If you’re considering an emerald cedar hedge, there’s something important most people aren’t told.
Emerald cedars are heavily marketed because they look clean, tight, and uniform at the time of planting. But what matters more is how they perform over time.
Below are the most common issues that show up after installation.
1. Dieback at the Base (and It Doesn’t Come Back)
Emerald cedars do not regenerate from old wood.
Once the lower foliage dies off, it stays bare permanently.
This is one of the biggest long-term problems.

2. They Don’t Form a True Hedge
Emerald cedars tend to grow as individual trees, even when planted close together.
They can look like a hedge early on, but over time gaps and inconsistencies often appear.

3. Susceptible to Winter Burn and Stress
Emerald cedars are more sensitive to:
- Winter burn
- Wind exposure
- Dry conditions
This often shows up as browning or thinning, especially on exposed sides.
4. Shorter Effective Lifespan as a Hedge
Even when healthy, emerald cedars typically:
- Stay as separate trees
- Require ongoing maintenance to keep shape
- Do not “fill in” naturally the way a true hedge should
What Most People Expect vs Reality
Most homeowners are expecting a solid green privacy wall.
What emerald cedars often deliver over time is:
- Individual trees
- Visible gaps
- Permanent thinning at the base
What to Plant Instead for a True Cedar Hedge
If the goal is a long-term privacy hedge, the species matters more than how it looks on day one.
Eastern White Cedar behaves differently:
- Naturally fills in all available space
- Grows into a continuous, uniform hedge
- Recovers better over time
- Forms a true green wall rather than separate trees
For a full comparison, see:
https://cedarontario.ca/hedging-cedars-eastern-white-cedar-vs-emerald-cedar/
