every single time.

Should I tarp under the tree?

Yes for fruit trees, where you want to recover the windfalls. Otherwise, just clear the drop zone of pets, kids and anything you care about — small branches travel further than you expect.

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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