What Is Tree Removal Cost Per Foot?
National Average Per-Foot Rates
Tree removal cost per foot is one of the most practical ways to understand why quotes change so much with height. Published national references still cluster in the broad range of roughly $9.50 to $14.50 per foot for a useful screening model, with some contractors quoting around $10 to $14 per foot for ordinary jobs. That range lines up with national all-in averages in the high hundreds per tree, but it becomes far more useful once you start comparing a 25-foot ornamental tree to an 80-foot hardwood removal. [1][2][3][4]
The reason homeowners search this pricing model is simple: a total-only quote hides too much. A per-foot framework gives you a way to ask what the contractor is charging for the actual tree size before species, access, and hazard adjustments are layered in. It does not replace a site visit, but it does make quote comparison more transparent than a single lump-sum number with no visible logic behind it. [1][2][3]
Per-Foot vs Flat Rate Pricing
Per-foot pricing works best as a comparison model, not as a law of nature. Many crews still prefer flat-rate pricing because they are really quoting a complete project scope: height, DBH, access, risk, debris, and equipment. That is why homeowners should treat per-foot rates as a way to understand quote mechanics, then verify the real total with an itemized written estimate. [1][2][3]
The best way to use this page is to think in layers. Start with a per-foot band, then check how much species, condition, location, stump work, and debris hauling move the final number. That layered method is what most contractors are already doing internally, even when they hand you a flat total. [2][3][4]
Tree Removal Cost Per Foot Calculator
How to Use the Calculator
Enter the height, choose the species, pick the tree condition, and then choose the access scenario that best matches the site. The estimate updates instantly and is designed to show how a basic per-foot rate stretches once real-world variables are applied.[1][2][3][4]
Your Estimated Cost
This is a screening estimate built from height bands plus species, condition, and access adjustments. It is designed to help you compare quote logic, not replace a site visit.
Understanding Your Estimate
The calculator starts from national height bands, not from a fantasy perfectly linear rate. That means a 90-foot tree is screened at a higher per-foot band than a 30-foot tree before species or structure proximity are considered. The output is a planning tool for comparing quote logic, not a binding arborist bid. [1][2][3][4]
If a local contractor quote lands outside the screening range, do not assume the quote is wrong. Ask what changed the math. Common reasons include difficult access, a protected species, hidden decay, unusually heavy canopy spread, or add-ons such as hauling and stump work being bundled into one total. The calculator is most useful when it helps you ask sharper follow-up questions about the scope you are actually buying. [1][2][3][4]
Tree Removal Cost Per Foot by Height
Height is still the single strongest driver of per-foot price, but it does not work in a straight line. Costs rise in steps as the job crosses from ground work into ladder work, then from ladder work into aerial access, and finally into crane-or-specialist territory. That staircase effect is why a 100-foot tree does not cost merely twice as much as a 50-foot tree. [1][2][3][4]
| Tree Size | Height | Per-Foot Rate | Total Cost Estimate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🌱 Small | <30 ft | $5-$10/ft | $150-$500 | Simple access, no equipment needed[1][2][3][4] |
| 🌳 Medium | 30-60 ft | $7-$14/ft | $200-$1,000 | Ladder work, standard crew[1][2][3] |
| 🌲 Large | 60-80 ft | $10-$15/ft | $800-$1,500 | Aerial equipment often required[1][2][3][4] |
| 🏔️ Very Large | 80-100 ft | $12-$18/ft | $1,000-$2,000 | Crane or boom lift, multi-person crew[1][2][3][4] |
| 🌳 Giant | 100 ft+ | $15-$25/ft | $1,500-$3,300 | Specialist crew, permits likely[1][2][3][4] |
Small Trees Under 30 Feet
Small trees are where the per-foot model looks the cleanest on paper, but even here the math is not perfectly linear. Many contractors are really balancing a minimum trip charge against easy cutting and cleanup. That is why a 12-foot ornamental removal may not be much cheaper than a 25-foot ornamental in the same yard. The crew still has to mobilize, protect the site, cut the stem, load debris, and handle disposal or chipping.
