Looking for tree removal or trimming in Pembroke Pines? Here are a few things worth knowing before you start calling around for quotes.
Prices vary quite a bit depending on the tree, but nationally, tree removal tends to run somewhere between $400 and $1,800, with a typical job landing around $750 to $900. Size makes the biggest difference:
Stump grinding is usually a separate charge, often $150 to $500 per stump, and trimming or pruning tends to run $250 to $650 depending on the size of the job. These are general national figures, not local pricing, so it’s worth getting a couple of quotes from providers in Pembroke Pines to see what’s typical in your area.
It depends on the tree and the property. Florida law (Statute 163.045) generally allows homeowners to remove a documented dangerous tree on single family residential property without a local permit, as long as an ISA certified arborist puts that risk assessment in writing. Outside of that situation, permit requirements can vary quite a bit by city and county, so it’s worth a quick call to Pembroke Pines’s local building or zoning office before any work starts, just to be safe.
Sometimes, but not always. Coverage usually kicks in if a tree falls on something insured, like your house, garage, or a fence, because of a storm or similar covered event. If a healthy tree just needs to come down, or a fallen tree didn’t damage anything, insurance typically won’t cover it. It’s worth checking your policy for a tree removal sublimit too, since many policies cap it somewhere around $500 to $1,000 per tree.
Getting routine trimming done before hurricane season starts on June 1st tends to be a smart move, since it can lower the chances of storm damage later. Tree companies also tend to get busier (and pricier) right after a storm passes through, so non-urgent work scheduled outside of peak storm season can sometimes save you a bit of money.
That’s really a question for a certified arborist, but a few warning signs tend to point toward removal rather than just pruning:
A few basics go a long way: make sure the company is actually licensed and insured, ask if they use ISA certified arborists (especially for anything large or tricky), and get a written estimate before anyone shows up with a chainsaw. Getting two or three quotes rather than just one is usually worth the extra bit of time too.
Cost figures reflect general 2026 industry data (Angi, HomeGuide, SoFi) and aren’t specific to Pembroke Pines pricing. Permit information reflects our understanding as of July 2026, tree laws do change from time to time, so it’s worth double checking with your local city or county office. Nothing here is legal advice, when in doubt, talk to a licensed arborist or your local building department directly.