Key Takeaways

  • WORX WG547 at 55% off: The WORX Turbine Blower drops to $59 with battery and charger included, making it the best overall value this week.
  • Greenworks 40V Big Spring Deal: The Greenworks 40V blower is 40% off and puts real 40-volt power under $90.
  • BLACK+DECKER for light duty: The LSW221 is a reliable one-handed blower at $65 for anyone who just needs to clear a patio or walkway.
  • WORX Nitro sneaks under $100: The WG543 packs a brushless motor and 410 CFM at 3.8 lbs, the best performance-to-weight ratio in this price range.
  • Greenworks 80V for big yards: If your property demands more, the 80V brushless blower hits 770 CFM at 35% off during the Big Spring Sale.

There’s a specific weekend in late March where it clicks. You walk outside, the sun’s warm enough to stand in, and you notice every gutter, every corner of the driveway, every garden bed is buried under six months of debris. That’s the weekend you start looking at leaf blowers. Not because you love yard work, but because raking a full property by hand sounds miserable and you know a decent cordless blower can cut that job down to twenty minutes.

This week’s Berry Basket leans hard into that moment. WORX and Greenworks are running aggressive spring discounts, with several models hitting the lowest prices I’ve tracked this season. The WORX WG547 at 55% off stood out immediately. So did the Greenworks 40V lineup, which has four separate blowers on sale across different voltage tiers. I also noticed a pattern: nearly every deal this week includes a battery and charger in the box, which hasn’t always been the case in previous spring sales where bare tools dominated the discounts.

Most of the picks below are genuinely under $100 with battery included. I added a few upgrade options at the end for anyone with a larger property or heavier debris, because the jump in power from 20V to 60V or 80V is significant enough to be worth knowing about. If you’re browsing for other outdoor tool deals, you can browse all deals here.

What are the best budget cordless leaf blowers under $100?

The three blowers in this section all come in well under $100 with batteries and chargers in the box. They’re best suited for small to medium yards, patios, driveways, and garage cleanouts. If your main goal is clearing dry leaves and light debris without dragging out an extension cord, any of these will do the job.

MZK Cordless Leaf Blower

The MZK LF40D13 is the #1 bestseller in this category right now, and the reason is simple: it ships with two 2Ah batteries and a charger at a price that’s hard to argue with. It’s a 20V blower, so don’t expect it to move wet packed leaves, but for dry debris on a patio, driveway, or small yard it gets the job done. MZK is a marketplace brand rather than a legacy tool company, so if long-term durability matters more than upfront savings, look at the WORX or BLACK+DECKER options below.

  • 20V battery powered with two 2Ah batteries and charger included
  • Lightweight handheld design for patios and small yards
  • Two speed settings for variable airflow

WORX Turbine Blower WG547

The WORX WG547 is the deal I’d point most people to this week. It uses a turbine fan design instead of the typical impeller, which means it moves air more efficiently at a given power level. Two speed settings let you dial it back for lighter work or open it up for stubborn debris. Battery and charger are included, and at 55% off it’s the deepest discount in this entire roundup.

  • Turbine fan design for efficient air movement
  • Two speed control settings
  • 20V battery and charger included

BLACK+DECKER Cordless Blower

BLACK+DECKER’s LSW221 is the kind of blower your parents probably own. It does one thing, does it fine, and doesn’t try to impress you with specs. The 130 MPH air speed is enough for dry leaves and grass clippings on a walkway or small lawn. It’s light enough to use one-handed for extended sessions. If you already have BLACK+DECKER 20V tools, the battery is cross-compatible, which adds value beyond just the blower itself.

  • 130 MPH air speed for light debris clearing
  • 20V MAX battery platform with cross-compatible batteries
  • Lightweight one-handed operation

Which cordless blowers deliver the most power under $100?

These three blowers sit at the top of the under-$100 range and offer noticeably more power than the budget picks above. Higher voltage platforms, brushless motors, and better CFM ratings mean they can handle heavier debris and bigger yards. One important note: the DEWALT in this group is a bare tool, so factor in battery cost if you’re not already in their ecosystem.

Greenworks 40V Leaf Blower

This Greenworks 40V blower puts a real 40-volt platform under $90, which is uncommon. The 150 MPH / 135 CFM output is a clear step above any 20V blower in this roundup. It runs quieter than most competitors at this price point too, which matters if you’re using it early on a weekend morning. It’s tagged as a Big Spring Deal, so the price may not hold past the sale window.

  • 40V platform with 150 MPH and 135 CFM output
  • Quiet operation for residential use
  • 2.0Ah battery and charger included

WORX Nitro Blower WG543

The WORX Nitro WG543 is the most capable blower under $100 in this roundup. The brushless motor pushes 410 CFM at 130 MPH, and the whole unit weighs 3.8 pounds. That weight-to-power ratio is genuinely impressive for a 20V tool. It comes with a 4.0Ah battery, which is double the capacity of most batteries bundled with blowers at this price. Another Big Spring Deal worth grabbing before it expires.

  • Brushless motor with 410 CFM and 130 MPH
  • Ultra-lightweight at 3.8 pounds
  • 4.0Ah battery and charger included

DEWALT 20V MAX Blower

If you already own DEWALT 20V MAX tools, this is a no-brainer. The DCE100B is a compact, well-built blower with variable speed and a trigger lock for sustained use. The 100 CFM output is modest compared to others here, but it’s designed as a jobsite cleanup tool rather than a yard blower. Keep in mind this is a bare tool. No battery, no charger. If you’re starting from scratch with DEWALT, the total cost will push well past $100.

