A tree removal cost calculator estimates your price by combining the tree’s size, trunk diameter, location, accessibility, and any add-on services into a ballpark range—usually somewhere between $200 and $4,000. It can’t replace an in-person quote, but it gives you a realistic budget before you call around. Use the free estimator below, then confirm with two or three local, insured tree services.
Tree removal cost calculator
Enter your tree’s details for an instant estimate. Results are national ballpark ranges and vary by region.
Ballpark estimate only. Always confirm with a local, insured tree service.
How the tree removal cost calculator works
The estimator starts with a base price for your tree’s height, then applies multipliers for the factors that crews actually price on the job:
- Height sets the base cost—taller trees need more labor and bigger equipment.
- Trunk diameter adds 15–35% because thick, dense trunks are slower to cut and may require a crane.
- Accessibility can add 25–60% when a tree is behind a fence, over a pool, or near power lines.
- Condition adds about 15% for dead, leaning, or storm-damaged trees that need careful rigging.
- Add-ons such as stump grinding, hauling, and permits are flat fees layered on top.
For the full picture behind these numbers, see our detailed guide to tree removal cost by size and job.
What information you need before you estimate
To get a useful number, gather a few details first: the tree’s approximate height (compare it to your one-story house, which is roughly 10 feet per story), the trunk’s diameter at chest height, how close it is to buildings or lines, and whether you also want the stump removed. Photos help a lot when you later request quotes.
Cost ranges behind the calculator
The base figures come from 2026 national pricing. Use this table to sanity-check your estimate.
| Tree size | Height | Typical cost |
|---|---|---|
| Small | Under 30 ft | $150 – $500 |
| Medium | 30 – 60 ft | $500 – $1,200 |
| Large | 60 – 80 ft | $1,200 – $2,500 |
| Very large | 80 ft+ | $1,500 – $4,000+ |
Removing an especially big specimen? Our large tree removal cost guide and overview of how much it costs to cut down a tree go deeper.
Add-on costs to factor in
| Service | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Stump grinding | $100 – $400 |
| Full stump & root removal | $150 – $1,000+ |
| Debris / log hauling | $50 – $150+ |
| Removal permit | $45 – $200 |
| Emergency / storm work | +20% – 50% |
Some trees need a city permit before removal—check whether you need a tree removal permit first.
How accurate is an online estimate?
An online calculator is a planning tool, not a binding quote. Real prices depend on details a form can’t fully capture—local labor rates, exact drop zones, hidden hazards, and how a crew rigs the job. Treat the result as a budgeting range, then get at least three written estimates from licensed, insured companies. The International Society of Arboriculture explains what to look for when hiring an arborist.
If the tree was damaged in a storm or fell on a structure, removal may be partly covered—see whether damaged trees are covered by insurance.
Disclaimer: This calculator and article provide general information only, not a quote or financial advice. Costs, permit rules, and insurance coverage vary by region and policy.
Frequently asked questions
How does a tree removal cost calculator estimate price?
It multiplies a base cost for the tree’s height by adjustment factors for trunk diameter, accessibility, and condition, then adds flat fees for services like stump grinding and hauling.
Is an online tree removal estimate accurate?
It gives a realistic ballpark range, but not an exact price. Local rates, site hazards, and rigging needs can move the final cost, so always get in-person quotes.
What’s the average tree removal cost?
About $850 to $900 nationally, with most jobs between $200 and $2,000 depending on size, species, and access.
Does the estimate include the stump?
Only if you check the stump grinding option. Stump removal is usually a separate $100–$400 add-on.
Written by Jack Turner, arborist and mediation writer for Neighbor Cut My Tree. We publish clear, people-first answers on tree costs, care, and neighbor disputes.