I have about a half acre of oak and maple, which means I rake roughly 30 bags of leaves every November. After three years of testing different electric leaf mulchers, I have a clear sense of which ones save real time and which ones just shred your patience.
These five made my short list this season. I judged each on reduction ratio, how often they clogged, and how long my arms held out using them.
Quick comparison
| Model | Power | Reduction | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| WORX WG430 13-Amp | 13 amp electric | 11:1 | Best overall |
| Sun Joe SDJ616 | 13 amp electric | 16:1 | Best reduction ratio |
| Flowtron LE-900 | 10 amp electric | 30:1 | Heavy mulching |
| BLACK+DECKER BV6600 | 12 amp blower/mulcher | 16:1 | Combo blower vac |
| Greenworks 24322 Cordless | 40V battery | 10:1 | Cordless freedom |
WORX WG430 13-Amp Electric Leaf Mulcher
This is the unit I use most often and the one I keep recommending to neighbors. It sits on a stand over any standard trash bag or paper yard bag and the Flex-a-Line cutting system uses replaceable trimmer line instead of metal blades. I shredded 12 bags of dry maple leaves in under an hour with no jams. Wet leaves were slower but still got through. The 11:1 reduction is honest, not marketing fluff.
Sun Joe SDJ616 Electric Leaf Mulcher
The 16:1 reduction claim drew me in and it mostly held up. Sun Joe uses real steel blades inside the chute, which chop finer than trimmer line. The trade off is that any twig over half an inch jams the unit and you have to unplug and clear it by hand. For pure dry leaves it is faster than the WORX. For mixed yard debris I trust the WORX more.
Flowtron LE-900 Electric Leaf-Eater
When you need fine mulch for compost or flower beds, the Flowtron is in a different league. The cutting line spins inside a sturdy housing and the 30:1 reduction claim is closer to 20:1 in my testing, still better than anyone else. It is loud, it vibrates, and the legs need to be on flat ground. But the output is almost dust compared to other units. This is what I run when I am building a leaf compost pile.
BLACK+DECKER BV6600 Blower/Vac/Mulcher
If you do not want a dedicated mulcher, this 3 in 1 unit blows, vacuums, and mulches in one tool. The metal impeller chops leaves into a 16:1 mulch and the bag holds about half a contractor bag worth. I tested it on the same leaf pile and it was slower than the WORX, around twice the time, but you carry it instead of feeding leaves into a chute. Good pick for small yards with mixed needs.
Greenworks 24322 40V Cordless Mulcher
For folks who hate extension cords, the Greenworks 40V version delivers about 25 minutes of runtime on a 4Ah battery. Power is about 70 percent of corded models, fine for dry leaves but it bogs in damp piles. I like that I can walk it to the back of my property without dragging cable. Just buy a spare battery, the included one will not finish a full yard.
How to choose
For most homeowners with a normal sized lot, the WORX WG430 is the right buy. It clogs least and the trimmer line is cheap to replace. Step up to the Flowtron if you want fine mulch for compost. Pick the BLACK+DECKER if you also need a leaf blower and have a small yard. The Greenworks cordless makes sense only if you cannot run a cord to your leaf piles.
Frequently asked questions
Will an electric leaf mulcher handle wet leaves?+
Most struggle. Wet leaves clog the impeller and slow the cut. Let leaves dry one day after rain, or use a unit with a metal blade.
Can I mulch sticks in a leaf mulcher?+
Only thin twigs under quarter inch thickness. Anything larger should go in a chipper shredder, you will dull or break the blades.