  • Variable speed switch with trigger lock
  • Compatible with DEWALT 20V MAX battery system
  • Compact design for jobsite and residential use

Are cordless leaf blowers over $100 worth the upgrade?

For anyone with a half-acre or more, heavy leaf cover, or wet debris to deal with, the answer is yes. The blowers in this section jump from 40V to 80V platforms, with CFM ratings two to five times higher than the budget picks. They cost more, but several are on deep spring discounts that bring them closer to normal pricing for the under-$100 models.

Greenworks 40V Axial Blower

This Greenworks 40V model is the axial version, and the difference matters. It pushes 550 CFM at 130 MPH with a brushless motor, which means it handles wet leaves and packed debris that would stall the cheaper 40V blower above. The included 4.0Ah battery provides solid runtime. At 46% off, this is one of the steepest discounts in the entire Greenworks lineup right now.

  • Brushless axial motor with 550 CFM and 130 MPH
  • Handles wet leaves and heavy debris
  • 4.0Ah battery and charger included

Greenworks 60V Blower

Greenworks’ 60V platform sits between their residential and commercial lines, and this blower reflects that. It puts out 610 CFM at 130 MPH, enough for thick gravel debris and heavy leaf cover. The 2.5Ah battery and 5A rapid charger are both included. If you’re looking at one tool that won’t make you wish you’d spent more, this is the middle ground that makes the most sense for medium to large yards.

  • 60V platform with 610 CFM and 130 MPH output
  • 2.5Ah battery and 5A rapid charger included
  • Lightweight with quiet operation

Greenworks 80V Blower

The 80V Greenworks is commercial-grade power in a consumer package. At 770 CFM and 190 MPH, it will move anything short of gravel off your driveway. It’s tagged as a Big Spring Deal and includes a 4.0Ah battery with rapid charger. This is overkill for a small suburban lot, but if you have a large property with mature trees, the time savings over a less powerful blower add up fast across a full season.

  • Commercial-grade 770 CFM and 190 MPH output
  • Brushless motor on 80V platform
  • 4.0Ah battery and rapid charger included

WORX 3-in-1 Blower WG583

The WG583 is a three-in-one: blower, vacuum, and mulcher. If you want to collect and shred leaves rather than just relocate them, this is the only option in the roundup that does it. It comes with two 4.0Ah batteries and a brushless motor with two speed settings. The vacuum and mulching functions mean you can blow a yard clean and bag the debris in one pass instead of making a pile and dealing with it separately.

  • Three-in-one blower, vacuum, and mulcher
  • Brushless motor with two speed control
  • Two 4.0Ah batteries and charger included

Frequently asked questions

Do cordless leaf blowers under $100 have enough power for a typical yard?

For small to medium yards with dry leaves and light debris, yes. A 20V blower with 130+ MPH air speed handles walkways, patios, and driveways without issue. If you regularly deal with wet leaves or have more than a quarter acre of lawn, consider stepping up to a 40V model, several of which are priced under $100 right now.

Should I buy a cordless leaf blower with a battery or a bare tool?

If you already own tools in the same battery platform, like DEWALT 20V MAX or Greenworks 40V, a bare tool saves money since the batteries are cross-compatible. If this is your first cordless outdoor tool, always buy the kit that includes a battery and charger. A battery alone can cost $40 to $80 depending on the platform.

What do CFM and MPH mean on a leaf blower?

CFM (cubic feet per minute) measures the volume of air the blower moves, which determines how effectively it pushes piles of leaves. MPH measures air speed at the nozzle, which matters more for dislodging stuck or wet debris. For residential use, look for at least 350 CFM and 100 MPH. Both numbers matter, but CFM tends to be the better predictor of real world performance.

How long do cordless leaf blower batteries last per charge?

Runtime varies significantly by voltage and battery capacity. A 20V blower with a 2.0Ah battery typically runs 10 to 20 minutes on high. A 40V blower with a 4.0Ah battery can stretch to 20 to 30 minutes. Running on a lower speed setting roughly doubles runtime in most models.

Are spring sales a good time to buy a cordless leaf blower?

Spring is one of the two best windows for blower deals, alongside Black Friday. Brands like Greenworks and WORX run their deepest discounts in late March and April to capture the start of yard work season. Several Big Spring Deals in this roundup are at or near their lowest tracked prices.

Prices verified March 29, 2026.

Discounts this week ranged from 27% to 55% off, with the strongest markdowns on WORX and Greenworks models. Six of the ten deals include a battery and charger, which is better than what I usually see in spring sales where brands tend to push bare tools. The sub-$100 blowers clustered between $35 and $99, while the upgrade picks ranged from $136 to $228. Greenworks had the most models on sale across their entire voltage lineup, from 40V to 80V, with several tagged as Big Spring Deals.

The standout for me is the WORX WG547 at 55% off. A turbine-design blower with battery and charger for under $60 is a genuinely strong deal, not an inflated original price situation. The WORX Nitro WG543 is the other one I’d personally grab. Brushless motor, 410 CFM, 3.8 pounds, and a 4.0Ah battery for just under $100 is the best spec sheet in this price tier. If I had to skip one, it would be the DEWALT bare tool. It’s a solid blower, but 100 CFM is low for the money unless you’re already invested in their battery system.

Greenworks is clearly pushing hard on spring pricing across their whole 40V through 80V range, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see those discounts deepen slightly as we get into April. WORX tends to keep spring deals live for a few weeks, so there’s less urgency there. If you need a blower for this season, now is the right time. Waiting for Prime Day in July means missing the spring window entirely and paying full price during the months you’d use it most.