When to Prune Honeysuckle for More Blooms (and How to Do It Right)

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The Best Time to Prune Honeysuckle to Boost Blooms (Plus How to Do It Right)

When to Prune Honeysuckle for More Blooms (and How to Do It Right)

Boost the blooms on your honeysuckle with these essential pruning tips.

Published on March 10, 2026

Credit:

Matthew Benson

Key Takeaways

  • The right time to prune honeysuckle depends on if it blooms on old wood or new wood.
  • Prune in late summer or fall for old wood varieties after flowers fade, and in late winter/early spring for new wood varieties.
  • For all types, remove dead, damaged, or overcrowded stems to encourage growth and maintain the plant's shape.

Honeysuckle brings flowers and fragrance to a yard, but to keep those blooms coming year after year, you must prune it correctly. If you don’t prune your honeysuckle, you can end up with many vines and leaves and few flowers. Here’s what you need to know to prune honeysuckle to get an epic floral display.

The “when” is the most critical aspect of pruning honeysuckle to maximize blooms. Pruning at the wrong time removes the buds that produce those fragrant flowers. The time of year that you prune a honeysuckle depends on whether your variety blooms on old wood or new wood.

Old Wood: Most vining types of honeysuckle bloom on old wood, which means the flower buds develop on the previous year’s growth—the old wood. These varieties include European honeysuckle, Japanese honeysuckle, and their cultivars. Prune these honeysuckle vines immediately after the last flowers fade, which typically occurs in late summer or early fall. This timing gives the plant time to produce new growth and set flower buds for next year’s growing season.

New Wood: Some shrubby types of honeysuckle produce flowers on stems that grow during the current season (aka the new wood). Shrubby honeysuckle varieties include winter honeysuckle and Tatarian honeysuckle. Prune these honeysuckles in late winter or early spring, before they produce new growth.

Unsure of whether your honeysuckle blooms on old or new wood? Pay attention to when it blooms. If your honeysuckle blooms in late spring or early summer, it’s likely blooming on old wood. If your honeysuckle blooms late in the summer or the winter, it probably blooms on new wood.

Related

How to Prune Honeysuckle

Now that you know when to prune, let’s dig into how to prune. With a pair of pruning shears or loppers, remove dead, damaged, or diseased wood, cutting these vines back to healthy growth or the base of the plant. This improves the honeysuckle’s overall health and its air circulation.

For Old Wood Bloomers

Prune old wood bloomers immediately after the flowers fade in late summer or early fall.

  • Thin out overcrowded areas of the plant. Prune off stems that are crossing or rubbing against one another. Remove older, less productive stems to let sunlight and air into the honeysuckle vine. This encourages new growth that will produce flowers in a year or so.
  • Prune overgrown stems. If the honeysuckle has gotten leggy, shorten some of the longer stems. Cut them back to a healthy bud or branch. Don’t remove more than one-third of the honeysuckle’s growth. A hard prune can stunt growth and weaken the plant overall.
  • Maintain shape and size. Honeysuckles will get big and grow all over the place. Prune them to maintain their shape and size.

Don't heavily prune old wood honeysuckles for the winter. The best time to prune these honeysuckle vines is immediately after the flowers drop. The lighter the pruning, the more flowers will appear the following spring.

For New Wood Bloomers

Prune new wood bloomers in late winter or early spring.

  • Do a hard prune. New wood-blooming honeysuckles benefit from more aggressive pruning. Cut them so you leave just a few inches of the previous year’s growth. This encourages the growth of strong new stems and abundant flowers.
  • Prune thin or weak shoots. Remove weak, spindly, or overcrowded stems so the honeysuckle will use its energy to produce strong, flower-producing stems.

Rejuvenation Pruning

If your old wood-blooming honeysuckle has become a tangled, scant-flowering mess, do a rejuvenation pruning. Cut back one-third of the oldest, thickest stems to the base of the plant over a period of three years. This gradually renews the plant and encourages lots of healthy new growth that will bloom more than older growth.

It's important to cut away no more than a third of the stems at one time to avoid stressing the plant too much. Rejuvenation pruning, done correctly, will help the honeysuckle grow back stronger. If you rush it, the plant could take longer to recover, and longer to start blooming again.

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