How Much Does Maple Tree Removal Cost?
Maple tree removal usually lands in a broad planning range of $300 to $2,500, which is wide enough to cover very different jobs: a small open-yard ornamental maple, a medium front-yard red maple, and a large silver maple hanging over a roof do not price like the same project. The market shape matters more than a single national average, because maple jobs accelerate once size, cleanup, and structure risk start layering together. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][9]
The hidden cost on maples is the canopy. Homeowners often compare only height, but a mature maple can throw a crown far wider than a pine at the same height, which means more limbs to lower, more brush to chip, and more debris to haul away. Maple also adds a hardwood penalty: denser wood means slower cutting, heavier rounds, and more saw wear. Those two forces together explain why maple quotes frequently come in above first expectations. [1][2][4][5][6][7][9][14]
Silver maple is the species-specific exception homeowners need to price separately. It grows fast, it is commonly planted too close to the house, and its wood is weaker and more failure-prone than the average homeowner assumes. That combination creates a real risk premium, especially after branch loss or before storm season. If you are pricing a silver maple, do not assume the baseline maple range is enough. [7][9][10][14]
The most reliable way to budget a maple is to start with size, then layer on species, canopy spread, structure proximity, stump scope, and regional labor. The tables below do exactly that, which is far more useful than a one-line "average tree removal cost" number. [1][2][4][5][6][7][9][11]
Maple Tree Removal Cost by Tree Size
Height still anchors the quote, but crown width and hardwood behavior matter more on maple than many generic size charts admit. Use the expandable table to see where the price starts to widen.
| Maple Tree Size | Height | Removal Cost | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 30 ft | $150-$600 | Young tree, manageable canopy | |
| 30-60 ft | $600-$1,500 | Wide canopy, hardwood density | |
| 60-80 ft | $800-$2,000 | Rigging often required | |
Large maples are where the canopy and the stem fight the quote in two different ways. The crown can spread far enough that the job needs controlled lowering, and the trunk sections are heavy enough to make hauling a real line item.
| |||
| 80-100 ft | $1,500-$3,000 | Multi-day job, heavy debris | |
| 100 ft+ | $2,500-$4,000+ | Specialist crew, permit review | |
Maple Tree Removal Cost by Species
Species is where this page stops behaving like a generic cost page. Silver maple, sugar maple, red maple, and Norway maple create different removal problems, and those differences can swing the budget by hundreds or thousands of dollars on larger trees. [5][6][7][8][9][10][14]
| Maple Species | Avg Height | Cost Range | Key Removal Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50-80 ft | $400-$2,500 | Fast growth, weak wood, near-structure risk | |
Silver maple is the tree that most often surprises homeowners. It grows quickly, fills a yard fast, and is often planted in the exact spots that now make removal harder: side yards, driveways, and narrow strips near the house. Weak wood and brittle branch structure mean the crew may need extra branch-control rigging and slower lowering. Typical canopy: 40-60 ft spread Common issues: Rapid growth, weak wood, surface roots, storm breakage Removal challenge: ★★★★★ If the tree is in the public way or part of a municipal streetscape, the city may control the removal process. Remove before the next major wind event if cracking, dead wood, or repeated branch drop is already visible. | |||
| 40-80 ft | $500-$2,800 | Hard maple, heavy rounds, permit review possible | |
| Up to 55 ft | $300-$2,000 | Most common baseline maple | |
| Up to 60 ft | $250-$1,800 | Invasive, dense canopy, may qualify for local assistance | |
What Affects Maple Tree Removal Cost?
Maple jobs get expensive when the canopy, the wood, and the site all push in the same direction. The cards below separate those cost drivers so you can tell whether your quote is being moved by size, by species, by access, or by cleanup scope. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][9][11][12][13][14]
Tree height and trunk diameter
Height is the base price driver, but on maples the trunk diameter matters almost as much. A thick maple stem means heavier pieces, longer saw time, and a slower cleanup pass.
Once the tree moves from medium to large, the quote usually stops behaving like a simple size chart.The same 50-foot maple can price very differently if one trunk is slender and the other is already carrying a broad stem with heavy scaffold limbs.
[1][2][4][5][6][9][14]Canopy spread
Maples are not famous for narrow crowns. The canopy often spreads far wider than the trunk height suggests, and that extra width creates brush volume, rigging space, and more debris loads.
A broad crown is the maple tax that homeowners usually miss on the first quote.The removal team may need to stage the work in pieces just to keep the brush and lowered limbs away from the house, fence, or driveway.
[1][2][5][6][7][9][14]Species and wood density
Silver maple is the weak-wood outlier, sugar maple is hard maple, and red maple usually sits between them. That wood behavior changes saw time, lowering behavior, and disposal weight.
