How to Prune Meyer Lemon Tree
When is the best time to prune?
Meyer lemon trees are evergreen and can fruit year-round in warm climates, but the main growth flush happens in spring, making late winter the ideal time to shape the tree before new growth emerges.
Why Should I Prune My Meyer Lemon Tree?
Meyer lemon trees stay relatively compact compared to other citrus, but they still benefit from annual pruning. The goal is to keep the canopy open so light and air can reach the interior, which improves both fruit quality and quantity.
Start by removing any dead or damaged branches. Then look for branches that cross through the center of the tree or rub against each other. These create wounds that invite disease. Cut one of the crossing pair back to where it joins a larger branch.
If your Meyer lemon is grafted (most are), check the base of the trunk for suckers growing from below the graft union. These come from the rootstock, not the Meyer lemon variety, and they'll never produce good fruit. Remove them as soon as you spot them by cutting flush with the trunk.
Avoid heavy pruning. Citrus trees store energy in their leaves, so removing too much foliage at once reduces next season's fruit crop. A light annual trim is better than an occasional hard cutback.