Pruning raspberries is an essential job when growing this delicious fruit in your garden. And, as long as you get the timing right, the process is pretty straightforward.
Part of learning how to grow raspberries is choosing whether you want summer-bearing or fall-bearing varieties. The time to prune them will depend on the type you have. And once you've got the date in your diary, it's simply a matter of grabbing your secateurs and cutting the old canes down, more or less.
There are a few extra tips to bear in mind though, which we cover in this guide. You'll be all set for growing your best crop of raspberries yet in no time.
If you have summer-bearing raspberries, which fruit in mid-summer on the previous year's canes, they should be pruned after the harvest. Fall-bearing raspberries, on the other hand, crop later at the tips of current-year canes, and should be pruned at the end of winter.
But whichever type you are growing, remember to 'mulch plants with composted manure or well-rotted garden compost in spring,' as says John Negus, a garden expert for Amateur Gardening. He also suggests feeding them monthly – fish, blood and bone meal or an all-purpose fertilizer such as Vitax Q4 will do the job.
Here, we've provided advice on how to prune raspberries in both categories.

There are plenty of summer-fruiting raspberries to choose from. Garden expert Monty Don's growing picks include 'Malling Jewel', 'Glen Ample', and 'Glen Moy'.
Before you get started, you may prefer to wear gardening gloves when pruning raspberries, to protect your hands from their often prickly stems. You'll also need a pair of the best secateurs, and perhaps some of the best loppers, too. You might also want to have a trowel or a spade to hand, in case you need to dig up suckers.

If you're growing fall-bearing varieties, pruning them is a late winter garden job to early spring, once they have lost their leaves. These include 'Autumn Bliss' and 'Polka', both of which are grown by Monty.

If your backyard is limited in size and you only have the space for some small vegetable garden ideas, you can grow fall-bearing raspberries only and harvest a late spring and a fall crop once they are well established.
'Canes that have been left unpruned with just the fruited tips cut out will probably produce a crop in late spring,' says John. However, 'there is a risk that by leaving all the canes unpruned, the plants will not produce any new canes to fruit in the autumn,' he says. So, play it safe by reducing some of them to ground level.
Here's what you need to do when it comes to pruning them:
Like the idea of harvesting two crops from your raspberries? The RHS (opens in new tab) recommends cultivars 'Joan J', 'Autumn Treasure', and 'Himbo Top’ as well-suited to double cropping.