Kousa Dogwood

How to Prune Kousa Dogwood

Cornus kousa
Reviewed by Kiersten Rankel M.S.
Quick Answer
Prune Kousa Dogwood in late summer, after its flowers and berries have finished. Because it blooms on wood formed the previous year, pruning in winter or early spring will cut off the buds for this year's display. Limit pruning to removing dead or crossing branches, as this tree naturally forms a beautiful layered shape that rarely needs heavy intervention.

When is the best time to prune?

Kousa Dogwood blooms in late spring to early summer on the previous year's wood, so the pruning window must come after flowering finishes, roughly mid-summer to early fall.

US pruning regions map
Pacific
Jul–Sep
Mountain
Aug–Sep
Midwest
Jul–Sep
Northeast
Jul–Sep
Southeast
Jul–Aug
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Why Should I Prune My Kousa Dogwood?

Kousa Dogwood has one of the most naturally beautiful growth habits of any ornamental tree. Its horizontal branching layers create a tiered silhouette that develops over years, and heavy pruning disrupts that form. The goal of pruning is to clean up dead wood and remove any crossing branches, not to reshape the tree.

The critical timing rule: Kousa Dogwood blooms on wood it grew the previous year. This means cutting branches in winter or early spring removes the buds for this year's flowers. Always wait until after flowering finishes in early summer before making any cuts.

For young trees, remove any branches that cross through the center or rub against other branches. For older trees, pruning is mostly about removing dead, diseased, or damaged wood that appears over time.

Avoid removing the low, spreading branches that give Kousa Dogwood its characteristic look. Those branches define the tree's form and take years to develop. Only remove a branch if it is clearly dead, crossing, or growing in a direction that conflicts with the overall structure.

Know Before You Cut

Difficulty Moderate
Max removal 1/4 of canopy per season
Growth pattern Upright, layered tree
Tools Pruners, loppers, or saw

What Should I Remove?

Wait until after flowering finishes to prune
Remove dead or diseased branches at their base
Cut crossing or rubbing branches back to their origin
Remove water sprouts growing straight up from branches
Don't prune in winter or spring, you'll remove this year's buds
Don't remove healthy low branches that define the tree's shape
Don't cut the central leader on a young tree
Don't over-prune, this tree shapes itself naturally

How Do I Prune Step by Step?

1
Wait until after the bloom period
Kousa Dogwood blooms in late spring to early summer. Wait until the flowers and ornamental berries have finished, typically mid-to-late summer, before making any cuts.
2
Assess dead or damaged branches
Walk around the tree and identify branches that are dead (no leaves, dry and brittle) or clearly diseased. Mark them for removal.
3
Remove dead wood at its point of origin
Cut dead branches back to where they meet a healthy branch or the main trunk, just outside the slightly raised ring of bark at that junction.
4
Address crossing branches
Choose which of two crossing branches to keep, usually the one with better structure or direction, and remove the other at its base.
5
Remove water sprouts
Cut off any upright water sprouts growing from horizontal branches. These grow straight up and disrupt the tree's layered silhouette.

Got More Questions?

Can I prune Kousa Dogwood in winter?
You can remove dead wood any time, but avoid cutting living branches in winter. Kousa Dogwood sets next year's flower buds in summer on the growth from this year, so winter pruning removes those buds and significantly reduces blooming.
My Kousa Dogwood didn't bloom much this year. Was it pruned at the wrong time?
Possibly. If it was pruned in late winter or spring, the flower buds for that season were likely removed. Wait until after flowering next year before any pruning and the bloom count should improve.
How do I know if a branch is dead?
Scratch the bark with your fingernail. Green underneath means the branch is alive. Brown or tan all the way through means it is dead. Dead branches are also brittle and leafless by mid-summer.
Can I remove lower branches to raise the crown?
You can, but do it gradually over several years, one or two branches per year. Removing too many lower branches at once stresses the tree and removes the tiered, horizontal layering that makes Kousa Dogwood distinctive.
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About This Article

Kiersten Rankel M.S.
Kiersten Rankel M.S.
Botanical Data Lead at Greg · Plant Scientist
About the Author
Kiersten Rankel holds an M.S. in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology from Tulane University. A certified Louisiana Master Naturalist, she has over a decade of experience in science communication, with research spanning corals, cypress trees, marsh grasses, and more. At Greg, she curates species data and verifies care recommendations against botanical research.
See Kiersten Rankel's full background on LinkedIn.
Editorial Process
Pruning guidance verified against Cornus kousa growth data from Greg's botanical database, cross-referenced with USDA hardiness zone data and published horticultural research.
248+ Greg users growing this plant
USDA hardiness zones 5a–8b
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