For homeowners, the main question in this band is not height alone. It is whether the tree is tucked behind a fence, leaning over landscaping, or paired with stump grinding and haul-away. Those scope items often move the quote faster than the last few feet of height. [1][2][3][4]
Medium Trees 30-60 Feet
Medium trees are the sweet spot for per-foot pricing because height starts to matter more than the minimum service call, yet the job still stays within the range of a standard residential crew on many sites. Quotes spread widely here because species and access finally start showing up in a visible way. A 45-foot pine in an open yard and a 45-foot maple over a fence are not the same project, even if the height matches.
If your tree falls into this height band, ask whether the quote assumes straightforward felling or controlled lowering. That single difference can explain why one estimate lands near the bottom of the range and another lands near the top. [1][2][3]
Large Trees 60-80 Feet
Once a tree crosses about 60 feet, the per-foot rate usually stops behaving like a simple extension of the medium-tree band. This is the point where lift access, advanced climbing, more rigging, and longer cleanup windows become much more common. Contractors are no longer pricing only saw time and haul-away. They are pricing control, fall-zone management, crew coordination, and the extra time required to lower bigger sections safely.
This is also the band where homeowners should stop comparing prices by total alone. A 70-foot oak in a tight backyard may deserve a much higher per-foot quote than a 70-foot pine with easy drop space, even before stump work is considered. [1][2][3][4]
Very Large Trees 80-100 Feet
Very large trees live in the zone where the removal plan itself becomes a major part of the price. Jobs in this band commonly involve boom lifts, crane planning, extended rigging, lawn protection, multiple truck cycles, or extra traffic and utility awareness. The result is that every extra foot carries more cost than it did in smaller bands because the job method has become more specialized, not just taller.
Homeowners with trees in this class should expect site photos, a more careful crew plan, and a wider spread between low and high quotes. It is normal for two reputable companies to price the same tree differently if one intends to use more equipment and the other intends to use more climbing labor. [1][2][3][4]
Giant Trees Over 100 Feet
At 100 feet and above, tree removal becomes a specialist project rather than a routine residential service. The per-foot number still helps frame the job, but the total quote often reflects logistics as much as cutting. Contractors may need heavier equipment, longer booking windows, more experienced climbers, special staging, or permit coordination. That is why this band can extend well into four-figure territory even before optional services are added.
For giant trees, the best homeowner question is not 'what is your rate per foot?' It is 'what removal method are you pricing, and what risks or add-ons could still change the total?' That produces a better comparison than height math alone. [1][2][3][4]
Why Per-Foot Rates Are Not Linear
A 100-foot tree is not just 2x a 50-foot tree- 60 ft+ jobs often need aerial lift rental in the $300-$600 per day range.
- Taller trees usually need larger crews and more time spent rigging sections safely.
- Debris volume rises faster than height because crown spread and section count both increase.
- Higher trees create higher insurance exposure and more expensive fall-zone planning.
- Large removals often trigger additional truck cycles, lawn protection, and structure protection.
Real-world example: a 30-foot pine might average about $10 per foot, while a 90-foot pine can average closer to $15 per foot because the whole removal method changes.
[1][2][3][4]Tree Removal Cost Per Foot by Species
Species is the next major rate shifter after height. Oak, ash, elm, and mature maples generally cost more per foot than pine, spruce, fir, or poplar because the wood is heavier, the canopy is broader, or the structure is more failure-prone when diseased. Palm is the main exception because the branch profile is simpler even when the tree is tall. [1][2][3][4]
| Tree Species | Per-Foot Rate | Why Higher / Lower? | Typical Height Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🌳 Oak | $13-$20/ft | Densest wood, wide canopy[2][3][4] | 60-100 ft |
| 🌲 Pine | $8-$13/ft | Softwood, straight trunk[1][2][3] | 40-100 ft |
| 🍁 Maple | $10-$16/ft | Medium-hard wood, dense canopy[2][3][4] | 40-80 ft |
| 🌴 Palm | $7-$12/ft | No branches, lighter wood[2][3] | 15-100 ft |
| 🌿 Elm | $10-$16/ft | Interlocked grain, heavy canopy[2][4] | 60-80 ft |
| 🌸 Cherry | $9-$14/ft | Medium hard, moderate size[1][2] | 30-50 ft |
| 🌳 Poplar | $7-$11/ft | Lightweight, fast removal[1][2] | 50-80 ft |
| 🌲 Spruce / Fir | $8-$12/ft | Softwood, standard job profile[1][2][3] | 40-70 ft |
| 🍂 Ash | $11-$17/ft | EAB-infested trees add risk[2][3][4] | 50-80 ft |
| 🌿 Willow | $9-$15/ft | Multiple trunks and water-heavy limbs[1][2] | 30-50 ft |
Oak Tree Per-Foot Removal Cost
Oak usually leads the premium tier because dense wood, broad branching, and heavy debris all increase labor. A tall oak is rarely just a trunk-removal problem. It is often a canopy-management problem, a rigging problem, and a cleanup problem at the same time. That is why oak per-foot pricing often lands meaningfully above pine, spruce, or poplar.
