Tree Removal in Galveston, TX

Dead oaks lean toward the house eventually. Salt-burned palms hollow out from the crown down. We take both down clean, even when the only way in is a golf cart path.

What removal actually costs

Most removals on the island run $450 to $3,200. The variables: trunk diameter and height, how much the canopy overhangs a structure or dock, whether we can drive a bucket truck to the base or have to rig and lower pieces by hand, and whether the stump comes out with it or stays (stump grinding is priced separately, see our stump grinding page). A 30-foot live oak in an open front yard on Broadway is a half-day job. The same tree wedged between two houses on a Pirates Cove canal lot, with a dock and a boat lift underneath, takes longer and costs more because every cut gets roped down instead of dropped.

How we take a tree down

  1. Walk the lot and the tree. We check lean, root flare, deadwood, and what's in the drop zone, docks, power lines, neighbor's fence.
  2. Quote the job on the spot, in writing, with the access problem called out if there is one.
  3. If it's a significant tree on private property, that's Galveston's term for anything 10 inches or more in trunk diameter, we handle the city's tree removal application before cutting.
  4. Set up rigging and drop zones, rope off the work area, protect anything nearby that can't move.
  5. Take the tree down in sections if there's no clear fall path, straight-drop if there's room.
  6. Chip brush on site, buck the trunk into rounds, and haul everything off the property same day.
  7. Grind the stump if you've asked for it, or cap it flush if you're leaving it for now.

What makes a removal harder than it looks

Canal-front lots in Tiki Island and Pirates Cove are the biggest wildcard. Docks, boat lifts, and seawalls sit right where a falling limb wants to land, so almost everything gets lowered by rope instead of dropped. Alleys on the East End and in the historic district are sometimes too narrow for a bucket truck, which means climbing the tree by hand and rigging every piece down. Root systems in sandy fill soil, common on Tiki Island where the land itself was built from dredged canal material, don't always hold the way they would in denser mainland clay, so a tree that looks stable can have a compromised root plate you can't see until you're cutting. And any tree over 10 inches DBH on private property needs the city's arborist report and mitigation plan before removal, which adds a few days if we're starting from zero.

How long it takes

A single yard tree with clear access: half a day. A large oak over a structure, or anything needing hand-rigging on a tight canal lot: one to two full days. Storm-damaged trees with multiple hazards on one property can run longer. We tell you which one you've got before we start, not after.

One thing that sets us apart

We check the root flare and soil salinity signs on every removal near the water, not just the canopy. A lot of crews only look up. Salt water intrusion from storm surge can compromise a root system months before the tree shows it above ground, and that changes how we rig the job.

We don't do stump removal by hand-digging. If the stump needs to go, it gets ground, not excavated.

Removal FAQ

Do I need a permit to remove a tree in Galveston?

If it's on private property and the trunk is 10 inches or more in diameter at breast height, the city calls that a significant tree and requires an application with current photos, a site plan, an arborist's report, and a mitigation plan before removal. We handle that paperwork as part of the job. Trees in the public right-of-way, like a tree between the sidewalk and the street, go through a separate city process.

Can you get equipment onto a Tiki Island canal lot?

Usually yes, but access on Tiki Island and Pirates Cove canal lots is tighter than a standard yard because of docks, seawalls, and narrow shared drives. We often rig and lower pieces by rope instead of using a bucket truck. We'll tell you during the walk-through if your lot needs hand rigging, and price it accordingly.

Will you clean up the whole tree, or just cut it down?

Full removal includes chipping the brush, bucking the trunk into rounds, and hauling everything off the property the same day, unless you want the rounds left for firewood. We don't leave a pile in the yard.

What if the tree is already down after a storm?

That's emergency work, not a scheduled removal. See our storm work page or call us directly, we triage hazard trees ahead of the regular schedule.

Get a removal quote

We serve Galveston Island, Tiki Island, Jamaica Beach, La Marque, and Texas City. Tell us where the tree is and we'll call you back same day.

Free Quote