Here’s the straight answer: if your tree measures 30 centimetres or more in diameter at breast height (DBH — 1.4 metres off the ground), you need a City of Toronto permit before it comes down. Cut it without one and you’re looking at fines from $500 to $100,000 per tree under Municipal Code Chapter 813, plus mandatory replacement planting. Legal permitted removal runs $1,450–$2,850 all-in. Non-permitted removal, if caught, can top $103,000 in penalties and replanting costs. The math is not close.
As an ISA Certified Arborist with 15+ years working across Toronto, Scarborough, North York, Etobicoke, Vaughan, Mississauga, Markham, and Brampton, I’ve seen homeowners make both choices — and watched the second one cost them six figures. This guide gives you the full decision framework so you can make the right call.
Permit-Required Tree Removal: The Legal Path in Toronto
Toronto’s Chapter 813 (Private Tree Bylaw) sets the rules for any tree on private property. The threshold is simple: ≥30 cm DBH = permit required before any removal work begins. The permit application goes through Toronto’s Urban Forestry department, and the City typically processes straightforward applications in 5–10 business days.
Here’s what the legal path looks like, step by step:
- Measure your tree. Use a flexible tape at 1.4 m above ground on the uphill side. If it reads 30 cm or more, you’re in permit territory.
- Hire an ISA Certified Arborist for an assessment. A documented arborist report ($150–$200) establishes tree condition and supports your permit application — it also protects you legally if the tree’s status is later disputed.
- File a permit application at Toronto’s Urban Forestry office or online. Application fee: $50–$150 depending on the number of trees.
- Await City inspection. A forestry officer may visit to verify tree condition and species. Protected species (oak, ash, elm, hickory, willow) face higher scrutiny.
- Receive written approval. The permit specifies any replacement-planting requirements — usually 1:1 for standard trees.
- Schedule removal with a licensed contractor. The contractor must carry $5M liability insurance and WSIB coverage. Our tree removal service meets all City requirements and handles permit compliance end-to-end.
Total cost for the legal path: $1,450–$2,850 (see cost table below). Permit included. No fines. No title issues. No neighbour complaints to the City.
Non-Permit Tree Removal: When It’s Allowed & When It’s Not
Not every tree removal in Toronto requires a permit. Chapter 813 carves out several legitimate exemptions — but each one has conditions that must be documented before you cut.
When you genuinely don’t need a permit:
- Trees under 30 cm DBH — below the protected threshold. No permit required on private property (note: trees on city boulevards are always City property regardless of size).
- Dead trees — provided the tree’s death is documented (arborist report, photos, or 311 acknowledgment) before removal. If you cut a tree and then claim it was dead, the City can reject the defence.
- Hazardous/imminent-hazard trees — where failure is imminent and documented. An ISA arborist’s report noting “imminent structural failure risk” qualifies; your own opinion does not.
- Emergency storm damage — a storm-downed or critically damaged tree can be removed immediately for safety without a permit. However, you must contact Toronto’s Urban Forestry (via 311) and submit a retroactive application within 10 business days.
When non-permit removal is NOT allowed (and people get it wrong):
- The tree is “too close to the house” — proximity is not an exemption under Chapter 813.
- You’re doing a renovation or pool install — construction needs are not exemptions; you need a development-related tree permit.
- The tree “looks sick” to you — homeowner opinion is not a documented hazard assessment.
- Your neighbour agreed — private agreements don’t override the bylaw.
- Any tree ≥30 cm DBH on a Ravine Protected Area lot — these require permits regardless of size and condition (see Ravine section below).
Decision Tree: Does Your Tree Need a Permit?
Work through this sequence before you call anyone:
Step 1: Is the tree on a City boulevard, park, or utility right-of-way?
→ YES: City tree. You cannot remove it at all — contact 311 to report it.
→ NO: Continue to Step 2.
Step 2: Is the tree in a Ravine Protection Area (check Toronto’s mapping tool)?
→ YES: Permit required regardless of tree size. Contact Urban Forestry.
→ NO: Continue to Step 3.
Step 3: Measure DBH at 1.4 m height.
→ Under 30 cm: No permit required (private tree, not in ravine). Skip to Step 5.
→ 30 cm or more: Continue to Step 4.
Step 4: Is the tree dead, an imminent hazard, or emergency storm damage?
→ YES (and documented by ISA arborist or 311): Exempt — but document first, cut second.
