Poplar Tree Removal Cost GuideUpdated May 20269 min read

Built with national pricing guides, arborist references, and contractor-screening sources

Poplar Tree Removal Cost [2026]: Tulip Poplar, Lombardy Poplar & Cottonwood Pricing

Poplar is one of the fastest-growing yard-tree choices in the United States, which is exactly why many homeowners planted it and why many now regret it. A tree that solved privacy or shade quickly can become a brittle, root-spreading, professional removal project within a decade. A practical national planning range is $300 to $2,500, with small Lombardy poplars at the low end and large cottonwood or tulip poplar removals at the high end. [[1]]()[[3]]()[[5]]()[[7]]()[[9]]()[[14]]()

Avg Poplar Cost
$400 - $1,800Single tree planning range

Most single poplar removals price like medium-to-large shade trees, then move higher when height, weak wood, or limited access stack together.

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Lombardy Row Removal
$250 - $600/treePer-tree discount for 5+ trees

Rows of Lombardy poplars share setup, chipper staging, and cleanup paths. The per-tree number can drop when the whole screen is removed in one visit.

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Brittle Wood Premium
+10% - +30%Storm-damaged or weak-wood surcharge

Poplar wood is not a shortcut for crews. Weak limbs and uncertain tie-in points often mean slower rigging and more controlled lowering.

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Root Sucker Treatment
$150 - $500Post-removal sucker control

White poplar, cottonwood, and aspen roots can keep producing shoots after cutting. Budget for follow-up control instead of treating removal as a one-day event.

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Large Cottonwood
$1,200 - $3,00080-100 ft mature tree

Cottonwood can be one of the largest poplar removals, especially near water where equipment access is softer or constrained.

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Job Time
3 - 8 hrsHeight and access dependent

Small Lombardy work can finish quickly. Tall cottonwood, tulip poplar, or a full row removal can turn into a full-day crew schedule.

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How Much Does Poplar Tree Removal Cost?

Most single poplar tree removals cost $400 to $1,800. The full planning range is wider because "poplar" can mean a narrow Lombardy screen, a tall tulip poplar, a giant cottonwood, a clump-forming aspen, or a white poplar with aggressive suckering roots. Species and height drive the first quote, while access, weak wood, cleanup, and post-removal root control decide where the final invoice lands. [[1]]()[[3]]()[[5]]()[[7]]()[[8]]()[[9]]()[[13]]()[[14]]()

The price shock on poplar is usually tied to growth speed. A homeowner may remember planting a 10- or 15-foot screen tree, then discover that the same tree is now 60-80 feet and leaning over a fence, driveway, roof edge, or neighbor's yard. That turns a few-hundred-dollar young-tree job into a four-figure dismantling job. Use our tree removal cost by state guide when regional labor rates are likely to change the baseline. [[1]]()[[3]]()[[5]]()[[7]]()[[9]]()

Brittle wood does not make poplar cheaper to remove. It usually does the opposite. Weak limbs and low-density wood force crews to be careful with every climbing point, rigging anchor, and lowering sequence. If the tree is storm damaged, dead in the top, or cracked at a union, expect a 10%-30% weak-wood premium and compare urgency with the emergency tree removal cost guide before waiting through another storm cycle. [[1]]()[[3]]()[[4]]()[[5]]()[[14]]()

The table below separates the common poplar categories. Lombardy poplar is a row pricing problem, tulip poplar is a hardwood height problem, cottonwood is a size and water-edge access problem, and white poplar is a root-sucker aftercare problem.

Poplar Tree Removal Cost by Species and Size

Poplar pricing is not one-size-fits-all. Match the tree to its species before you compare bids, especially if one contractor is quoting a single tree and another is pricing an entire privacy row.

Poplar tree removal cost by species and sizeSpecies + size pricing
Poplar SpeciesTypical HeightSmallMediumLargeNotes
40-70 ft$250-$600$500-$1,100$800-$1,600Row discount available
60-90 ft$400-$800$700-$1,500$1,200-$2,500Hardwood, higher density
  • Tulip poplar, Liriodendron tulipifera, is one of the tallest native eastern hardwoods and can reach the 90-foot planning tier.
  • Unlike most trees casually called poplar, tulip poplar is a true hardwood, so cutting, lowering, and hauling costs run higher than weak-wood poplars.
  • The crown can be wide and heavy, so debris hauling often matters as much as the trunk cut.

