How Much Does Tree Removal Cost in Phoenix?
A single-tree removal in Phoenix usually costs $300 to $2,200. The common 30- to 60-foot project - Washingtonia palm, Mesquite, Palo Verde, ficus, or Aleppo pine - often lands around $500 to $1,300. That puts Phoenix close to the national average and below Los Angeles. [[1]]()[[2]]()[[3]]()[[4]]()
Season is the biggest local variable. October through May is the easiest pricing window because crews can work longer days. From June through September, extreme heat shortens safe work windows; some contractors add 10%-20% or restrict jobs to early mornings. [[8]]()[[9]]()
Monsoon timing creates the other swing. A Haboob can uproot shallow-rooted trees, snap limbs, or drop palm crowns onto walls and roofs. For the first 48 hours after a damaging storm, expect bids to run 20%-50% higher if crews are triaging urgent work. If the tree is stable and not touching utility lines, waiting three to five days can make the market calmer. [[5]]()[[6]]()[[7]]()[[20]]()[[21]]()
Neighborhood still matters. Scottsdale usually runs 15%-25% above average because lots, native-plant rules, and contractor standards are tighter. Tempe and Mesa track the baseline; Chandler and Gilbert are competitive; Glendale is usually near average.
Tree Removal Cost in Phoenix by Tree Type
Phoenix pricing is driven by height, debris, and legal review. Washingtonia palms dominate many calls, Mesquite adds thorny heavy wood, Palo Verde can trigger native-plant questions, and eucalyptus or ficus costs climb with roots or access.
| Tree Type | Small (< 30 ft) | Medium (30-60 ft) | Large (60-80 ft) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $250-$600 | $500-$1,100 | $900-$2,200 | Tallest common Phoenix palm | |
See the dedicated Washingtonia Palm pricing guide for species-specific factors. | ||||
| $200-$500 | $400-$900 | $700-$1,400 | Native, thorny, heavy wood | |
| $150-$400 | $350-$750 | $600-$1,200 | AZ state tree - check permits | |
| $350-$750 | $700-$1,400 | $1,200-$2,200 | Common, fire risk | |
| $300-$650 | $600-$1,200 | $1,000-$1,800 | Common in older neighborhoods | |
| $250-$550 | $500-$1,000 | $800-$1,500 | Allergen, often removed | |
| $300-$650 | $600-$1,200 | $1,000-$1,800 | Aggressive roots | |
Compare the state baseline in the tree removal cost by state guide, but remember that Phoenix's cool-season baseline can change quickly after a Haboob or during a long stretch of extreme heat.
Tree Removal After a Haboob in Phoenix: What to Do and What It Costs
Haboobs are large dust storms tied to Arizona's summer monsoon pattern. In Phoenix, they can arrive with sudden outflow winds, near-zero visibility, and enough force to uproot trees or break major limbs. Damaging events create an immediate contractor rush. [[5]]()[[6]]()[[7]]()
If the tree or debris touches a power line, stay away and call APS, SRP, or 911 before any cleanup starts.
Capture the tree, roof, vehicle, wall, fence, driveway blockage, and root plate before a crew cuts anything apart.
Partly uprooted trees should be left to a pro. Temporary bracing is only for non-electrical, non-structural situations.
Ask whether the windstorm claim requires an adjuster review before removal and keep every invoice.
The first 0-48 hours after a Haboob are most expensive. Three to seven days later, crews are easier to schedule. Non-emergency removals are cheapest in the cool season, before monsoon risk builds.
Insurance usually helps only when the tree has fallen and damaged covered property or blocked covered access. A standing dead tree, a leaning tree, or a tree that fell only on open lawn is often a homeowner maintenance cost. Photograph everything before cleanup and keep invoices. For deeper planning, use the emergency tree removal cost guide. [[22]]()
Preventive timing matters. If a 40-foot-plus palm leans toward a house or a heat-stressed tree is declining, March-May removal can cost 20%-40% less than post-Haboob emergency work.
Protected Desert Trees in Phoenix: What You Can and Cannot Remove
Arizona's native plant framework is the legal trap Phoenix homeowners miss most often. Palo Verde, saguaro cactus, desert willow, ironwood, and other native desert plants can require state notice, salvage tags, or city review. [[10]]()[[11]]()[[12]]()
Scottsdale is the strictest common metro example. Phoenix City is usually simpler for non-protected private-yard trees, but protected native plants, right-of-way trees, development projects, and HOAs can change the answer.
