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Flail Mowers for Tractors

Standard Duty – For CAT I Tractors Ranging 15-60 HP

BCRL Flail Mower

BCRL Standard Duty Ditch Bank Flail Mower

CAT I
15-45 PTO HP
45″–61″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Extension
400 Gram Flails

Starting at $2,395.00 Sale!

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TRIM Standard Duty Embankment Flail Mower

TRIM Standard Duty Ditch Bank Flail Mower

CAT I
20-60 PTO HP
40-64″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Extension
350 gram flails

Starting at $2,395.00 Sale!

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Medium Duty – For CAT I/II Tractors Ranging 20-65 HP

MD Flail Mower

MD Medium Duty Flail Mower with Fixed Offset

CAT I/II
20-65 PTO HP
53″–76″ Mowing Width
Fixed Offset
800 Gram Flails

Starting at $2,195.00 Sale!

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MDH Flail Mower

MDH Medium Duty Flail Mower with Hydraulic Offset

CAT I/II
20-65 PTO HP
53″–76″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Offset
800 Gram Flails

Starting at $2,395.00 Sale!

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BCRM Flail Mower

BCRM Medium Duty Ditch Bank Flail Mower

CAT I/II
30-60 PTO HP
53″–68″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Extension
800 Gram Flails

Starting at $2,995.00 Sale!

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Heavy Duty – For CAT I/II Tractors Ranging 25-90 HP

MFZpro Flail Mower

MFZpro Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Hydraulic Offset

CAT I/II
25-90 PTO HP
53″–86″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Offset
1200 Gram Flails

Starting at $2,795.00 Sale!

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FMHD Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Manual Offset

FMHD Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Manual Offset

CAT I/II
35-85 PTO HP
64-86″ Mowing Width
Manual Offset
800 gram flails

Starting at $3,795.00

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FMHDH Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Hydraulic Side Offset

FMHDH Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Hydraulic Offset

CAT I/II
35-85 PTO HP
64-86″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Offset
800 gram flails

Starting at $3,545.00 Sale!

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BCRI Flail Mower

BCRI Heavy Duty Ditch Bank Flail Mower

CAT II
50-90 PTO HP
70″–86″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Extension
1300 Gram Flails

Starting at $4,595.00 Sale!

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Extra Heavy Duty – For CAT II Tractors Ranging 65-150 HP

FMHDX Extra Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Hydraulic Side Offset

FMHDX Extra Heavy Duty Flail Mower with Hydraulic Offset

CAT II
80-150 PTO HP
94-114″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Offset
1,200 gram flails

Starting at $5,995.00

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EMHD Heavy Duty Flail Mower

EMHD Extra Heavy Duty Ditch Bank Flail Mower

CAT II
65-120 PTO HP
70-94″ Mowing Width
Hydraulic Extension
800 gram flails

Starting at $5,995.00

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ATV / UTV

MATV Motorized Flail Mower with Offset

MATV Motorized Flail Mower with Manual Offset

2″ Ball Hitch
13.5HP / 24HP Engine
48-62″ Mowing Width
Manual Offset
Electric Start

Starting at $2,995.00 Sale!

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Need help choosing the right flail mower? Check out our detailed Victory 2025 Flail Mower Buyer’s Guide to find your ideal mower.

Flail Mower Reviews – What Our Customers Are Saying

Carl
Reviewer
5/5
I have been using this flail mower for several months now. It is built very...
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1 month ago
James Adkins
Reviewer
5/5
From shipping to quality I love this mower and Victory. Great product and g...
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1 month ago
David Gonzalez
Reviewer
5/5
Just used the flail mower last weekend. Took out everything in its path fro...
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1 month ago
Rodney Zechman
Reviewer
5/5
Heavy duty mower, works as it should, well worth the money. Good service by...
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2 months ago
Bob Lenton
Reviewer
5/5

Ryan, thank you. The mower works well. A sturdy implement.

