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Daffodils are among my favorite spring bulbs because the squirrels don’t bother with them and I get a dependable display of cheerful flowers every spring. Knowing when to cut back daffodils after they’ve bloomed helps to guarantee next year’s flowers. Unfortunately, that means being patient and dealing with a bit of untidiness in the garden. In this article, I’m going to share some tips on timing your daffodil pruning, why it’s important, and how to deal with the foliage as it dies back.
Daffodils multiply underground through bulb division, so the daffodil clumps in your garden can become fuller over time. I love to plant a mix with different bloom times to extend my daffodil growing season for as long as possible. I also like to have extra so I can bring some indoors to enjoy in a vase.
Knowing when to cut back a daffodil plant is like taking out a little insurance policy for the next spring. You just need to be patient while the foliage decays before clearing it away.

Deadheading dead daffodil blooms
Once your daffodils have finished blooming, you can deadhead them like you do with your summer flowers. Removing a spent daffodil flower head helps the plant concentrate on next year’s bloom, rather than producing a seed pod. Wait until the daffodil flower has died back completely before taking a sharp pair of pruners and cutting the flower off where it meets the stem. You can also pinch it off with your finger and thumb. Toss the flowers into the compost.

What not to do with daffodil foliage
One year, I saw a photo on social media where someone had braided their daffodil foliage so it would look tidier in the garden as it died. I thought it was pretty clever, so I eagerly braided all the daffodil foliage in my front yard garden. It turns out braiding, tying foliage, or making a knot from it is not beneficial to the plant. In fact, it can hinder flower production for the next year, depleting the energy needed to create it.

After daffodils have bloomed, the dying leaves are used by the plant as energy to form next year’s flowers. The plants—both the flower stalk and the leaves—will absorb nutrients for about four to six weeks after the flowers die back, enjoying the sunlight and spring showers. Those nutrients travel back down the leaves into the bulb, recharging it for the following year. Tying or twisting the leaves in any way prevents that energy from making its way back to the bulb.
When to cut back daffodils
Before removing your daffodil foliage, you need to let it die back completely. If you don’t like the unsightliness of the slowly decomposing leaves, plant other perennials or shrubs nearby. Hostas, peonies, coreopsis, hydrangeas, ninebarks, and elderberries are all good choices. As the leaves of those plants start to fill in, they’ll gradually cover some or all of the dying daffodil leaves.

This is actually a good time of year to plant other things, too, because you won’t accidentally dig up the daffodil bulbs. You can see where they are!
After your daffodil has finished blooming, allow the green leaves to turn yellow and brown. It will seem like an eternity, but it takes at least four to six weeks. At this point, you can take your pruners and prune the dead foliage at ground level where it meets the soil line.

I find that the foliage is ready when it comes away after a gentle tug. Usually I’ll just get into the garden with a gloved hand and gently pull all that spent foliage away. Be careful not to pull too hard as you don’t want to pull the bulbs out of the soil.
I don’t usually fertilize my bulbs, but I do amend the soil in my gardens in the spring with fresh compost. In the list below I’ve also included an article that has tips about when to fertilize flower bulbs.



Braiding is a non-starter for me because that sounds like unnecessary additional work. As I age, I opt for the simpler choices, it has worked for me! KISS
4-6 weeks after they bloom or 4-6 weeks after they die back or 4-6 weeks after they turn yellow or 4-6 weeks into June?
When do you start counting 4-6 weeks?
Hi Gregory,
Once you see the blooms start to wilt, you can count about 4 to 6 weeks from there. It’s really an approximation. If your foliage has all died back sooner, you can clear it away.
The state i live in decided to widen the interstate and along with it the service roads. All along the side of one section were hundreds of daffodils. Instead of letting them get bulldozed into oblivion, i dug them up and replanted in my yard. It was early summer, so the didnt bloom the next year, but the year after, i had over 300 yellow flowers around my driveway.
So glad i saved them
Hi Mark, What a lovely story! I’m so glad that the daffodils eventually bloomed for you after saving them from destruction.
Will the daffodils still bloom more if you trim off the spent flowers?
Hi Anna, If there are other buds from that bulb, trimming spent flowers could encourage the other ones to bloom sooner, but they won’t produce more flowers, like say a petunia or other non-bulbing plants.
I’ve cut back daffodils for years about two weeks after they bloom they aways come back and bloom
i cut mine back to 4 to 6 inches of leaves as the look messy flopping all over my bed never had issues with them coming back
Do the same rules apply to tulips and iris?
Hi Charles, Tulips, yes. Irises are a bit different: https://savvygardening.com/when-to-cut-back-irises/
I have a LOT of daffodils everywhere in my gardens. Most of my daffodil leaves are still green well into July. Your article states that the daffodils need their leaves for 4 to 6 weeks. Even if the leaves are still green and healthy looking, can I cut the leaves off at 4 or 6 weeks?
I would try to wait as long as possible before cutting them off to ensure the maximum amount of energy goes back into the bulb.
Hello! I have some daffodils that have been planted for 4 years and they just don’t get enough sun in their current home (north side of house). When is the best time to dig them up to be replanted in a sunnier spot? The fall?
I would wait until all the foliage has died back before moving them to a sunnier spot!