How to Prune Shrimp Plant
When is the best time to prune?
Pruning timing shifts by a few weeks depending on your region's last frost date, since Shrimp Plant breaks dormancy earliest where winters are mildest.
Why Should I Prune My Shrimp Plant?
Shrimp Plant gets leggy fast. Without pruning, the stems stretch and flop, and the plant puts energy into long bare branches rather than those colorful shrimp-shaped flower spikes it's known for. A good prune in early spring resets the plant and encourages dense, branchy new growth loaded with blooms.
The most useful cut is a simple tip pinch: snip back each long stem to just above a leaf node, which is where the leaves attach to the stem. This forces two new stems to sprout where one was, doubling the branching and the number of potential flower sites.
You can also deadhead throughout the growing season by removing spent flower bracts as they brown and fade. This keeps the plant looking tidy and may push out another round of flowers sooner.
Avoid cutting into old woody stems at the base unless you are doing a deliberate rejuvenation prune. If the plant has gotten very woody and sparse, you can cut the whole thing back by half in early spring and it will usually rebound, but give it a few weeks of warmth and consistent watering before expecting new shoots.