2 months ago
Greg B
Reviewer
5/5
Seems to be a great mower. I’ve only gotten to use it a few times, but it ...
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2 months ago
Stephen Stewart
Reviewer
5/5
The mower worked great! Light, but powerful. I used it on some really ste...
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2 months ago
Doug M
Reviewer
5/5
I had previously purchased the EMID-64 offset flail from Victory, which unf...
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2 months ago
Jay Schehr
Reviewer
5/5
I am very impressed at how well this flail mower performed. I have 2.5 mile...
Show More
4 months ago

Find the Right Flail Mower for Your Tractor

Choosing the right flail mower starts with more than PTO horsepower. You also need to match your tractor’s hitch category, rear lift capacity, outside tire width, and available rear remotes to the type of mowing you plan to do. Use the tool below to narrow down the models that fit your tractor and your property.

Verify tractor specs with tractordata.com

Compare Flail Mowers by Tractor HP

This table provides a quick starting point for matching mower families to tractor PTO horsepower. Use it as a first filter, then confirm lift capacity, hitch category, mower weight, and hydraulic requirements before choosing a specific model.

HP Range FMHD
CAT I/II
FMHDH
CAT I/II
FMHDX
CAT II
BCRL
CAT I
BCRM
CAT I/II
BCRI
CAT II
EMHD
CAT II
20-35 HP ✔️
35-45 HP ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ✔️
50-60 HP ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ✔️
65-75 HP ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ✔️
80+ HP ✔️ ✔️ ✔️

What Is a Flail Mower?

A flail mower is a PTO-driven 3-point attachment that uses multiple cutting hammers mounted on a horizontal rotor instead of one large blade. That design helps it cut and mulch grass, weeds, stalks, brush, and overgrowth into finer material while maintaining better control of clippings and debris than a typical rough-cut mower.

For many tractor owners, the biggest advantage of a flail mower is that it can do more than simply mow directly behind the tractor. Depending on the model, a flail mower may offer fixed offset, hydraulic side-shift, or full ditch-bank movement so you can reach fence lines, tree rows, roadsides, embankments, and other areas that are harder to manage with a standard cutter.

Flail Mower
Flail mower cutting heavy brush

Flail Mower vs. Brush Hog: Which Is Better?

A flail mower is usually the better choice when you want a cleaner finish, finer mulching, better control of discharged material, and more flexibility around obstacles, rows, edges, and uneven terrain. A brush hog or rotary cutter is often the lower-cost choice for rough-cut field work when finish quality is less important.

Where a flail mower stands out is in the way it cuts and in the way many models can offset or tilt. If you mow fence lines, orchards, roadsides, pond edges, ditches, banks, or maintained acreage where appearance matters, a flail mower is often the more capable and more refined tool

Hammer Blades vs. Y Blades

The two most common flail blade styles are hammer blades and Y blades. Hammer blades are heavier, more durable, and better suited to mixed conditions that include thick grass, weeds, stalks, and light brush. Y blades can work well in lighter mowing conditions, but hammer blades are generally the better all-around choice for landowners who need one mower to handle both maintenance mowing and heavier seasonal growth.

That is why all of our flail mowers come equipped with hammer blades. They give most tractor owners the widest operating range without forcing a compromise between finish quality and cutting ability.

y blade vs hammer blade side by side comparison

fixed vs offset vs ditch bank flail mower side by side comparison

Fixed Offset vs. Hydraulic Offset vs. Ditch-Bank Flail Mowers

A fixed-offset flail mower is a good choice for general pasture maintenance, field edges, and fence lines when you want the mower to run slightly outside the tractor’s track without adding hydraulic complexity. A hydraulic offset flail mower lets you shift the mower from the seat, which is useful when mowing around trees, posts, vineyard rows, orchards, roadsides, and changing boundaries.

A ditch-bank flail mower adds both reach and tilt. This is the right style when you need to mow embankments, roadside slopes, pond edges, drainage ditches, hedge lines, and similar areas while keeping the tractor on more level ground. These models require more attention to tractor compatibility, hydraulic needs, lift capacity, ballast, and stability than a standard flail mower.

How to Choose the Right Flail Mower

Start with your tractor’s PTO horsepower, but do not stop there. The right flail mower also depends on hitch category, rear lift capacity, outside tire width, hydraulic remotes, terrain, and the type of material you cut most often.