→ NO / Unsure: Permit required. Budget $50–$150 and 5–10 business days processing.
Step 5: Is the tree an oak, ash, elm, hickory, or willow ≥30 cm DBH?
→ YES: Heightened scrutiny — fine up to $100,000 per tree if removed without permit. Always get an ISA report and permit.
→ NO: Standard permit process applies.
Still unsure? Call 647-558-1366 — we’ll assess your tree at no charge and tell you exactly where you stand before any money changes hands.
Cost Comparison: Legal Removal + Permit vs Fines + Penalties
Let’s put real CAD numbers on both paths. This is what actually matters to homeowners weighing their options.
Scenario A: Legal, Permitted Removal
| Item | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| City of Toronto permit application fee | $50–$150 |
| ISA arborist condition report (optional but recommended) | $150–$200 |
| Tree removal — small tree (under 30 ft) | $800–$1,200 |
| Tree removal — medium tree (30–60 ft) | $1,200–$1,800 |
| Tree removal — large tree (60+ ft, crane required) | $1,800–$2,500 |
| Stump grinding (add-on) | $150–$400 |
| TOTAL — Legal removal (mid-range tree, all-in) | $1,450–$2,850 |
Scenario B: Non-Permitted Removal — Caught by the City
| Item | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| City of Toronto fine (standard Chapter 813 violation) | $500–$100,000 |
| Mandatory replacement planting (1–3 trees) | $1,000–$3,000 |
| Legal/arborist report for dispute or appeal | $500–$1,500 |
| Title encumbrance (if unpaid — affects mortgage/resale) | Variable |
| Property value impact (documented violation on record) | Variable |
| TOTAL — Realistic worst-case for a protected-species violation | $103,000+ |
The $50–$150 permit fee is the most cost-effective insurance policy in residential property ownership. See our detailed Toronto tree removal cost guide for full pricing by tree type and neighbourhood.
Cost by Tree Size (Permitted Removal)
| Tree Size | DBH Range | Removal Cost | Permit Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small (under 30 ft) | Under 30 cm | $400–$800 | No |
| Medium (30–50 ft) | 30–50 cm | $800–$1,500 | Yes ($50–$100) |
| Large (50–70 ft) | 50–75 cm | $1,500–$2,200 | Yes ($100–$150) |
| Very Large (70+ ft, crane) | 75+ cm | $2,200–$3,500+ | Yes ($150) |
Protected Trees: Species That Always Require Permits (Oak, Ash, Elm, Hickory)
Chapter 813 applies the same 30 cm DBH threshold to all private trees — but certain species carry elevated fine risks because of their ecological value. In practice, Urban Forestry officers treat removal of the following species as a high-priority enforcement matter:
- Oak (Quercus spp.) — Long-lived canopy trees; replacement requirement often 2:1 or higher.
- Ash (Fraxinus spp.) — Already under pressure from Emerald Ash Borer; healthy surviving ash trees get elevated protection.
- Elm (Ulmus spp.) — Dutch Elm Disease survivors are rare; the City actively protects remaining specimens.
- Hickory (Carya spp.) — Slow-growing canopy species; fines up to $100,000 for unpermitted removal.
- Willow (Salix spp.) — Often found in ravine or waterfront areas, triggering dual bylaw protections.
For these species, even if the tree is clearly dead or diseased, I strongly recommend an ISA arborist assessment and documentation before any removal. A report from our arborist consultation service creates a defensible record that the City will accept as evidence for an exemption claim or retroactive permit.
Fines for unpermitted removal of protected species: The City of Toronto has levied fines at the maximum $100,000 level for single protected-tree removals. This is not a theoretical ceiling — it’s an enforcement number that has been used.
Chapter 813 Exemptions: Dead, Diseased & Hazardous Trees
The three main exemptions under Chapter 813 are real — but each requires specific documentation to be valid. “I thought it was dead” is not a defence.
Exemption 1: Dead Trees
A tree that is completely dead (no living tissue, no foliation, no viable root crown) can be removed without a permit. To qualify, the tree’s death must be documented before removal — not after. Acceptable documentation includes:
- An ISA Certified Arborist written report confirming complete tree death
- Photographs with timestamps showing absence of foliage across two growing seasons
- A 311 service request response acknowledging the tree as dead
A partially dead tree — e.g., 60% crown loss from disease but still producing foliage — does not qualify as dead. The Chapter 813 standard is complete death of the entire tree.