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60-100 ft$400-$900$800-$1,800$1,400-$3,000Largest poplar species
20-50 ft$200-$500$400-$900$700-$1,400Often in clumps
40-70 ft$300-$700$600-$1,200$900-$1,800Invasive root suckers

Lombardy Poplar Row Removal: Bulk Pricing and What to Expect

Lombardy poplar is the classic fast privacy-screen trap. It grows quickly enough to hide a road, neighbor, or utility area within a few seasons, which made it popular for lot lines and back fences. The same trait creates the removal issue: a short row can become a tall, narrow wall of weak-wood trees before the owner has budgeted for mature-tree work. Purdue and disease references also flag Lombardy poplar as a tree with frequent canker and decline problems, so many old rows are being removed in batches rather than one by one. [[5]]()[[6]]()

A single Lombardy poplar commonly costs $250 to $600 when it is small or medium and access is easy, but row pricing is different. For five or more trees, contractors can usually share mobilization, chipper setup, traffic flow, and debris hauling, so a 15%-25% per-tree discount is realistic. For 10 or more trees, the discount can reach 25%-35%, and some crews quote the row as one project instead of writing a separate line for every trunk. [[1]]()[[3]]()[[4]]()

Timing matters. Lombardy decline is often gradual: one tree browns out, then two or three nearby trees follow, and the row begins to gap. Removing the row while the trees are half-dead is usually cheaper than waiting until every trunk is brittle and unsafe to climb. Once more than 30% of a row shows dieback, canker, or major dead tops, ask contractors to price full-row removal and staged removal so you can compare the real cost of delaying.

Plan the replacement before the screen is gone. Many homeowners replace Lombardy poplars with longer-lived privacy trees such as Thuja Green Giant or Eastern Red Cedar. If you are moving away from fast, short-lived screens, compare the maintenance tradeoffs in the cedar tree removal cost guide before planting the next row. Do not replant Lombardy poplar unless you are comfortable repeating the same removal cycle in the future.

Poplar Root Suckers After Removal: The Problem That Keeps Growing

Root suckers are new shoots that grow from living roots after the trunk has been cut. Poplar, white poplar, cottonwood, and aspen can keep pushing shoots from the old root system, sometimes far from the stump. Those shoots may appear in turf, beds, fence lines, and driveway cracks. If they are ignored, they can become a new thicket within a few growing seasons and make the original removal feel unfinished. [[11]]()[[12]]()[[13]]()[[14]]()[[15]]()

Chemical treatment is usually the most effective control when applied correctly to fresh growth or targeted cuts. Common professional approaches use labeled woody-plant herbicides such as triclopyr or glyphosate, with repeat visits through two or three growing seasons. Physical cutting is useful for appearance, but cutting alone can stimulate more shoots. Root barriers can help where roots are moving toward drainage, pavement, or a bed edge, and professional root-kill treatment typically adds $150 to $500. Keep this separate from ordinary stump removal cost. [[2]]()[[13]]()[[14]]()[[15]]()

Root sucker control$150-$500

Best when new shoots are already emerging from surviving roots. Ask whether follow-up visits are included.

Root barrier$200-$500

Useful when roots are moving toward a lawn edge, bed, driveway crack, or drainage line.

Ask about sucker control during the removal quote, not after the crew has left. Some contractors bundle "remove + root sucker control" into one package, which is often cheaper than calling a second provider later. A conservative budget is to hold back another $200 to $500 beyond the cutting and hauling quote.

Cottonwood Tree Removal: When the "Snow" Becomes a Problem

Cottonwood, Populus deltoides, is the poplar that often turns from shade tree into seasonal nuisance. Female cottonwoods release cottony seed fluff in late spring or early summer. The fluff can blanket lawns, clog air-conditioner filters, collect in gutters, and irritate people who already associate the season with allergy symptoms. In dry or wildfire-prone areas, that floating material is also treated as combustible debris that should be cleared away. [[8]]()[[9]]()[[10]]()

Cottonwood removal is also a size problem. Mature trees commonly move into the 60-100-foot pricing tier, where a standard job can cost $800 to $3,000depending on access, condition, and cleanup. Cottonwood often grows near water, so equipment may need to work around soft ground, drainage channels, or wetland buffers. That overlap is similar to the site constraints covered in our willow tree removal cost guide. [[1]]()[[3]]()[[8]]()[[9]]()[[16]]()

Interactive estimate

Poplar Tree Removal Cost Calculator

Use this calculator for poplar jobs where species, row count, brittle wood, region, and root sucker aftercare all change the bid.

Growth-regret estimate

Inputs tuned for poplar removals

Poplar pricing changes when a fast privacy screen becomes a row project, when brittle limbs need extra rigging, or when roots keep sending up new shoots after the tree is cut.

🌳 Removing a row of Lombardy poplars? Contractors typically offer 15%-35% bulk discounts for 5+ trees removed in a single visit. Get quotes that specify per-tree pricing for rows of 5 or more.

⚠️ Budget an additional $200-$500 for root sucker control after removal. Poplar roots can remain active and sprout new growth for years.