Maple quotes are really species quotes once the tree is large enough.Hard maple sections are simply heavier to move, while brittle silver maple may force extra branch control to keep the job safe.
[7][9][10][14]Proximity to structures
If the tree leans toward a house, driveway, garage, fence, or pool, the crew has to convert a straightforward cut into controlled dismantling. That raises labor time and reduces the number of easy cuts they can make.
Close targets are one of the fastest ways to move a maple from the low end of the range to the high end.Even a medium maple can price like a much larger job when it overhangs something expensive.
[1][2][4][5][6][11]Root system conflicts
Maple roots are often shallow and wide, which means they can lift pavement, crowd drains, and create issues around foundations or utilities. Once that happens, the removal scope can spill into repair planning.
Root damage usually turns a tree quote into a site-repair conversation too.Silver maple is the classic example here: fast growth above ground often comes with aggressive roots below it.
[7][9][10][14]Tree condition
Dead, diseased, cracked, or storm-damaged maples are rarely cheap. Once wood is brittle or the crown is already failing, the crew has to move slower and protect the target area more carefully.
Declining trees usually add hazard pricing instead of discount pricing.A tree that lost major limbs in a storm often needs extra cleanup and more conservative rigging than a healthy one of the same size.
[1][2][4][7][9]Permit requirements
Public-right-of-way maples and some regulated street trees can require municipal review before anyone cuts. That applies even when the tree is otherwise ordinary-looking or the species is common.
If the maple is near the street, check ownership before you book the crew.New Hampshire and Vermont both show how tree-warden and public-tree rules can control what happens to maples in the public way.
[11][12][13]Debris volume and haul-away
Maple removals can create a lot of cleanup even when the trunk does not look enormous. The canopy, leaf volume, and branch count all push haul-away charges upward.
A low bid that skips debris is not a real maple quote.Ask whether brush, chips, and log sections are included or billed as separate trips.
[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]If you remember one rule, remember this: maple pricing is a canopy-and-risk problem, not just a height problem.
For region-specific pricing patterns, compare these maple bands with our tree removal cost by state guide. For hardwood contrast, our large oak tree removal cost page shows how mature oak and mature maple diverge once canopy and permit conditions change.
Maple Tree Removal Cost Calculator
This calculator follows the same logic homeowners use in real quote comparison: size, trunk diameter, region, condition, access, stump work, and haul-away. It starts in a Northeast maple scenario by default because that is where these trees show up most often in residential budgeting conversations.
Your Estimated Maple Removal Cost
This estimate is built from maple-specific height bands, canopy spread adjustments, and regional labor rates. Silver maple and large-canopy jobs may price above this range. Use it to screen quotes, not replace a site visit.
Silver Maple Removal: Why It Costs More
Silver maple is one of the most common "problem trees" in older neighborhoods across the Northeast and Midwest. It was planted because it grows quickly and throws shade fast, but that same fast growth often means a tree that is now too close to the house, too broad for the yard, or already shedding limbs in storms. [7][9][10]
The cost premium comes from weak wood and branch control. A crew removing silver maple has to assume that large limbs may break less predictably than a sturdier hardwood, so the job often needs more rope work and slower lowering than a normal backyard tree of the same height. That is why silver maple removal cost is often 10% to 20% above other same-size maples in comparable locations. [1][2][7][9][10][14]
Roots can add another layer. Silver maple often develops shallow, aggressive roots that conflict with pavement, drains, or nearby utility runs, which is one reason these trees are overrepresented in calls about trees near the house. If storm damage is already part of the story, compare the quote against our emergency tree removal cost guide instead of using a standard scheduled-removal range. [7][9][10]
| Scenario | Typical Range | Why It Moves |
|---|---|---|
| Open yard | $400-$1,200 | Easier landing zone, less rigging, simpler cleanup[1][2][7][9] |
| Near house | $1,000-$2,500 | More rope work, roof protection, slower dismantling[1][2][7][9][10] |
| Near power lines | $1,500-$3,000+ | Utility coordination and brittle branch control dominate the quote[1][2][4][7][9] |
Maple Tree: Remove or Trim?
Maple is one of the most common species where homeowners hesitate between pruning and full removal. That hesitation is reasonable, because a healthy maple with a few long limbs is not the same thing as a declining silver maple with a split trunk or invasive roots.
- The trunk has an obvious hollow, cavity, or major decay pocket.
- More than half of the crown is dead or declining.
- Roots are already lifting the foundation, driveway, or a buried utility line.
- A silver maple main stem has a visible crack or repeated large limb failures.
- The tree is healthy overall and the problem is just a few overlong limbs.