Exemption 2: Imminent Hazard Trees
If a tree poses an imminent risk of failure — structural cracks at the root collar, severe lean over a structure, advanced cavity decay — an ISA arborist can certify the tree as an imminent hazard. This certification creates a documented exemption path. You still must notify Urban Forestry via 311 before or immediately after removal, but the permit timeline is waived.
Our arborist consultation includes a Level 2 Tree Risk Assessment per ISA TRAQ standards — the format Toronto’s Urban Forestry officers accept. Consultation fee: $150–$200.
Exemption 3: Emergency Storm Damage
A tree that has been uprooted, split, or critically damaged by a storm event can be removed immediately without a pre-approval permit for safety reasons. However:
- You must contact Toronto 311 and report the removal as soon as practically possible.
- A retroactive application to Urban Forestry must be filed within 10 business days of the removal.
- Photographs of the storm damage before removal are critical — they’re your evidence if the City questions the emergency claim.
We respond to storm emergencies across all GTA areas within 2 hours, 24/7. Call 647-558-1366 for immediate response.
What Happens If You Remove Without a Permit (Real Penalties & Recovery)
When Urban Forestry discovers an unpermitted removal — and they do discover them, whether through neighbour complaints, aerial survey updates, or street-view inspection — the enforcement sequence typically goes like this:
- Notice of Violation issued to the property owner. This is not a warning — it’s the start of the enforcement process.
- Penalty assessment. For a standard private tree ≥30 cm DBH: minimum fine of $500, up to $25,000 per tree. For protected species (oak, ash, elm, hickory): up to $100,000 per tree.
- Mandatory replacement order. Standard ratio is 1 replacement tree per removed tree. Significant violations (large trees, protected species) can require up to 5 replacement trees per removed tree. Replacements must be planted in a City-approved location on your property.
- Cash-in-lieu. If your property cannot accommodate replacement planting (small lot, hardscaping), the City may accept a cash payment into Toronto’s Tree Canopy fund — roughly $500–$1,200 per required replacement tree.
- Title encumbrance. If fines remain unpaid, the City can register a lien against the property title. This blocks mortgage refinancing and complicates resale.
Contractor liability clarification: Property owners often assume their contractor bears the responsibility for unpermitted work. They do not. Under Chapter 813, the property owner is liable for all penalties, even if a contractor performed the removal. Hiring a cut-rate crew that skips the permit process exposes you, not them. Our company ensures every permitted removal includes proper documentation and City-compliant paperwork — it’s why we carry $5M liability coverage and WSIB.
DIY vs Hiring a Pro: The Real Comparison
| Factor | DIY Removal | Professional (ISA Certified) |
|---|---|---|
| Permit knowledge | ❌ Homeowner must research | ✅ Handled by contractor |
| Equipment cost | $400–$1,200 rental | Included in quote |
| Liability if unpermitted | ❌ 100% on homeowner | ✅ Contractor ensures compliance |
| Insurance coverage for damage | ❌ Homeowner insurance only | ✅ $5M liability + WSIB |
| ISA arborist condition report | ❌ Not available DIY | ✅ Included or add-on |
| Neighbour / City dispute defence | ❌ No professional documentation | ✅ Full paper trail |
| Safe outcome for trees near structures | ⚠️ High property-damage risk | ✅ Rigging + precision felling |
Post-Removal Violations: If You’ve Already Cut It Down
If you’ve already removed a tree without a permit and you’re now worried about enforcement, here’s what actually helps:
- Contact 311 proactively. Reporting the removal yourself — even after the fact — is consistently viewed more favourably by Urban Forestry officers than being reported by a neighbour. It signals cooperation rather than concealment. In multiple cases I’m aware of, proactive contact reduced penalties significantly.
- Get an ISA arborist report prepared retroactively. If the tree genuinely qualified for an exemption (dead, hazardous, storm damage), a retroactive arborist assessment documenting the pre-removal condition can support your case. The strength of this defence depends heavily on available evidence — photos, neighbour statements, 311 service history on the tree.
- Do not plant replacement trees without City approval. Planting your own replacement trees in the “wrong” locations or species can actually complicate your compliance situation. Get written approval from Urban Forestry on replacement species and placement first.
- Engage an ISA arborist for the dispute process. If you receive a Notice of Violation, a formal written arborist opinion can be submitted as part of your response. This is not a legal opinion (you may also want a lawyer for large fines), but it carries weight with the City’s forestry officers.