If the oak is mature, near a structure, or protected by local ordinance, expect the final number to be shaped by canopy spread and permit friction as much as by pure height. That is also why homeowners comparing oak quotes should ask about debris volume and lowering method, not just the headline rate. [2][3][4]
Pine Tree Per-Foot Removal Cost
Pine usually prices in the lower tier because the wood is lighter and the form is often more vertical than hardwood canopy trees. On an uncomplicated site, this makes per-foot pricing easier to understand and easier to compare. A clean pine removal in an open yard is one of the better examples of when the quoted rate may feel close to the real job logic.
That said, height still matters. Very tall pines can become expensive quickly because they often exceed the comfortable limits of simple ladder or ground-based work. When a pine reaches major height, the softwood advantage stays real, but it no longer cancels out equipment and hazard premiums. [1][2][3]
Maple Tree Per-Foot Removal Cost
Maple sits in the middle-to-upper part of the rate spectrum because mature specimens often combine medium-hard wood with dense branching and broad crowns. In practical terms, that means more cuts, more cleanup, and more weight in every lowered section than many homeowners expect. A maple is rarely the cheapest tree per foot unless it is very small and very accessible.
Maple pricing becomes especially sensitive to fences, patios, roofs, and ornamental landscaping below the canopy. The reason is simple: the crown architecture forces more careful dismantling, which pushes both labor hours and cleanup time upward. [2][3][4]
Palm Tree Per-Foot Removal Cost
Palm is the main outlier in per-foot comparisons because the structure is simpler than a branching shade tree. There are fewer large lateral limbs to rig down, which is why palm often comes in below hardwood pricing at the same height. That does not make tall palms cheap in absolute terms, but it does explain why the rate per foot can look more favorable.
The savings narrow as palms grow taller or sit close to pools, roofs, or power lines. Once lifts, specialty access, or extra debris handling are involved, the price starts rising for the same reason it does on other tall removals: the work method becomes more controlled and more equipment-heavy. [2][3]
Elm and Ash Per-Foot Removal Cost
Elm and ash deserve to be grouped together because both can move into premium pricing for reasons that go beyond ordinary wood density. Elm often has a broad, awkward structure that is time-consuming to rig near structures. Ash, meanwhile, has become a higher-risk category in many markets because Emerald Ash Borer decline leaves many trees brittle and less predictable than healthy specimens of the same size.
That is why two trees with similar height can produce very different quotes depending on health status. A standing dead ash may outprice a healthy elm or maple simply because the crew has to slow down, change cut strategy, and assume less about how the wood will behave. [2][3][4]
Other Common Species
Cherry, poplar, spruce, fir, and willow fill the middle and lower-middle bands, but each carries its own tradeoffs. Poplar stays relatively economical because the wood is light, while willow can climb in price because multi-stem growth and water-heavy limbs complicate control. Spruce and fir often resemble pine in pricing, although branch density and access can narrow the gap.