  • Choose a standard or medium-duty flail mower for regular pasture cleanup, overgrown fields, orchard rows, and general maintenance.
  • Choose a hydraulic offset flail mower if you regularly mow along fence lines, tree rows, roadsides, or buildings.
  • Choose a ditch-bank or embankment mower if you need to cut slopes, pond banks, roadside shoulders, hedges, or drainage areas.
  • Choose the widest mower your tractor can safely power and carry, while still leaving enough margin for rough terrain, ballast needs, and hydraulic requirements.

If you are unsure, use the compatibility tool above as a starting point, then verify your tractor specs before ordering.

Trusted expert helping match flail mower to tractor

Need more help comparing mower types, widths, and tractor fit? Start with our Flail Mower Buyer’s Guide and use our Compatibility Tool to narrow down the best option for your tractor, terrain, and mowing conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions (Flail Mower FAQ)

Below are answers to the most common questions buyers ask when comparing flail mowers, including cut quality, sizing, blade type, offset options, and what to look for when matching a mower to a tractor.

What Is a Flail Mower?


A flail mower is a PTO-driven 3-point attachment that cuts with multiple blades mounted on a rotating drum rather than one large blade. This design helps it mulch material more finely, maintain better control of clippings, and deliver a cleaner, more even finish than a typical rough-cut mower.

What Is the Difference Between a Flail Mower and a Brush Hog?


A flail mower is typically chosen for cleaner cutting, finer mulching, better debris control, and the ability to mow more precisely along edges, rows, and uneven areas. A brush hog is usually the more economical choice for rough-cut field mowing when finish quality and edge control are less important.

When Should You Use a Flail Mower?


A flail mower is the better choice when you are mowing overgrown grass, weeds, roadside shoulders, orchard rows, fence lines, pond edges, drainage areas, or uneven ground where you want a more controlled cut and a more finished result. It is especially useful when offset or ditch-bank capability matters.

What Size Flail Mower Do I Need?


The right size depends on your tractor’s PTO horsepower, hitch category, rear lift capacity, tire width, available hydraulic remotes, and the type of terrain you mow. In general, you want the widest mower your tractor can safely power and carry without sacrificing stability, especially on slopes or when using a ditch-bank mower.

Are Hammer Blades Better Than Y Blades?


For most landowners, yes. Hammer blades are the better all-around option because they handle heavier grass, weeds, stalks, and light brush while still producing a clean finish. Y blades can work in lighter mowing conditions, but hammer blades are usually the better choice when versatility matters.

Do I Need Fixed, Hydraulic, or Ditch-Bank Flail Mower?


Choose fixed offset for routine mowing along edges and fence lines when you do not need to adjust mower position from the seat. Choose hydraulic offset when you regularly mow around trees, posts, rows, roadsides, or changing boundaries. Choose a ditch-bank flail mower when you need reach and tilt for slopes, embankments, pond banks, drainage ditches, or hedges.

What Is the Most Affordable Flail Mower?


If price is the main concern, a lighter-duty or standard-duty flail mower is usually the most affordable entry point. The best budget choice depends on your tractor size and whether you need a standard mower, offset mower, or ditch-bank mower. It is usually better to buy the lightest mower that truly fits your tractor and mowing conditions than to buy strictly by lowest price.

How High Can a Flail Mower Cut?


Cut height depends on the mower design, rear roller setting, skids, top-link adjustment, and operating setup. Most flail mowers are used for controlled maintenance mowing rather than very high rough-cut height, and they are best when adjusted for consistent finish and proper rotor performance.

What Is the Best 3-Point Flail Mower?


There is no single best 3-point flail mower for every tractor or property. The best choice depends on whether your priority is affordability, heavier material handling, hydraulic side-shift, or ditch-bank capability. Start with compatibility first, then choose the mower family that matches how and where you mow.

How Are Flail Mowers Delivered and Set Up?


Most 3-point flail mowers ship largely assembled, but final setup varies by model. Standard flail mowers usually require minimal assembly, while hydraulic offset and ditch-bank flail mowers may require installation of swing arms, cylinders, hoses, or related hardware. Before ordering, always confirm your tractor’s hitch category, lift capacity, and hydraulic compatibility.

At Victory Tractor Implements, we source all of our equipment directly from the manufacturer and pass the savings on to our customers. As always, the team is standing by to answer any questions to assist with your decision. Victory Support can be reached directly at (562) 534-8182 or sales@etractorimplements.com


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