How To Deadhead A Rose - David Austin Roses

Skip to content
  • Video placeholder Watch the video
How to deadhead a rose

Feeding your roses will encourage strong, healthy growth and abundant flowering. It’s a relatively quick and simple task, yet is one of the most beneficial jobs you can do to ensure that your roses are at their most healthy and floriferous when summer arrives.

What is deadheading?

Deadheading is the removal of finished blooms to encourage further blooms and improve the appearance and shape of the rose. You should deadhead repeat-flowering shrub roses and once-flowering shrub roses that don’t produce hips. Do not deadhead hip-producing roses if you want hips in the autumn/winter.

You will need

Deadheading snips

Secateurs

Gloves

How to deadhead

There are two stages to deadheading. The first is mainly aesthetic, removing the brown finished blooms so you can enjoy the remaining flowers without interruption. The second stage encourages new blooms and helps to maintain a compact shape.

  • Step 1Remove a finished bloom from a flowering head Pinch or cut off the finished flower, just below where the base of the flower joins the stem. Leave any remaining buds or blooms to continue flowering. Continue this as required throughout the flowering season.
  • Step 2Remove a flowering head Remove the entire flowering head by cutting the stem just above the first leaf with five leaflets. Once all the flowering heads have been removed, cut any disproportionally tall stems back to the height of the rest of the plant, creating a neat rounded shape as you go.
Need help deciding which rose is right for you?Try our rose finder Related guides
  • Beauty Awakens As winter fades, the garden stirs. Buds swell, leaves emerge, and spring unfolds.  The transition between seasons is rarely abrupt. Light changes first. It lingers in the afternoon and carries a different warmth, subtle yet unmistakable. The air, once sharp and spare, begins to soften. Even before visible growth, the atmosphere of the garden feels altered. This is the beginning of renewal. Close up bloom shot of an orange rose bred by David Austin
  • The Vision Behind the English Rose In the days following the centenary of David C. H. Austin’s birth on 16 February, it feels fitting to reflect more deeply on how he worked and why his influence endures. David approached rose breeding as a long and thoughtful process. From the first cross to final introduction, a single rose could take ten years or more. Each season brought new seedlings, most of which would be quietly set aside. He watched closely, learning how a rose opened, how it aged, how fragrance developed, and how a plant behaved over time. Often, he could be found walking the trial fields, pausing over a seedling, noting its character and potential. David C. H. Austin
  • Training Climbing Roses into Decorative Shapes There is a distinct charm in allowing a climbing rose to do more than simply cover a surface. A wall awash with bloom is undeniably lovely, yet when a rose is thoughtfully guided into a deliberate form, such as a sweeping arc, a relaxed swag, or a flowing wave, the effect becomes something altogether more expressive. The plant is not constrained, merely encouraged, its natural grace quietly emphasised. Training Climbing Roses into Decorative Shapes
  • A Life Dedicated to the Rose Today, 16th February, marks what would have been one hundred years since the birth of David C. H. Austin, whose vision transformed the modern garden and reimagined what a rose could be. David C. H. Austin
  • Pantone Colour of the Year 2026: Cloud Dancer, a Soft White Palette for the Moon Garden Soft, luminous whites are taking centre stage in 2026, inspired by Cloud Dancer, the Colour of the Year from Pantone. Chosen for its gentle warmth and airy elegance, this subtle shade reflects a growing desire for calm, light, and restorative spaces. In the garden, Cloud Dancer finds its most natural expression in the moon garden, also known as a lunar garden, where pale blooms are chosen specifically to glow in evening light. Susan William's Ellis white rose bred by David Austin
  • Soft Hues, Enduring Spirit: Emily Brontë in the Garden The moors shaped Emily Brontë long before she shaped words. Wind, wide skies, and the steady presence of nature formed the rhythm of her days, and that rhythm lives on in everything she wrote. Emily Brontë did not observe the landscape from a distance. She belonged to it. Rosa_Emily_Bronte English rose bred by David Austin
Your bag Your bag is empty. Continue shopping Are you in the right place? Continue to {storeName} ({currencySymbol}){storeName} Stay in Europe (€)Europe Or select a different store to visit Shop the scene

Tag » How To Deadhead A Rose