For everyday quote comparison, the most useful shortcut is to think about three buckets: light softwoods, middle-density shade trees, and premium hardwood or hazard trees. That framework will usually explain most per-foot rate differences before you even get to site access and add-ons. [1][2][3][4]
The easiest rule of thumb is this: softwoods tend to sit at the low end of the rate band, medium-density shade trees live in the middle, and dense hardwoods or diseased trees move toward the premium tier. [2][3][4]
Tree Removal Cost Per Foot by Location
Labor market differences are large enough that a perfectly identical tree can price very differently in a Pacific Coast metro versus an open-access Midwestern suburb. That is why national averages are useful for screening, but region-aware pricing is better for actual budget planning. [2][3][4]
| Region | Per-Foot Rate Adjustment | vs National Average | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northeast (NY, NJ, MA) | $12-$18/ft | +25%-35% | High labor market and dense suburban access[2][3][4] |
| Pacific Coast (CA, WA, OR) | $13-$20/ft | +30%-40% | Highest labor costs and complex urban sites[2][3][4] |
| Southeast (FL, GA, SC) | $8-$13/ft | -10%-15% | Competitive market with strong crew density[1][2][3] |
| Midwest (OH, IN, IL) | $7-$12/ft | -15%-25% | Lower labor costs and more open-access lots[1][2][3] |
| Southwest (TX, AZ, NM) | $9-$14/ft | 0%-10% | Near national average with mixed access conditions[1][2][3] |
| Mountain West (CO, UT, MT) | $10-$16/ft | +10%-20% | Terrain, travel time, and fewer specialty crews[2][3][4] |
Northeast and Pacific Coast Rates
The Northeast and Pacific Coast consistently sit at the top of the national range because labor, insurance, travel time, and urban complexity all push bids upward. Dense neighborhoods, tighter access, older housing stock, and stricter local rules can all raise the effective price per foot even when the tree itself is ordinary. Homeowners in these regions should expect their local rate band to run noticeably above national averages.
In practice, this means a quote that feels high compared with a national article may still be perfectly normal for New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, California, Washington, or Oregon. Local market conditions matter as much as national reference numbers. [2][3][4]
Midwest and Southeast Rates
The Midwest and Southeast often produce the most competitive per-foot pricing, but for different reasons. Many Midwestern markets benefit from lower labor costs and more open-access lots, while many Southeastern markets benefit from a high concentration of tree-service crews competing for routine residential work. That competition can keep standard removals close to or even below the national planning band.
Lower average pricing does not mean every job is cheap. Hazard trees, storm-damaged removals, and structure-adjacent hardwoods can still climb quickly. What it usually means is that ordinary open-yard jobs have less regional overhead pushing the baseline rate upward. [1][2][3]
Southwest and Mountain West Rates
The Southwest often lands close to the national middle, while the Mountain West can run higher because terrain, travel distance, and limited specialty-crew supply change the math. In flatter suburban Southwest markets, many jobs remain straightforward enough to price near the baseline band. In mountain and foothill markets, access and transport can move the quote even before the saw starts cutting.
For homeowners in these regions, the key variable is not only wage level. It is whether the contractor can get equipment close to the tree and whether the crew has to price extra setup, travel, or slope management into the job. [2][3][4]
How Per-Foot Tree Removal Pricing Works
The Per-Foot Pricing Formula
Total Cost = Base Per-Foot Rate × Tree Height × Species Adjustment × Condition Adjustment × Location Adjustment + Add-On Services
Example: a 60-foot oak near a fence starts with a generic height-led rate, then gets adjusted upward for dense hardwood wood, controlled lowering, and common add-ons like stump grinding. That is why one contractor may still quote a flat number even though the underlying math behaves a lot like a per-foot model. [1][2][3][4]
Per-Foot vs Flat Rate Comparison
| Factor | Per-Foot Pricing | Flat Rate Pricing |
|---|---|---|
| Transparency | High - easy to compare rates across tree heights | Medium - total price only unless itemized |
| Best For | Tall trees where height is a leading cost driver | Routine trees in ordinary open-yard conditions |
| Risk of Surprise | Lower if the contractor is truly using a visible rate band | Medium when add-ons and complexity are folded into one number |
| Complexity Handling | Can understate access or hazard difficulty if used too literally | Lets the contractor absorb complexity into a single scope |
| Industry Usage | ~40% of quotes use a per-foot frame or close variant | ~60% still lean on all-in site-assessed flat pricing |
Real-World Per-Foot Cost Examples
The fastest way to understand the model is to see it applied to real scenarios. These example bands are not promises, but they show how species, height, and access stack together in the way homeowners actually experience quote differences. [1][2][3][4]
Species: Pine | Height: 25 ft | Site: Open yard
Estimated total: $200-$250
Stump grind: +$100
Final: $300-$350
This is what people hope per-foot pricing will do: a relatively clean, low-risk tree with no major access or structure complications.
[1][2][3]Species: Maple | Height: 45 ft | Site: Near fence
Estimated total: $540-$720
Stump grind: +$150
Final: $690-$870
The fence does not change the height, but it does change the way the tree has to be lowered. This is where the per-foot rate starts to climb beyond simple height math.