Our team has helped property owners in Toronto, Scarborough, Etobicoke, North York, and Markham navigate post-violation recovery. Call 647-558-1366 — we’ll review your situation and tell you what options are available before you spend money you don’t need to.
Ravine & Waterfront Trees: Extra Protections & Permit Requirements
Toronto’s Ravine and Natural Feature Protection Bylaw (By-law 1012-2013) adds a second layer of protection on top of Chapter 813. If your property is in or adjacent to a Ravine Protection Area — and a substantial portion of Toronto’s Don Valley corridor, Humber River valley, Highland Creek, and waterfront-adjacent lots fall within this zone — the rules are stricter:
- All trees require permits in Ravine Protection Areas, regardless of DBH. A 15 cm DBH sapling in a ravine lot needs a permit; the same tree on a standard lot in Scarborough does not.
- Replacement ratios are much higher. Standard non-ravine replacements are 1:1. Ravine removals typically require 3:1 to 15:1 replanting ratios depending on the removed tree’s size and ecological function.
- The City may require a Natural Heritage Impact Assessment for significant ravine-adjacent removals — a report that costs $800–$2,500 and takes 3–6 weeks to produce.
- Species near watercourses (willows, alders, cottonwoods) face especially high scrutiny due to their role in bank stabilization and stormwater management.
To check if your property falls within a Ravine Protection Area: search your address on the City of Toronto’s mapping portal or call 311. We can also confirm this during our free site assessment.
Neighbourhood Permit Breakdown Across the GTA
| Area | Governing Bylaw | DBH Threshold | Max Fine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto (incl. Scarborough, North York, Etobicoke) | Chapter 813 | 30 cm | $100,000 |
| Vaughan | Vaughan Tree Protection By-law | 20 cm | $100,000 |
| Mississauga | Tree Protection By-law 0021-2006 | 20 cm | $100,000 |
| Markham | Markham Tree By-law | 20 cm | $100,000 |
| Brampton | Brampton Tree Protection By-law | 15 cm | $100,000 |
Note: Vaughan, Mississauga, Markham, and Brampton all have lower DBH thresholds than Toronto — meaning permits kick in at smaller tree sizes. Toronto’s 30 cm threshold is actually among the more permissive in the GTA. If you’re in Brampton, a tree that’s half the size of Toronto’s threshold still requires a permit.
Why Choose Toronto Tree Removal Ninja for Permit-Compliant Removal
There are dozens of tree companies in the GTA. Here’s what actually differentiates compliant, professional work from a crew that might leave you with a Notice of Violation:
- ISA Certified Arborists on staff — not a contracted add-on. Every permit application and arborist report comes from a credential-verified ISA member.
- TCIA member — Tree Care Industry Association standards govern how we train, equip, and insure our crews.
- $5M general liability insurance — required for commercial removal work and by many Toronto-area homeowner insurance policies for contractor coverage.
- WSIB coverage — protects you from workplace injury liability on your property.
- 15+ years of GTA permit experience — we know which Urban Forestry officers handle which zones, what documentation speeds applications, and how to navigate Chapter 813 exemptions properly.
- 2-hour emergency response — storm damage, imminent hazard, overnight failure — we respond across Toronto, Scarborough, North York, Etobicoke, Vaughan, Mississauga, Markham, and Brampton.
- End-to-end compliance — we handle permit applications, City inspections, arborist reports, and replacement planting coordination. You don’t touch the paperwork.
“I had a massive silver maple — easily 80 cm DBH — leaning over my garage in North York. I got quotes from three companies. Two of them told me I ‘probably didn’t need a permit’ to keep costs down. Toronto Tree Removal Ninja told me flat out: that tree absolutely needs a Chapter 813 permit, here’s why, here’s what it costs, here’s the timeline. They filed the permit, managed the City inspection, and had the tree down two weeks later. Total cost: $2,400 — permit included. The other guys were quoting me $1,800 with zero mention of the $100k fine exposure. I know which math I prefer.”
See our full breakdown of tree removal pricing on our Toronto tree removal FAQ page or get an instant ballpark from our cost guide.
FAQ: Permit vs Non-Permit Removal Questions
Do I need a permit to remove a tree on my own property in Toronto?
Yes, if the tree measures 30 cm or more in diameter at breast height (DBH — measured 1.4 metres above ground). Trees under 30 cm DBH on private property do not require a permit under Toronto’s Municipal Code Chapter 813. Exceptions: all trees in Ravine Protection Areas require permits regardless of size, and all trees on city boulevards are City property regardless of who planted them.
