How Much Does Tree Removal Cost in Chicago?
A single-tree removal in Chicago usually costs $350 to $2,500. The common 30- to 60-foot project - ash, maple, elm, spruce, or a medium oak - often lands around $600 to $1,500. That runs about 10%-20% above the national average. [[1]]()[[2]]()[[3]]()[[4]]()
Chicago is pricier because labor and insurance expectations are high, lots are often tight, and mature hardwoods dominate many neighborhoods. Dense streets, alleys, garages, overhead wires, and parkway trees create more staging work than a simple open-yard removal.
The local surprise is seasonality. Winter removals in December through March can be 10%-20% cheaper than summer because demand drops and leafless trees are easier to inspect. Spring brings ice-damage discovery, summer brings thunderstorm demand, and fall stays steady as homeowners prepare before snow. [[5]]()[[6]]()[[7]]()
Area matters too. Chicago city lots and Evanston can cost more because of parking, density, and local review. Naperville, DuPage County, Lake County, Will County, and Kane County are more suburban, but large hardwoods and EAB dead ash still push bids upward.
Tree Removal Cost in Chicago by Tree Type
Chicago pricing starts with ash because EAB dead trees are still a major driver. Oaks and silver maples add hardwood weight and broad canopy spread, while elm, cottonwood, spruce, and linden pricing depends on condition, access, and season.
| Tree Type | Small (< 30 ft) | Medium (30-60 ft) | Large (60-80 ft) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $350-$750 | $650-$1,400 | $1,200-$2,200 | Dead tree surcharge applies | |
See the dedicated Ash (EAB-affected) pricing guide for species-specific factors. | ||||
| $400-$850 | $800-$1,600 | $1,400-$2,500 | Hardwood, wide canopy | |
| $350-$750 | $700-$1,400 | $1,200-$2,200 | Brittle wood risk | |
| $350-$700 | $650-$1,300 | $1,100-$2,000 | Dutch Elm Disease legacy | |
| $300-$650 | $600-$1,200 | $1,000-$1,800 | Fast-growing, brittle | |
| $300-$650 | $600-$1,200 | $1,000-$1,800 | Common in suburbs | |
| $300-$650 | $600-$1,200 | $1,000-$1,800 | Common street tree | |
Compare the state baseline in the tree removal cost by state guide, but remember that Chicago's winter discount and summer storm demand can move the same tree into a different quote band.
Winter Tree Removal in Chicago: Why It's Often Cheaper and When to Do It
Winter removal is the counterintuitive Chicago bargain. Many homeowners assume snow makes tree work impossible, but arborists often prefer dormant, leafless trees for planned removals. Crews can see the branch structure clearly, demand is lower, and frozen ground can reduce lawn damage from equipment. [[5]]()[[6]]()
January and February often have the most open contractor schedules and the best non-emergency pricing.
Schedule for a clear stretch. Ice, new snow, and subzero cold can slow climbing and equipment.
Ice-broken limbs can hang in the canopy and drop later. Treat them as urgent hazards, not routine trimming.
Winter removal can reduce stress on the property and get dead ash handled before spring demand returns.
Winter is not always easy. Ice on limbs, fresh snow, and subzero cold can slow equipment and climbing work. The best target is a clear January or February stretch without heavy snowfall in the forecast.
The main winter hazard is the hanging broken limb, often called a widow maker. Ice can crack a limb without dropping it immediately; spring thaw then exposes the risk. Treat suspended limbs over roofs, cars, sidewalks, or play areas as urgent work and use the emergency tree removal cost guide. [[7]]()[[20]]()
If you have a known EAB ash, winter also helps you schedule before the spring rush. Removing a dead ash while the ground is frozen can be easier on the yard and safer than waiting for another season of decay.
Emerald Ash Borer in Chicago: Dead Ash Tree Removal Costs and Urgency
Emerald Ash Borer reshaped Chicago's urban forest. The region planted large numbers of ash trees, and EAB has made dead or declining ash one of the most common urgent removals in Cook County and the surrounding suburbs. [[8]]()[[9]]()
Dead ash deteriorates quickly. Bark loosens, limbs become brittle, and climbing points become less reliable. A tree that might have been removed with normal rigging soon requires a bucket truck, lift, or crane. Budget 20%-40% above a comparable healthy tree and plan removal within about 12 months of confirmed death when possible. See the dedicated ash tree removal cost guide. [[8]]()[[9]]()[[10]]()
EAB wood-movement rules have changed over time. USDA removed the federal domestic EAB quarantine, but Illinois homeowners should still confirm current IDOA, municipal, and contractor handling rules before moving ash logs or firewood. A written quote should say how ash wood will be chipped, hauled, or disposed. [[8]]()[[10]]()[[19]]()
Do You Need a Permit to Remove a Tree in Chicago?