[2][3][4]Species: Oak | Height: 70 ft | Site: Near structure
Estimated total: $1,050-$1,400
Stump grind: +$250
Final: $1,300-$1,650
This is a classic example of a job where species density and target proximity move the rate far faster than height alone.
[2][3][4]Species: Dead elm | Height: 90 ft | Site: Open yard
Estimated total: $1,260-$1,620
Stump grind: +$300
Final: $1,560-$1,920
Even with open access, the dead-tree premium keeps the rate elevated because decay and brittleness create more uncertainty for the crew.
[2][3][4]8 Key Factors That Adjust Your Per-Foot Rate
Per-foot pricing is only helpful if you understand what moves the rate. These are the main adjustments homeowners should expect to see across quote comparisons. [1][2][3][4]
Tree Height and Equipment Needs
Height is the single biggest rate driver because per-foot pricing accelerates once the job moves from ground work to aerial work.
The biggest jump usually happens once the tree crosses the 60-foot threshold.[1][2][3][4]Wood Density and Species
Hardwoods such as oak, maple, elm, and diseased ash generally carry a premium because they cut slower, weigh more, and create heavier debris.
Species can move the rate band 30% to 60% even before access is considered.[2][3][4]Proximity to Structures
Trees over roofs, fences, patios, driveways, or pools must usually be removed in controlled sections rather than felled outright.
Near-structure jobs can add 30% to 60% to the effective per-foot rate.[1][2][3][4]Tree Condition (Dead vs Healthy)
Dead, decayed, split, or storm-damaged trees cost more per foot because the crew has to slow down and manage unpredictable movement.
Expect a dead-tree premium instead of a discount on most standing hazards.[2][3][4]Site Accessibility
Narrow gates, slopes, soft ground, and backyard-only access can block machines and force hand-rigging or extra carry-out labor.
Access is one of the easiest ways for a flat quote to drift above a simple height formula.[1][2][3]Trunk Diameter (DBH)
Height is not the whole job. A thick trunk means larger cuts, heavier rounds, slower rigging, and more saw time per section.
Two trees of the same height can remove very differently if one is 12 inches DBH and the other is 36 inches DBH.[2][4]Permits and Regulations
Protected trees and local ordinance review add flat cost and scheduling delay, even when the contractor is already using a per-foot pricing framework.
Permit cost is flat, but permit friction still changes the real project cost per foot.[2][4][6]Geographic Location
Labor markets vary sharply across the U.S., which is why the same 60-foot tree can price far higher in coastal metros than in lower-cost inland markets.
Regional rate differences can move the per-foot cost by 40% or more.[2][3][4]If you only remember one rule, remember this: the per-foot rate is a transparency tool, not a claim that every contractor prices every tree by a single linear equation.
DIY vs Professional - Per-Foot Cost Reality
DIY looks cheaper on paper because homeowners compare saw rental to a contractor invoice. That comparison misses haul-away, PPE, permit handling, stump work, disposal, and the risk cost of getting the removal wrong. Once those hidden items are added, the real all-in DIY cost per foot often ends up much closer to professional pricing than people expect. [2][3][4]
| Factor | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Effective Per-Foot Cost | $4-$8/ft for tools only | $9.50-$14.50/ft for full service |
| Hidden Per-Foot Costs | Chainsaw rental, disposal, PPE, permits, injury risk | Normally bundled or clearly itemized |
| True All-In Cost | $8-$15/ft once real extras are counted | $9.50-$14.50/ft on routine jobs |
| Recommended For | Only very small trees under about 20 ft in open yards | Any tree above ladder range or near anything valuable |
Rule of thumb: if the tree is above 20 feet, near anything valuable, or in poor condition, stop comparing tool rental to professional pricing and compare risk-adjusted project scope instead. [2][3][4][6]
That distinction matters because per-foot pricing is often mistaken for a commodity rate. It is not. Professional removal is a bundled risk-management service that includes training, insurance, crew coordination, site protection, and cleanup discipline. When homeowners try to recreate that with rental tools, the missing line item is usually not labor. It is the cost of a mistake. [2][4][6]
Add-On Services and Per-Foot Cost Impact
Most disputes over per-foot pricing happen because one quote includes the extras and another does not. Stump grinding, hauling, chipping, lifts, and permit help can change the effective cost per foot more than a few feet of height. [1][2][3][5]