| City / Area | Permit or Review Pattern |
|---|---|
| Scottsdale | Native plants receive the strictest metro-level review. Confirm Native Plant Ordinance and salvage requirements before removing Palo Verde, saguaro, ironwood, or other native desert plants. [[13]]() |
| Phoenix City | Routine private-yard work on non-protected species is usually simpler, but protected native plants, right-of-way trees, and development-related trees need separate review. [[10]]()[[11]]()[[12]]() |
| Tempe | Street trees and city-managed trees are not private removals. Native plant and development review can apply depending on location and project scope. [[10]]()[[11]]()[[14]]() |
| Chandler | Many private residential removals are straightforward, but street trees, landscape-code work, and HOA-controlled communities can require approval. [[10]]()[[11]]() |
Olive trees are different: pollen and fruit make them common removal candidates, and existing olive removal is usually a landscape decision rather than a protected-plant issue. [[15]]()
How to Verify a Tree Removal Contractor's License in Phoenix
Arizona contractor screening starts with the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. Use AZ ROC tools to verify any license number, match the entity name to the bid, and check complaint history. Do not rely on one class shortcut; tree-only work does not map cleanly to a universal ROC number. [[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. After a Haboob, be careful with crews that cannot show local references, written scope, insurance, or verifiable records.[[18]]()
Do You Need a Permit to Remove a Tree in Phoenix?
In Phoenix City, non-protected private-yard removals are usually simpler than protected native plants, right-of-way trees, or development work. Scottsdale is materially stricter for native desert plants, and master-planned communities or HOAs in Chandler, Gilbert, Mesa, Tempe, Glendale, and Scottsdale can add approval steps. Start with the tree removal permit cost guide, then verify your city, HOA, and Arizona Department of Agriculture requirements before removing Palo Verde, saguaro, ironwood, or other native desert plants. [[10]]()[[11]]()[[12]]()[[13]]()[[19]]()
Interactive estimate
Phoenix Tree Removal Cost Calculator
This local calculator starts with Phoenix, AZ, and Washingtonia Palm selected, then adjusts for Haboob damage, summer heat, area, protected-plant review, and stump grinding.
Local estimate
Inputs tuned for Phoenix desert conditions
Phoenix pricing starts with Palm selected, then adjusts for Haboob damage, summer heat, native-plant review, suburb, and stump grinding. Use the protected-plant option for Palo Verde, saguaro-adjacent work, Scottsdale lots, and HOA review.
How to Get the Best Tree Removal Quote in Phoenix
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 Phoenix bid window is October through May. Avoid summer heat premiums and post-Haboob demand spikes when the job is not urgent. For palms, make sure the quote includes full trunk haul-away; for protected desert species, make sure permit, salvage, or HOA help is listed separately.
Tree Removal Cost Phoenix: Frequently Asked Questions
How much does tree removal cost in Phoenix?
Most Phoenix tree removals cost $400-$1,600. Small desert trees can start around $150-$300; tall Washingtonia palms can reach $2,200. Summer heat and post-Haboob demand can push bids 10%-50% higher.
Do I need a permit to remove a Palo Verde tree in Phoenix?
Maybe. Palo Verde is Arizona's state tree, and native species may fall under Arizona's protected native plant framework. Scottsdale and some HOAs add stricter review, so confirm requirements before removal.
How much does it cost to remove a tall Washingtonia palm in Phoenix?
Tall Washingtonia palm removal in Phoenix usually costs $800-$2,200 for 70-100 foot palms. Plan on $100-$200 per 10 feet of height, plus $100-$300 for trunk haul-away.
When is the best time to remove a tree in Phoenix?
October through May is best. Crews can work longer days, and you avoid summer heat surcharges of about 10%-20% plus post-Haboob spikes of about 20%-50%. Remove wind-risk trees in March-May.
How do I verify a tree removal contractor's license in Phoenix?
Use the Arizona Registrar of Contractors lookup to verify any claimed license and complaint history. Tree-only removal does not have one universal ROC class, so also require liability insurance and workers' compensation proof.
Sources
Audit trail- [1] LawnStarter: Tree removal costMay 2026
- [2] Lawn Love: Tree removal costMay 2026
- [3] Angi: Tree removal costMay 2026
- [4] Angi: Palm tree removal costMay 2026
- [5] National Weather Service: Monsoon safetyMay 2026
- [6] National Weather Service: Dust storms and haboobsMay 2026
- [7] NASA Earth Observatory: Haboob sweeps over PhoenixMay 2026
- [8] National Weather Service Phoenix: Extreme heat safetyMay 2026
- [9] NOAA Climate.gov: Phoenix extreme heatMay 2026
- [10] Arizona Department of Agriculture: Native plantsMay 2026
- [11] University of Arizona Cooperative Extension: Native plant lawMay 2026
- [12] Arizona Legislature: Native plants statutesMay 2026
- [13] City of Scottsdale: Native plant ordinanceMay 2026
- [14] City of Tempe: Trees and urban forestryMay 2026
- [15] City of Phoenix: Allergy and pollen-producing plantsMay 2026
- [16] Arizona Registrar of Contractors: Contractor searchMay 2026
- [17] Arizona Registrar of Contractors: License classificationsMay 2026
- [18] International Society of Arboriculture: Find an arboristMay 2026
- [19] City of Phoenix: Right-of-way managementMay 2026
- [20] Arizona Public Service: Power line safetyMay 2026
- [21] Salt River Project: Electrical safetyMay 2026
- [22] Insurance Information Institute: Tree-fall coverageMay 2026