Chicago's key distinction is public parkway tree versus private-yard tree. Parkway trees are city-managed and should go through 311 or the Department of Streets and Sanitation. Most ordinary private-yard removals are simpler, but Evanston, Naperville, Oak Park, Schaumburg, HOAs, and development rules can be stricter. Start with the tree removal permit cost guide, then verify your municipality. [[12]]()[[13]]()[[14]]()[[15]]()
| City / Area | Permit or Review Pattern |
|---|---|
| City of Chicago | Parkway trees are city-managed public trees. Contact 311 or the Department of Streets and Sanitation before any work. Private-yard removals are usually simpler, but business licensing and insurance still matter. [[12]]()[[17]]() |
| Evanston | Evanston regulates protected trees and has its own private-tree permit process. Verify DBH thresholds and replacement requirements before removal. [[13]]() |
| Naperville | Naperville's tree preservation rules are more relevant for development, protected trees, and parkway trees than routine small private removals. Check before removing large oaks, elms, or street trees. [[14]]() |
| Oak Park | Oak Park's public-tree rules are stricter than ordinary private-yard maintenance. Confirm village rules when a tree is near the parkway, sidewalk, or right-of-way. [[15]]() |
| Schaumburg | Street trees and right-of-way trees require municipal coordination. Private-property requirements can differ by project scope and HOA. [[12]]()[[17]]() |
How to Verify a Tree Removal Contractor's License in Chicago
Illinois screening starts with IDFPR when a contractor claims a state license and with the City of Chicago when the work is inside city limits. There is no single universal tree-removal number, so verify the actual license, the company name, and the business record. [[16]]()[[17]]()
Ask for a certificate of insurance before work starts. For meaningful protection, the certificate should show general liability coverage, commonly at least $1,000,000, and workers' compensation or equivalent workers' injury coverage. Confirm the policy is active and the company name matches the bid. ISA Certified Arborist credentials help with risk assessment, but they are not a contractor license. Be careful with crews that cannot show local references, written scope, insurance, or verifiable records. [[18]]()
Chicago business licensing also matters for city work. Parkway work especially should be done by a contractor who understands local permitting and public-tree rules.[[17]]()
Interactive estimate
Chicago Tree Removal Cost Calculator
This local calculator starts with Chicago, IL, and Ash selected, then adjusts for winter scheduling, EAB dead ash risk, area, permit help, and stump grinding.
Local estimate
Inputs tuned for Chicago seasons and dead ash risk
Chicago pricing starts with Ash selected, then adjusts for winter scheduling, EAB dead ash risk, area, permit or parkway coordination, and stump grinding.
How to Get the Best Tree Removal Quote in Chicago
Get at least three written quotes when the tree is not an active safety hazard. A 30%-50% spread is common when one quote includes hauling, insurance, and stump work while another only includes cutting. Require the quote to list removal, hauling, stump grinding if needed, and cleanup depth. Stump work is often separate, so compare the stump removal cost guide before assuming it is included.
The best Chicago bid window is January through February, or a quiet fall window before the first snow. For ash removals, ask how the wood will be handled so the quote reflects current IDOA and municipal handling rules.
Tree Removal Cost Chicago: Frequently Asked Questions
How much does tree removal cost in Chicago?
Most Chicago tree removal projects cost $500-$1,800. Small trees under 30 feet start around $350; large oak or EAB-killed ash trees over 60 feet can reach $2,500. Chicago usually runs 10%-20% above the national average.
Is tree removal cheaper in winter in Chicago?
Yes. December through March is often 10%-20% cheaper than summer because demand drops and crews have more open schedules. January and February are usually the best quote window for non-emergency removals.
How much does it cost to remove an EAB-killed ash tree in Chicago?
EAB-killed ash removal commonly costs $400-$2,200 depending on size and access, often 20%-40% more than healthy-tree removal. Dead ash becomes brittle and less climbable, so early removal is cheaper and safer.
Do I need a permit to remove a tree in Chicago?
Chicago parkway trees are city-managed public trees and require city coordination. Most ordinary private-yard removals are simpler, but Evanston, Naperville, Oak Park, Schaumburg, and HOAs can have their own rules.
How do I verify a tree removal contractor in Chicago?
Use IDFPR to verify any state professional license a contractor claims, check Chicago business licensing for city work, and ask for ISA Certified Arborist credentials when risk assessment matters. Always require liability and workers' compensation insurance.
Sources
Audit trail- [1] LawnStarter: Tree removal costMay 2026
- [2] Lawn Love: Tree removal costMay 2026
- [3] Angi: Tree removal costMay 2026
- [4] U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Occupational employment and wage statisticsMay 2026
- [5] Morton Arboretum: Winter injury to trees and shrubsMay 2026
- [6] University of Minnesota Extension: Pruning trees and shrubsMay 2026
- [7] National Weather Service: Winter storm safetyMay 2026
- [8] Illinois Department of Agriculture: Emerald Ash BorerMay 2026
- [9] Morton Arboretum: Emerald Ash BorerMay 2026
- [10] USDA APHIS: Emerald Ash Borer deregulationMay 2026
- [11] Morton Arboretum: Dutch Elm DiseaseMay 2026
- [12] City of Chicago: Trees and forestry servicesMay 2026
- [13] City of Evanston: Tree preservation ordinanceMay 2026
- [14] City of Naperville: TreesMay 2026
- [15] Village of Oak Park: TreesMay 2026
- [16] Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation: License lookupMay 2026
- [17] City of Chicago Data Portal: Business licensesMay 2026
- [18] International Society of Arboriculture: Find an arboristMay 2026
- [19] Illinois Department of Agriculture: Invasive species and regulated pestsMay 2026
- [20] OSHA: Tree care hazardsMay 2026