Tree Removal Cost in Washington (2026)
A routine scheduled removal in Washington averages $1,145. Most modeled jobs land between $633 and $1,656, which is 15% above the national average. Washington lands above the national midpoint because labor, wet-site access, and urban canopy rules all raise the floor on tree work.

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Updated March 2026 · Uses the live tree removal estimator with a default Washington pricing context.
How to read this state benchmark
This page uses the same tree removal calculator shown above, but starts from Washington-specific pricing pressure. Use it to compare scheduled and emergency quotes, then check nearby states or jump back to the national calculator if the job scope changes.
- Each state page uses the live tree removal calculator with four fixed scenarios: routine scheduled removal, tight-access hazardous removal, storm emergency response, and fallen-tree cleanup.
- State-level pricing changes come from the calculator's tree removal multiplier model and are paired with visible notes about permits, access friction, weather risk, and emergency pressure rather than state-name swaps.
- Every page includes five direct-answer FAQs, a national comparison, related-state comparisons, and a clear path back to the national tree removal estimator.
- Every published page links back to the national calculator, related-state comparisons, and the supporting research that explains the benchmark.
Typical Tree Removal Budgets in Washington
These scenarios use the same calculator model shown above. They are not contractor quotes, but they give you a useful range for a routine scheduled removal, a difficult-access hazard job, a storm emergency response, and a fallen-tree cleanup in Washington.
| Project | Low | Midpoint | High |
|---|---|---|---|
Routine scheduled removal One healthy 30-60 ft tree in an open yard, scheduled work, no stump grinding. | $633 | $1,145 | $1,656 |
Tight-access hazardous removal One dead 60-80 ft tree near structures, difficult access, stump grinding included. | $1,832 | $3,683 | $5,534 |
Storm emergency response One leaning 60-80 ft tree after a storm, difficult access, same-day response. | $3,289 | $6,861 | $10,433 |
Fallen-tree cleanup One fallen 30-60 ft tree in a moderate-access yard, scheduled cleanup, no stump work. | $364 | $803 | $1,242 |
How Washington Compares to National Pricing
In our model, Washington comes in 15% above the national average for a scheduled 30-60 foot removal in an open yard with no stump work. That is a benchmark, not a quote guarantee. The most useful thing to compare across bids is whether the contractor is pricing a calm scheduled job or a hazard-driven access problem.
If your quote sits above the modeled high range, pressure-test the scope for crane access, utility clearance, permit handling, stump grinding, or emergency timing. If it sits well below the low range, check whether haul-away, cleanup, and insurance-ready documentation are missing.
- Seattle-area labor and wet-weather site planning keep Washington pricing above many inland states even when the tree itself is not unusually large.
- Tree protections and replacement requirements can matter more in Washington than in lower-regulation markets, especially in urban jurisdictions.
- Moist ground, narrow side yards, and mature tree canopies often limit equipment options in Washington, which raises labor intensity.
- Wind events and saturated soil can create urgent removals in Washington that price very differently from scheduled pruning-season work.
Where a Difficult-Access Washington Tree Budget Goes
For a hazardous 60-80 foot removal in Washington, labor does most of the work, but equipment, disposal, stump grinding, and contingency all matter. Tree removal budgets widen because access conditions and risk change how the crew works, not just how much wood is on the ground.
| Budget bucket | Range |
|---|---|
| Labor | $999 to $2,767 |
| Equipment | $300 to $830 |
| Disposal | $200 to $553 |
| Stump grinding | $200 to $500 |
| Contingency | $167 to $922 |
| Total modeled range | $1,832 to $5,534 |
Why Emergency Timing and Access Matter in Washington
In this model, a storm emergency response in Washingtonprices about 499% above a routine scheduled removal. A difficult-access hazardous removal still comes in about 222% above the routine midpoint even without emergency timing, which shows how much of the cost comes from rigging, crew time, and cleanup complexity.
In Washington, keep the estimate honest by asking what changes if the crew cannot use a bucket truck or mini skid on your lot. If a tree is not actively threatening a structure, the easiest way to save money is usually to convert the job from same-day response work into scheduled removal work.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does tree removal cost in Washington?
A routine scheduled removal in Washington averages $1,145, with most modeled jobs landing between $633 and $1,656. Tight-access hazard work and emergency storm calls can land far above that range.
Is Washington more expensive than the national average for tree removal?
Yes. Washington is 15% above the national average for a routine scheduled removal in our model. The difference is mostly explained by seattle-area labor and wet-weather site planning keep washington pricing above many inland states even when the tree itself is not unusually large. Moist ground, narrow side yards, and mature tree canopies often limit equipment options in Washington, which raises labor intensity.
What usually pushes a Washington tree removal quote above the midpoint?
Seattle-area labor and wet-weather site planning keep Washington pricing above many inland states even when the tree itself is not unusually large. Tree protections and replacement requirements can matter more in Washington than in lower-regulation markets, especially in urban jurisdictions. Moist ground, narrow side yards, and mature tree canopies often limit equipment options in Washington, which raises labor intensity. On real jobs, difficult access, crane work, utility clearance, stump grinding, and same-day hazard response usually move the number faster than tree height alone.
How much more does emergency tree removal cost in Washington?
In our Washington emergency scenario, the modeled range is $3,289 to $10,433. That is about 499% above the midpoint for a routine scheduled removal because the calculator applies emergency response pricing on top of difficult-access hazard work.
How can I keep a Washington tree removal project on budget?
In Washington, keep the estimate honest by asking what changes if the crew cannot use a bucket truck or mini skid on your lot. Homeowners usually get the cleanest comparison when they ask for separate prices for removal, stump work, hauling, permit handling, and emergency response instead of one bundled number.
Explore More Tree Removal Cost Pages
National tree removal calculator
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California tree removal cost
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Colorado tree removal cost
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New York tree removal cost
Compare New York pricing, access pressure, and emergency assumptions.
Quick facts for this state
Data Updated
2026-03-08
Helpful links
5 ways to compare this page inside CostFigure
Benchmarked Scenarios
4 tree removal scenarios
More to compare
3 nearby state pages plus the national calculator