- The canopy is dense and needs light or clearance pruning, not removal.
- There is no trunk crack, no major decay, and no active root conflict.
- The tree can be reassessed by an ISA Certified Arborist before deciding on removal.
If the answer is not obvious, start with an ISA Certified Arborist assessment. A good pruning recommendation can save a healthy maple, while a cracked or decayed silver maple should not be priced like a routine trim job. [7][9][10]
Do You Need a Permit to Remove a Maple Tree?
Maybe. Many maple permit questions are really ownership questions first. If the tree is in the public right-of-way, part of a streetscape, or under local tree-warden control, the city or town may need to approve removal before the contractor starts work. [11][12][13]
Sugar maple also shows up in more regulated public-tree conversations than many homeowners expect, especially in New England towns that take street and shade trees seriously. That does not mean every sugar maple is protected on private property, but it does mean you should check the local rule before assuming the crew can cut immediately. Our full tree removal permit cost guide breaks down the paperwork and timeline side of that process. [11][12][13]
Street-side maples are the clearest example. Even when the tree sits in front of your house, it may still be municipal property. In those cases, permit rules can matter more than the tree species itself. [11][12][13]
Prepare for Maple Tree Removal Quotes
Good maple quotes are detailed quotes. The checklist below is tuned for the places where maple bids usually drift apart: crown width, debris assumptions, silver maple rigging, and permit responsibility.
Document canopy spread, not just height
Quote prepMaples are judged by crown width as much as trunk height. Ask the contractor to note how far the limbs reach over the roof, driveway, or fence.
[5][6][7][9][14]Ask whether debris volume is included or priced separately
Quote prepA broad maple can generate more cleanup than the trunk size suggests. Confirm whether chips, brush, and log rounds are hauled or left onsite.
[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]For silver maple, ask about branch control rigging
Quote prepBrittle wood is the silver maple problem. Extra control lines, slower lowering, and more conservative cuts are normal on risky silver maple jobs.
[7][9][10][14]Verify permit requirements for sugar maple in your state
Quote prepPublic street trees and regulated trees can require municipal approval before removal. Do not assume a common maple is automatically owner-controlled.
[11][12][13]Compare line items, not headline numbers
Quote prepA low maple bid can hide hauling, stump work, access time, or permit help. Make sure every quote uses the same scope before you compare them.
[1][2][3][4]Maple Tree Removal Cost: Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to remove a large maple tree?
Large maples in the 60- to 80-foot range typically land around $800 to $2,000. Mature maples above 80 feet, or maples that sit close to structures, can move into the $3,000 to $4,000+ band.
[1][2][4][5][6][7][9]Is maple tree removal more expensive than pine?
Usually yes. Maple is a hardwood, and the crown is often much wider than a pine of the same height, which means more cutting time and more debris to haul away.
[1][2][4][5][6][7][9][14]Why is silver maple removal more expensive?
Silver maple is fast-growing but weak-wooded, so crews often need more rigging and slower branch control. It is also commonly planted close to homes, driveways, and other targets that make the job harder.
[7][9][10][14]Sources and Methodology
Updated May 2026Pricing on this page was checked against national tree-removal cost guides, maple species references, and public-tree rules, then adjusted into maple-specific planning bands using canopy spread, hardwood behavior, silver maple risk patterns, and contractor quote structure. Some mature-tree and species bands are synthesis ranges rather than one-row publisher tables, because general cost guides rarely isolate maple jobs at this level of detail.
- [1] Angi: Tree Removal Cost [2026 Data]November 18, 2025
- [2] HomeGuide: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost? (2026)February 4, 2026
- [3] Fixr: Tree Removal Cost | Cost to Cut Down a TreeJanuary 31, 2025
- [4] Today's Homeowner: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost? (2026)September 2025
- [5] UMass Amherst Extension: Sugar MapleAccessed March 22, 2026
- [6] University of Minnesota Extension: Red MapleReviewed in 2026
- [7] University of New Hampshire Extension: Know Your Trees: Silver MapleAccessed March 22, 2026
- [8] University of Minnesota Extension: Norway MapleReviewed in 2019
- [9] North Carolina State Extension: Acer saccharinum (Silver Maple)Accessed March 22, 2026
- [10] Arbor Day Foundation: Learn About Silver MapleAccessed March 22, 2026
- [11] Montpelier, VT: Tree Warden & Tree ManagementAccessed March 22, 2026
- [12] New Hampshire General Court: Removal of TreesAccessed March 22, 2026
- [13] Vermont League of Cities and Towns: Tree LawAccessed March 22, 2026
- [14] USDA Forest Service: Acer spp. (Maples)Accessed March 22, 2026