I rake leaves for about three weeks every November and have torn through five electric blowers over the past few seasons. Some sound like a hair dryer and feel like one. Others move soaked maple leaves out of the lawn in one pass. Here are the ones I will recommend without hesitation.

Quick Comparison

ProductPowerType
EGO Power+ 615 CFM56V batteryCordless
Greenworks Pro 80V80V batteryCordless
Ryobi 40V HP40V batteryCordless
Toro PowerJet F700CordedCorded
Worx WG520 TurbineCordedCorded

1. EGO Power+ 615 CFM - Best Overall

The EGO is the blower I reach for first every weekend. The variable speed trigger is intuitive, the brushless motor pushes a real 615 CFM, and the 5Ah battery clears my front yard on one charge. Turbo button kicks it up for stubborn piles. Build quality is excellent and the same battery powers my EGO mower and trimmer. Noise level is reasonable for the power output.

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2. Greenworks Pro 80V - Best Raw Power

If you want the closest battery experience to a backpack gas blower, the 80V Greenworks moves more air than I sometimes need. Wet leaves do not stand a chance. Battery drains faster on max, so I keep a spare on the charger. Slightly heavier than the EGO, which becomes noticeable after twenty minutes. Excellent build, strong warranty.

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3. Ryobi 40V HP - Best Mid-Range Cordless

I picked this up when my neighbor wanted to borrow my EGO weekly. The Ryobi puts out a true 730 CFM on the HP version with a 6Ah battery. Fits naturally in a Ryobi tool collection and the cost is about two thirds of the EGO. Trigger feel is less smooth and turbo kicks in abruptly, but for the price the air output is hard to argue with.

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4. Toro PowerJet F700 - Best Corded Performance

For a corded blower the F700 is hard to beat. 725 CFM and 140 MPH output, balanced grip that does not fatigue your wrist, and a concentrator nozzle that focuses air for digging into wet piles. I use this in my driveway near the garage outlet because the unlimited runtime matters more than mobility for that job. Needs a 12 gauge outdoor extension cord to deliver full power.

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5. Worx WG520 Turbine - Best Budget Corded

The Worx Turbine is the inexpensive corded blower I keep recommending. Two speed switch, comfortable handle, and a turbine fan that moves a respectable 600 CFM. Cannot match the Toro for raw power but at less than half the price it does the job for small yards, patios, and gutters. Great starter blower.

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How to Choose

Match power source to yard size and access. Cordless for anything over a small patio. Corded for driveway and porch work near an outlet. Look at CFM and MPH together rather than treating one as the headline number. CFM moves piles, MPH lifts wet leaves off the lawn. If you already own batteries in a brand ecosystem, stay in it to avoid stranded charging gear. Weight matters because anything over 9 pounds gets tiring fast. Lastly, check the noise spec. Many municipalities now limit blowers above 65 dB at 50 feet, and electric units are usually well under that.

Frequently asked questions

Are battery leaf blowers as good as gas?+

For yards under half an acre, yes. Modern brushless 40 to 80 volt blowers match small gas units for power and beat them on noise and start-up. For multi-acre commercial work gas still wins on runtime.

What is more important, CFM or MPH?+

CFM is volume of air moved and matters more for moving big piles. MPH is air speed and matters more for blasting wet leaves loose from grass. The best blowers offer high numbers in both.

Corded or cordless?+

Cordless if your yard is bigger than about 50 feet from an outlet. Corded if you only need to clear a driveway and patio. Corded units cost less and never run out of charge.

Independent video for additional perspective on Best Electric Leaf Blowers I've Used Around My Yard.

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TQ
Author

Taylor Quinn

Fashion, Apparel & Accessories Editor

Taylor Quinn covers clothing, footwear, eyewear, and accessories at The Tested Hub. With a background in fashion merchandising and years of hands-on experience reviewing apparel, Taylor evaluates garments for fit across a wide range of sizes, fabric durability through repeated wash cycles, and overall construction quality. Taylor focuses on practical, real-world testing to help readers find pieces that actually hold up.