At a glance
Most cordless trimmers lock you into one battery for the rest of your tool-buying life. This one didn’t. It runs on the POWER FOR ALL Alliance, which meant the battery already sitting in my drill drawer slotted straight into it without buying anything extra. That’s a real, practical difference the first time you pick it up, not just a line on a spec sheet.
It’s a 26cm cordless trimmer weighing 2.3kg without the battery fitted, built around a fully automatic line feed rather than the bump-feed most rivals still use. If you see it sold as “18V-260” rather than “18V-26,” that’s the same trimmer bundled with a battery and charger rather than the bare tool.
Overview and first impressions
The V-shaped handle kept my posture upright rather than hunched over the whole time I used it, and the telescopic shaft adjusted enough to suit my height without feeling like a compromise either way, though I’d imagine anyone genuinely tall might find the top of that adjustment range a little short. It’s light enough that I never once reached for a shoulder strap or harness, something plenty of trimmers this size still expect you to wear. A foot pedal combined with a twist of the handle rotates the head between trimming and edging, and I could switch between the two without crouching down or fiddling with anything by hand.
A plant protector guard folds out when I needed it close to a flower bed and tucks away when I didn’t. Setting it up the first time took minutes: adjust the auxiliary handle, extend and lock the telescopic shaft, check the guard sits properly over the line. There’s nothing here that needs a manual open on the kitchen table.
The line itself is a standard 1.6mm nylon spool holding up to 6 metres, and it only ever needs Bosch’s own approved line. I tried a cheaper third-party line once out of curiosity and the feed mechanism noticeably struggled with it, so I went back to genuine Bosch line and never looked back.
Starting it needs the safety lock-off button pressed before the trigger will respond at all, a simple precaution that becomes second nature within a session or two. Bosch are explicit that this only works in daylight or good artificial light, since the cutting line needs to be visible, and that it’s built for grass cutting and edge trimming specifically, nothing heavier.
This is built for grass and edges, not general clearance. Bosch are explicit in the manual: it’s designed for grass cutting and edge trimming specifically, not any other purpose.
Specifications and scores
How it performed in our tests
IntelliFEED genuinely delivers on its promise. I never once stopped to bump the head or fuss with the spool mid-job. A sensor picks up when the line’s wearing short and feeds more out on its own, so the only thing I had to think about was where to point the trimmer.
Over a neglected stretch of garden left to its own devices since the previous autumn, I trimmed almost the whole thing in one go, around forty minutes start to finish. I put the battery back on charge, finished the edging in another ten minutes once it had topped up, and still had charge left over afterwards. Bosch’s own claim is that a full charge will trim the edges of eight tennis courts. I’d want a lot of practice with this trimmer before I’d manage anything close to that, but the point stands that there’s genuinely more in the tank than a single garden ever needs.
In a larger, more open garden, the noise never carried any further than an ordinary lawn mower would, though I’d still think twice about running it for a long stretch if I knew next door were trying to relax outside. The foot pedal earned its place on real obstacles too, getting cleanly under a patio table and beneath a couple of low branches without me needing to crouch or twist to reach either spot.
It isn’t the most powerful trimmer I’ve used. On a properly overgrown patch with thicker stems mixed into the grass, I noticed it working harder than a heavier-duty machine would, and the cutting width felt modest next to bulkier rivals I’ve tried. For grass, weeds and a season’s worth of regular edges, none of that mattered. For a genuinely neglected plot that’s gone over to scrub, it’s the wrong tool for the job.
The cross-brand battery is the real selling point here. If you’ve already got an 18V POWER FOR ALL battery from another tool entirely, you may not need to buy a new one at all.
Battery system and runtime
The 18V battery sitting under POWER FOR ALL is the real headline here. It isn’t locked to Bosch alone, it works across tools from several different manufacturers building to the same standard, so a battery bought for a drill years ago can end up powering a trimmer with no extra outlay at all. That’s a genuinely different proposition to the single-brand battery platforms most cordless trimmers still use.
A Syneon chip inside the system squeezes the last usable run out of the battery before it needs recharging, rather than cutting off conservatively early and leaving real capacity sitting unused. With the recommended 2.0Ah battery and the standard charger, I got a full charge in a little over two hours, which fit easily around finishing a longer job in two sittings rather than one.
I’m careful with the battery itself the way Bosch are clear it deserves: kept away from heat and direct sunlight, never poked at with anything sharp, removed before cleaning or putting the trimmer away for any length of time. Bosch are specific too that only rechargeable lithium-ion batteries above 1.5Ah should ever go anywhere near the charger, never anything non-rechargeable, and the charger itself stays well clear of rain.
When the line genuinely tangled on me once, the fix was straightforward. Bosch’s own troubleshooting guidance covers the line-feed problems I’ve actually run into.
Performance and limitations
What this does brilliantly is exactly what it sets out to do. A genuinely effortless line feed that never once needed my attention mid-job, and a battery system that doesn’t quietly lock me into buying everything else from one brand for years to come. The foot-pedal head tilt solved a problem every trimmer eventually runs into, reaching under something low, properly well.
The honest limitation is scope, and Bosch are upfront about it rather than overselling what this can do. It’s built for grass and edges, not anything resembling proper clearance work, and the modest cutting width and lighter-duty motor show it the moment thicker growth gets involved. For a tidy lawn and borders kept up through a normal season, that’s never a problem.
Neither point changes what this is at its best: a genuinely easy, well-thought-through trimmer for the job it was actually built to do.
- Genuinely cross-brand battery system
- Fully automatic line feed, never needs bumping
- Genuinely light enough for long sessions
- Useful foot-pedal head tilt for obstacles
- Not built for weeds or proper overgrowth
- Modest 26cm cutting width
- 2hr+ charge time on the standard charger
- Battery sold separately on the bare-tool option
- Small to medium gardens, tidy edges and borders
- Anyone already on an 18V POWER FOR ALL battery
- Anyone who wants line feed they never think about
- Larger gardens with genuine overgrowth or weeds
- Anyone wanting the fastest possible charge time
- Anyone wanting a blade-based head as an option
Final verdict
This delivers exactly what it promises. Effortless trimming and edging, and a line feed I never had to think about once the spool was loaded properly. For tidy lawns and borders, it’s a properly easy, well-engineered choice.
It was never trying to be a heavy-duty clearance tool, and being honest about that scope from the start matters more than the spec sheet alone suggests. Match the job to what it’s actually built for and there’s very little here to fault.
For a small to medium garden, especially one where other 18V POWER FOR ALL tools are already kicking around the shed, this earns its place comfortably.
A genuinely effortless cordless trimmer with a fully automatic line feed and a real cross-brand battery advantage over single-brand rivals. Held back only by its modest scope for grass and edges rather than heavier clearance work.
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