🌳 How to Prune Mulberry Trees Safely
🌱 Introduction: Why Mulberries Need Extra Care
Mulberry trees are long-lived, productive, and surprisingly sensitive to pruning mistakes. The biggest issue with mulberries is excessive sap bleeding if they’re pruned at the wrong time, which can weaken the tree and lead to dieback.
Keter Manor Outdoor Apex Double Door Garden Storage Shed (6 x 8ft)
A durable and stylish beige and brown garden storage shed perfect for storing garden tools, equipment, bikes, and outdoor essentials. Weather-resistant, low maintenance, and ideal for any garden or allotment setup.
Vegetable Plants & Seedlings
Browse Plants
All-Purpose Compost & Soil Improvers
View Compost
Plant Feed & Fertiliser for Strong Growth
Shop Fertiliser
Safe mulberry pruning is all about timing, restraint, and small cuts. Get those right and your tree stays healthy, well-shaped, and productive for decades.
⭐ Check Out Our Recommended Products
• Sharp Bypass Secateurs
Clean, sharp cuts heal faster and reduce the risk of disease entering pruning wounds.
Click here to see them
• Loppers or Pruning Saw
Essential for removing thicker branches cleanly without tearing the bark.
Click here to see them
• Disinfectant or Alcohol Spray
Cleaning tools between trees prevents spreading disease and canker.
Click here to see them
⚠️ The Golden Rule of Mulberry Pruning
Mulberries should never be pruned in winter or early spring.
They bleed heavily when dormant or just waking up, which can:
- Weaken branches
- Cause dieback
- Stress the entire tree
Safe pruning depends almost entirely on when you prune.
⏰ Best Time to Prune Mulberry Trees (UK Guide)
🌞 Late summer is safest
Best time: July to August
This is the safest window because:
- Sap flow is reduced
- Cuts heal quickly
- Bleeding is minimal or absent
- Disease risk is lower
✅ If you remember one thing: summer only.
🚫 When NOT to Prune Mulberry Trees
Avoid pruning at these times:
- ❌ Winter (December–February) – severe sap bleeding
- ❌ Early spring (March–April) – high stress and bleeding
- ❌ Late autumn (September–October) – poor healing before winter
If the tree isn’t fully in leaf and actively growing, don’t prune.
🌳 How Mulberry Trees Fruit (Why Over-Pruning Is a Problem)
Mulberries fruit on:
- Older wood
- Short shoots that develop over time
This means:
- Heavy pruning removes fruiting wood
- Cutting back hard delays fruiting
- Mature structure is valuable
Mulberries prefer minimal interference, not regular reshaping.
✂️ How to Prune Mulberry Trees Safely (Step by Step)
1️⃣ Remove dead, damaged, or diseased wood
This can be done whenever necessary.
- Cut back to healthy wood
- Make clean, tidy cuts
2️⃣ Thin lightly for airflow
Only if needed:
- Remove crossing or rubbing branches
- Open up congested areas
Light thinning improves health without stressing the tree.
3️⃣ Control size with small cuts
If branches are getting too long:
- Shorten lightly
- Cut back to a strong side branch
- Avoid removing large limbs
Large cuts are slow to heal on mulberries.
4️⃣ Preserve the natural shape
Mulberries have an attractive, spreading form.
- Don’t force a formal shape
- Avoid heavy heading cuts
- Let the tree keep its character
Mulberries look and crop best when left mostly alone.
🌳 How Much Should You Prune?
A safe guideline:
- Remove no more than 10–15% of the canopy in one year
- Spread any size control over several summers
Mulberries respond badly to drastic pruning.
🌱 Young vs Mature Mulberry Trees
🌱 Young trees
- Minimal pruning
- Focus on removing only badly placed branches
- Build a strong framework early
🌳 Mature trees
- Occasional light summer pruning
- Remove dead or congested wood
- Avoid routine annual cutting
Mulberries improve with age — pruning should slow down, not increase.
🚫 Common Mulberry Pruning Mistakes
- ❌ Winter pruning
- ❌ Heavy cutting back
- ❌ Removing large branches
- ❌ Treating mulberries like apples or pears
- ❌ Trying to control size in one go
Most mulberry problems are caused by too much pruning, not too little.
🍇 How Correct Pruning Keeps Mulberries Productive
Safe pruning:
- Prevents sap bleeding
- Preserves fruiting wood
- Maintains long-term health
- Keeps trees manageable
- Supports reliable crops
With mulberries, restraint equals success.
🧠 Key Takeaway
To prune mulberry trees safely, always prune in late summer, keep cuts small and minimal, and avoid heavy pruning entirely. Protect older wood, respect the tree’s natural shape, and never prune in winter.
Handled gently and at the right time, mulberry trees remain healthy, productive, and beautiful for generations.