| Add-On Service | Cost Range | Per-Foot Impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stump Grinding | $100-$400 | +$1-$4/ft equivalent | Usually the most common add-on and often quoted separately.[3][5] |
| Stump Removal (full) | $200-$800 | +$2-$8/ft equivalent | Higher than grinding because it includes root-ball extraction and spoil handling.[3][5] |
| Debris Hauling | $50-$150/load | +$0.50-$2/ft equivalent | Often more important on broad-canopy hardwoods than on simple conifers.[1][3][5] |
| Crane / Aerial Lift | $200-$600/day | +$2-$6/ft on tall trees | Usually shows up on 60-ft-plus jobs or anything over structures.[2][4] |
| Permit Filing | $60-$500 | Flat add-on | Adds paperwork cost and often adds delay risk, not just dollars.[4][6] |
| Wood Chipping | $75-$125/hr | +$0.75-$2/ft equivalent | Useful when you want mulch or lower haul-away volume.[3][5] |
| Log Splitting | $75-$200 | Flat add-on | Can be worthwhile on species with good firewood value.[3][5] |
| Arborist Assessment | $75-$150 | Often free with quote | Especially useful for dead, leaning, or permit-sensitive trees.[6][7] |
This is why two quotes that advertise the same per-foot rate can still produce very different totals. One company may be pricing a bare removal only, while another is pricing grinding, chips, haul-away, and permit handling in the same proposal. The cleanest way to compare bids is to separate the tree-removal rate from the accessory scope, then decide which extras you actually want included on day one. [1][2][3][5]
How to Get Accurate Per-Foot Quotes
The best quote process is not about hunting for the single lowest headline rate. It is about forcing clarity on height, species, access, add-ons, and written scope so every bidder is pricing the same job. [1][2][3][6]
Homeowners usually save the most money when they improve quote quality first. Once every bidder is working from the same assumptions, it becomes much easier to spot hidden hauling fees, vague stump language, or a suspiciously low price that leaves out cleanup. Accurate quotes are less about negotiation tricks and more about making the scope impossible to misunderstand. [1][2][3][5][6]
Measure your tree before calling
StepGet a working height estimate and a rough DBH measurement so you can compare quotes on the same starting assumptions instead of relying on vague descriptions.
[1][2][3]Request an itemized per-foot breakdown
StepAsk what the contractor considers the base per-foot rate and what adjustments are being applied for species, condition, access, and add-ons.
[1][2][3]Get 3 or more written quotes
StepPer-foot rates can vary sharply from one company to another because some crews include haul-away, protection, or stump work while others do not.
[2][3][6]Schedule in off-peak months when possible
StepWinter and other lower-demand windows often give homeowners more negotiating room than post-storm periods or peak emergency seasons.
[1][2][4]Bundle related services into one mobilization
StepCombining stump grinding, chipping, and haul-away with the removal usually lowers the effective per-foot cost compared with booking each item separately.
[3][5]Frequently Asked Questions
How much does tree removal cost per foot?
Tree removal costs about $9.50 to $14.50 per linear foot on average nationwide as a planning benchmark. Smaller trees under roughly 30 feet can run closer to $5 to $10 per foot, while very large trees over 80 to 100 feet often move into the $15 to $25 per foot range because lift access, larger crews, and more rigging become common. The national total cost per tree still clusters around the high hundreds, which is why the per-foot model is most useful for explaining how that total grows with height and complexity.
[1][2][3]Is tree removal priced per foot or flat rate?
Both models are used in the real market. Per-foot pricing is common when a contractor wants a quick, height-led framework that homeowners can compare easily, but many companies still prefer flat-rate site-assessed quotes because those quotes absorb access problems, tree condition, debris volume, and equipment needs into one number. In practice, many flat quotes still behave like a per-foot model under the surface. The difference is that the adjustments are folded into the final scope instead of being shown as a clean rate card.
[1][2][3]Why does the per-foot rate increase for taller trees?
Per-foot rates increase with height because the removal method changes, not just the tape measure. Trees above about 60 feet are more likely to need aerial lifts, more experienced climbers, extra rigging, more cleanup cycles, and more time spent protecting structures and fall zones. Insurance exposure also rises with job complexity. That is why a 90-foot tree can cost much more than three times a 30-foot tree of the same species even though it is only three times as tall.