What is the fine for removing a tree without a permit in Toronto?
Under Chapter 813, fines range from $500 to $100,000 per tree. Standard violations for non-protected species typically result in fines of $500–$25,000. Removal of protected species (oak, ash, elm, hickory, willow) exposes property owners to the full $100,000 maximum per tree. Mandatory replacement planting adds $1,000–$3,000 on top of any fine.
Can I remove a dead tree in Toronto without a permit?
Yes — if you can document that the tree was completely dead before removal. Acceptable documentation includes an ISA arborist written report, timestamped photographs across two growing seasons showing no foliation, or a 311 service acknowledgment. Partially dead trees (diseased but still producing some foliage) do not qualify for this exemption and still require a permit.
What is the permit process timeline for tree removal in Toronto?
Toronto’s Urban Forestry department typically processes standard residential tree permits in 5–10 business days. Complex applications (protected species, ravine-adjacent trees, multiple trees) may take 15–20 business days. Emergency situations with imminent hazard documentation can be expedited. Factor the permit timeline into any project scheduling — contractors cannot legally begin work until written permit approval is received.
Am I responsible if my contractor removes a tree without a permit?
Yes. Under Chapter 813, the property owner bears full liability for any unpermitted tree removal, even if a contractor performed the work. Hiring an uninsured or unlicensed crew that skips the permit process exposes the homeowner — not the contractor — to the City’s enforcement fines. This is why we recommend only hiring TCIA-member contractors with ISA certified arborists who manage permit compliance directly.
What trees require permits in Toronto regardless of size?
All trees located within a Ravine Protection Area require permits regardless of DBH. The City’s Ravine and Natural Feature Protection Bylaw (By-law 1012-2013) applies to trees in or adjacent to designated ravine lands, regardless of species or size. Additionally, all trees on Toronto’s public right-of-way (boulevards, parks) are City property and cannot be removed by private property owners under any circumstances — contact 311 to report hazardous City trees.
How many replacement trees do I need to plant after a permitted removal in Toronto?
Standard replacement ratio is 1:1 — one replacement tree planted for every permitted tree removed. Significant violations (large trees, protected species, ravine removals) can require 2:1 to 5:1 ratios. Ravine Protection Area removals may require up to 15:1 replanting ratios. If your property cannot accommodate replacement planting (small lot, existing hardscaping), the City accepts a cash-in-lieu payment of approximately $500–$1,200 per required replacement tree into Toronto’s Tree Canopy fund.
Can I remove a tree after a storm without a permit in Toronto?
Yes, for immediate safety purposes. If a storm event has uprooted, critically damaged, or split a tree such that it poses an immediate hazard, you may proceed with emergency removal without a pre-approval permit. However, you must contact Toronto 311 as soon as practically possible after the removal, and you must file a retroactive application with Urban Forestry within 10 business days. Photograph the storm damage extensively before removal — these images are essential documentation for your retroactive application.
Does the tree permit rule apply in Scarborough, North York, and Etobicoke?
Yes. Scarborough, North York, and Etobicoke are all amalgamated into the City of Toronto and fall under the same Municipal Code Chapter 813. The 30 cm DBH threshold, $100,000 maximum fine, and exemption rules apply identically across all former municipalities within Toronto’s boundaries. Adjacent municipalities (Vaughan, Mississauga, Markham, Brampton) have their own bylaws with similar protections — and in most cases, lower DBH thresholds (15–20 cm), meaning permits are required on smaller trees.
How do I know if my property is in a Ravine Protection Area?
The City of Toronto maintains an online mapping tool that overlays Ravine Protection Area boundaries on an address search. Search your address on the City’s planning portal, or call 311 and ask an Urban Forestry officer to confirm your lot’s status. Alternatively, contact us at 647-558-1366 — we confirm ravine status as part of our free site assessment before quoting any removal project.
Get Your Free Quote Today
Call: 647-558-1366
Not sure if your tree needs a permit? We’ll assess it at no charge — measure the DBH, check species, confirm ravine status, and tell you exactly what’s required before any money changes hands. We serve Toronto, Scarborough, North York, Etobicoke, Vaughan, Mississauga, Markham, and Brampton. ISA Certified, TCIA member, $5M liability, WSIB. 24/7 emergency response.