Can You Remove a Poplar Tree Yourself?

A small Lombardy poplar under 30 feet, growing in an open yard with no targets, may be manageable for an experienced DIYer with proper tools and a safe fall zone. That is the exception. Most poplar removals become professional jobs once the tree is taller than a single-story roof, growing near a structure, or part of a leaning row.

Do not treat brittle wood as a DIY advantage. Poplar can break unpredictably during cutting, and a limb that looks stable from the ground may fail when weight shifts. Avoid DIY when the tree is over 30 feet, near utility lines, storm damaged, dead in the top, or a large cottonwood or tulip poplar. A professional crew can use rigging, lifts, or controlled sectional cuts instead of relying on a single fall direction.[[4]]()[[5]]()[[7]]()[[9]]()[[14]]()

Poplar Tree Removal Permits

Most private-yard poplar removals do not need a special permit when the tree is small, dead, or clearly hazardous. The exceptions are local. Some cities protect large cottonwoods, street trees, heritage trees, or trees tied to development review. If the tree is on a lot line, right-of-way, or shared drainage corridor, check before scheduling the crew.

Cottonwood can add a second permit layer because it often grows near streams, wetlands, irrigation ditches, or drainage easements. If equipment must enter a regulated buffer or disturb wet soil, the question may be closer to a wetland review than a normal tree permit. Start with the tree removal permit cost guide and then confirm the local rule. [[8]]()[[9]]()[[16]]()

Poplar Tree Removal Cost: Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to remove a Lombardy poplar?

A single Lombardy poplar typically costs $250-$1,600 to remove, depending on height. For rows of 5 or more trees, bulk discounts of 15%-35% are common. A row of 10 mature Lombardy poplars might cost $3,000-$8,000 total, compared with $5,000-$16,000 if removed as separate one-off jobs.

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Why do poplar trees need to be removed so often?

Poplars grow extremely fast, which is why they are popular for quick privacy screens. The tradeoff is that they reach problematic height quickly, develop brittle limbs, and spread aggressive roots. Lombardy poplars also have a short useful landscape life before canker and decline become common.

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Will poplar roots keep sprouting after I remove the tree?

Yes. Poplar roots can remain active after trunk removal and send up root suckers for several years. Budget $200-$500 for sucker control or root treatment, and expect follow-up work through two or three growing seasons.

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Is tulip poplar removal more expensive than other poplars?

Often, yes. Despite the name, tulip poplar is a true hardwood and one of the tallest native eastern trees. A medium or large tulip poplar commonly runs $700-$2,500 because height, wood density, and canopy volume all add labor.

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How do I get a bulk discount for removing a row of poplars?

Ask each contractor for row removal or bulk removal pricing for 5+ trees, and make sure the bid states a per-tree number and a total row price. Most contractors can discount the per-tree rate when equipment setup, chipper staging, and debris hauling happen in one visit.

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Before you compare poplar quotes, count the trees and the suckers.

Ask whether the bid is single-tree, row-removal, or post-removal root control. That one distinction explains most price gaps on Lombardy poplar and white poplar jobs.

Row count • Brittle wood • Root sucker aftercare

Sources

Audit trail

Pricing ranges and risk notes are tied to national pricing guides, arborist hiring guidance, poplar species references, root-sucker and invasive-plant references, cottonwood notes, and wetland permitting context.

  1. [1] LawnStarter: Pricing Guide: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost?December 27, 2025
  2. [2] LawnStarter: Pricing Guide: How Much Does Stump Grinding Cost in 2026?December 27, 2025
  3. [3] Lawn Love: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost in 2026?December 27, 2025
  4. [4] International Society of Arboriculture: Why Hire an Arborist?2021
  5. [5] Purdue Extension: Lombardy PoplarsAccessed May 2026
  6. [6] Pacific Northwest Pest Management Handbooks: Poplar: CankerAccessed May 2026
  7. [7] USDA Forest Service: Yellow-Poplar SilvicsAccessed May 2026
  8. [8] NC State Extension: Populus deltoidesAccessed May 2026
  9. [9] USDA Forest Service: Eastern Cottonwood SilvicsAccessed May 2026
  10. [10] Purdue Extension: Question: Why Are My Cottonwood Trees Shedding?Accessed May 2026
  11. [11] NC State Extension: Populus tremuloidesAccessed May 2026
  12. [12] USDA Forest Service: Quaking Aspen SilvicsAccessed May 2026
  13. [13] NC State Extension: Populus albaAccessed May 2026
  14. [14] Utah State University Extension: White PoplarAccessed May 2026
  15. [15] Texas Invasives: White PoplarAccessed May 2026
  16. [16] U.S. EPA: Permit Program Under CWA Section 404Accessed May 2026