[1][2][3][4]What tree species costs the most per foot to remove?
Oak is usually one of the most expensive common species per foot because the wood is dense, the canopy is wide, and the debris load is heavy. Large elm removals can also price aggressively because the structure is awkward to rig near structures, and declining ash often moves into premium tiers because Emerald Ash Borer damage leaves the tree brittle and less predictable. By contrast, softwoods such as pine, spruce, and fir usually live at the lower end of the rate spectrum unless the site itself is difficult.
[2][3][4]How much does it cost to remove a 30-foot tree?
A 30-foot tree commonly costs about $150 to $500 to remove, or roughly $5 to $10 per foot on a routine job. The exact price depends on whether the tree is a light softwood or a denser canopy tree, whether it has clean drop space, and whether the contractor includes haul-away. If you add stump grinding, many jobs move into the $250 to $700 all-in range. A 30-foot tree near a fence or roof can still price above the middle of the band because the work method becomes more controlled.
[1][2][3][4]How much does it cost to remove a 60-foot tree?
A 60-foot tree often costs about $600 to $1,500, although species and structure proximity can shift the number materially. This is the height where many removals start crossing from routine ladder or climbing work into more equipment-heavy planning, so the per-foot rate often accelerates. A 60-foot pine in an open yard may stay near the lower half of the range, while a 60-foot oak or maple over a structure can push toward the upper half even before stump work is added.
[1][2][3][4]How much does it cost to remove a 100-foot tree?
A 100-foot tree typically costs at least $1,500 and can exceed $3,000 on complex residential sites. At this size, the quote is usually reflecting more than height alone. It may include crane or boom-lift planning, longer booking windows, larger crews, multiple debris loads, and a specialist removal sequence. If the tree is dead, close to structures, or subject to permit review, the total can move above the base band quickly because the contractor is managing project risk as much as cutting wood.
[1][2][3][4]Does a dead tree cost more per foot to remove?
Usually yes. Dead trees often cost 20% to 50% more per foot because brittleness, internal decay, cracked unions, and unpredictable movement force the crew to slow down and change the way they rig the tree. The danger is not always obvious from the ground, which is why a dead standing tree is not automatically easier just because there are fewer leaves to handle. Many dead-tree premiums come from risk management and cautious sectioning rather than from raw cutting time alone.
[2][3][4]How can I lower my tree removal cost per foot?
The best levers are timing, quote comparison, and scope control. Get at least three written quotes, ask each company to itemize stump work and haul-away, and schedule in slower seasons when possible instead of during post-storm demand spikes. If practical, keeping chips or firewood onsite can lower disposal cost, and bundling stump grinding with the main mobilization often produces a better effective rate than booking it later as a separate job. The goal is not just to find the lowest number, but to make sure every quote is pricing the same scope.
[1][2][3][5]Do permits affect the per-foot cost?
Permits usually add a flat cost rather than a direct per-foot charge, but they still affect the true price of the project. A protected tree, HOA review, or municipal permit process can add paperwork, filing fees, waiting time, and sometimes arborist-report requirements. That delay matters because it can change scheduling, equipment reservation, and crew planning. In other words, permits do not usually raise the rate per foot directly, but they often raise the total job cost and extend the timeline in a way homeowners should budget for.
[4][6][7]Sources and Methodology
Updated March 2026Pricing on this page was checked against national tree-removal cost guides on March 22, 2026, then restructured into per-foot planning bands, height tiers, and species comparisons. The calculator is intentionally conservative and uses softened multipliers so it behaves like a homeowner screening tool rather than a rigid contractor formula.
- [1] LawnStarter: Pricing Guide: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost?December 27, 2025
- [2] HomeGuide: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost? (2026)February 4, 2026
- [3] Lawn Love: How Much Does Tree Removal Cost in 2026?December 27, 2025
- [4] Bob Vila: How Much Does It Cost to Remove a Tree?July 27, 2023
- [5] HomeGuide: How Much Does Tree Debris Removal Cost? (2026)December 22, 2025
- [6] International Society of Arboriculture: Why Hire an Arborist?2021
- [7] Tree Care Industry Association: Tree Care Company DirectoryAccessed March 22, 2026