Tree Service Estimating Guide: How to Price Jobs Confidently
A practical framework for pricing tree removal, pruning, and stump grinding jobs โ covering cost factors, profit margins, and common pricing mistakes.
Why Accurate Estimating Is the Foundation of a Profitable Tree Service
Underpricing is the #1 reason tree service companies fail in their first three years. It’s not lack of skill or lack of clients โ it’s quoting jobs at rates that don’t cover true costs. Every job you underprice is a job that costs you money to complete.
Accurate estimating starts with understanding your real cost structure: labour, equipment, insurance, overhead, and the risk premium that tree work demands. Once you know your true cost per hour, pricing becomes straightforward.
Calculating Your True Hourly Cost
Before you can price a job, you need to know what it costs you to operate per hour. Add up:
- Labour: All wages including your own time, plus payroll taxes and workers’ comp
- Equipment: Fuel, maintenance, and depreciation on all trucks, chippers, and saws
- Insurance: General liability, commercial auto, and equipment insurance divided by billable hours
- Overhead: Phone, software, marketing, accounting, divided by billable hours
Most tree service companies find their true hourly cost is $85โ$140 per crew-hour once all costs are included. If you’re charging less than this, you’re losing money on every job.
Pricing Tree Removal: The Key Variables
Tree removal pricing depends on five main factors:
- Tree height and diameter: The primary size indicator. A 40-foot oak is roughly 2โ3x the work of a 20-foot oak.
- Access: Can you get a chipper and truck close? Restricted access (fenced yards, tight spaces) adds 25โ50% to the job cost.
- Proximity to structures: Trees over houses or near power lines require more time, more skill, and more risk โ price accordingly.
- Wood disposal: Are you chipping, hauling, or leaving logs? Each has different cost implications.
- Stump grinding: Always quote separately and clearly โ many clients don’t realise it’s not included in removal.
Common Pricing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
The most common estimating mistakes in tree service:
- Not accounting for drive time: If a job is 45 minutes away, that’s 1.5 hours of crew time round-trip that needs to be in the price.
- Underestimating cleanup time: Cleanup often takes as long as the actual cutting. Price it accordingly.
- Ignoring risk premium: A tree over a pool or a car is not the same job as a tree in an open field. The risk premium should be 20โ50% depending on the hazard.
- Discounting to win: If you win every job you quote, you’re probably underpriced. A healthy win rate is 40โ60%.
Building a Pricing System Your Whole Team Can Use
Once you’ve established your cost structure and pricing logic, document it. A simple pricing guide โ even a one-page reference sheet โ allows your crew leads to give accurate ballpark quotes in the field without calling you for every job.
Many successful tree service companies build a tiered pricing matrix: small trees (under 30ft), medium trees (30โ60ft), large trees (60ft+), with modifiers for access, proximity to structures, and disposal method. This makes estimating consistent and fast.