Tree trimming in Toronto costs $200–$1,500+ CAD, depending on tree size — small trees (under 30 ft) average $200–$500, medium trees (30–60 ft) average $450–$800, and large trees (60+ ft) start at $800 and can exceed $1,500 for multi-day climber work. Trimming is typically 50–75% cheaper than full tree removal, making it the right call for any healthy tree that poses no structural hazard. Toronto Tree Removal’s ISA Certified arborists serve all GTA neighbourhoods — call 647-558-1366 for a free on-site quote.
Tree Trimming Cost in Toronto: 2026 Pricing at a Glance
Toronto homeowners can expect to pay between $200 and $1,500+ CAD for professional tree trimming as of 2026, with the final price driven by five factors: tree height, access, species density, amount of crown to remove, and seasonal timing. The table below gives you a fast reference before you call for quotes.
| Tree Size | Typical Height | Cost Range (CAD) | Job Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | Under 30 ft | $200 – $500 | 2–4 hours | Ornamental trees, young maples, Japanese maples, small fruit trees |
| Medium | 30–60 ft | $450 – $800 | 4–8 hours | Mature maples, birch, ash — structural pruning up to 25% of crown |
| Large | 60+ ft | $800 – $1,500+ | 1–2 days | Heritage oaks, silver maples, large ash — requires climbers and rigging |
| Extra Large / Emergency | 70+ ft, complex access | $1,500 – $2,500+ | 2+ days | Crane-assisted or over-structure work; tight yard access, power-line proximity |
All prices are approximate ranges for GTA residential work. A free on-site assessment is required for exact pricing — call 647-558-1366.
Small Trees (Under 30 ft): Cost & What’s Included
Small tree trimming in Toronto costs $200–$500 CAD and typically takes two to four hours for a two-person crew. This category covers ornamental trees, young maples, Japanese maples, dogwoods, and most fruit trees — anything with branches you could safely reach from a tall ladder.
At this size, the work typically includes:
- Crown thinning — removing select interior branches to improve air circulation and light penetration
- Deadwood removal — cutting out dead, dying, or diseased branches to eliminate fall risk
- Clearance pruning — lifting lower branches away from structures, fences, or walkways
- Chip-and-haul or on-site chip piling — your choice at time of booking
In GTA neighbourhoods like Riverdale, High Park, and Leaside, where mature street trees are close to homes, small-tree trimming is the most common annual maintenance job. Most homeowners in these areas budget $250–$400 per tree per season.
Even at this size, DIY trimming carries real risks — improper cuts create entry points for disease, and working near power service drops requires utility clearance. Toronto Tree Removal’s crew handles all notification requirements and carries $5M liability insurance and WSIB coverage on every job.
Medium Trees (30–60 ft): Cost & What’s Included
Medium tree trimming costs $450–$800 CAD in Toronto and takes a full day (four to eight hours) for an experienced two- or three-person crew. This range covers mature maples, birch, ash, Norway spruce, and most backyard shade trees that have been in the ground for 15–30 years.
At this scale, professional climbing equipment, rigging, and proper ANSI A300 pruning technique become essential. Work at this size typically includes:
- Structural pruning — correcting competing leaders, removing crossing or rubbing branches, establishing a strong scaffold structure
- Up to 25% live crown removal — the safe maximum per ANSI A300 standards in a single season
- Hazard branch removal — dead limbs of 2 inches diameter or larger removed with proper drop-zone control
- Vista pruning — optional: selectively opening sightlines without compromising tree health
In North York, Scarborough, and Etobicoke, medium-sized maples and ash trees are the most common trimming requests — often triggered by neighbours’ concerns about overhang, post-storm limb failure, or routine pre-season maintenance. For heritage-adjacent or city-listed trees, our ISA Certified arborists confirm whether the work falls under Toronto’s Municipal Code Chapter 813 before cutting. See our full Toronto tree removal permit guide for bylaw details.
“We had a 45-foot silver maple hanging over our Etobicoke garage. Toronto Tree Removal came out, assessed it properly, and did a full structural prune for $650. Clean job, crew was professional, they left the yard better than they found it. Would absolutely call again.” — S. Kowalczyk, Etobicoke, June 2026
Large Trees (60+ ft): Cost & What’s Included
Large tree trimming in Toronto costs $800–$1,500+ CAD and typically requires one to two full days of work by a specialized crew with climbers, rigging systems, and sometimes a bucket truck or aerial lift. Heritage oaks, silver maples over 70 feet, and mature ash or elm trees all fall into this category.
At this height, safety and logistics dominate the price:
- Certified climbers — ISA-trained arborists ascending with rigging ropes, saddles, and spikeless technique to protect bark
- Controlled lowering — large sections rigged down piece by piece to protect structures, fences, and gardens below
- Equipment fees — aerial lift or bucket truck rental can add $200–$600/day depending on access
- Two-day scheduling — complex large trees often need partial work on day one, final cleanup on day two
In Forest Hill, Rosedale, Cabbagetown, and the Beaches, large heritage trees are common — and often protected under Toronto’s Chapter 813 Private Tree Bylaw. Any tree with a trunk diameter of 30 cm or more at breast height (DBH) is protected, and unauthorized removal or major pruning can result in fines of $500 to $100,000. Our arborists assess permit requirements before any cut.
For trees requiring emergency attention — storm damage, imminent hazard, power-line contact — Toronto Tree Removal offers a 2-hour emergency response across the GTA. Learn more at our emergency tree removal page.
Cost Factors That Affect Tree Trimming Price in Toronto
Beyond tree size, six factors consistently move the final trimming quote up or down — understanding them helps you evaluate any estimate you receive.
1. Access to the Tree
Tight yards, fences, narrow gates (under 36 inches), and no truck access can add $100–$400 to a job. If a crew must hand-carry equipment through a house or over a fence, that increases labour time significantly. Front-yard trees with road access are almost always cheaper than backyard trees with restricted entry.
2. What’s Underneath and Around the Tree
Trimming over a pool, shed, greenhouse, or finished patio requires slower, more controlled work — plan for a 15–25% premium on standard rates. Proximity to power lines, gas meters, or structures adds both risk and the need for utility marking before work begins.
3. Debris Removal
Most Toronto arborists quote trimming and debris removal separately. On-site chipping (where chips are left in a pile on your property) is cheapest. Full haul-away to a facility typically adds $75–$200 depending on volume. Clarify this at quote time.
4. Number of Trees
Multi-tree jobs almost always get a volume discount. Homeowners booking three or more trees in the same session can typically negotiate 10–15% off individual rates, since mobilization and equipment costs are shared across the job.
5. Condition of the Tree
A tree with extensive deadwood, disease, or structural failure requires more careful, time-intensive work. If our arborist identifies significant decay or a hanging dead limb that requires emergency handling, that will be quoted separately.
6. Crew Size and Experience
A two-person crew can handle most small and medium trees. Large trees often require three or four crew members — adding to hourly costs. Always confirm whether a quoted crew includes a certified arborist directing the work, not just labour.
Tree Trimming vs Tree Removal: When to Choose Each
Tree trimming is 50–75% cheaper than removal for healthy trees — the right choice when the tree has structural integrity and no active disease threatening surrounding property. Choose removal only when the tree is dead, diseased beyond recovery, or poses a direct structural hazard.
| Scenario | Trimming (CAD) | Removal (CAD) | Best Choice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy tree with overhang | $200 – $800 | $800 – $2,500+ | ✅ Trim |
| Tree leaning toward structure | $500 – $1,000 (cabling + prune) | $1,000 – $3,000 | Arborist assessment needed |
| Dead tree (50%+ crown dead) | Not applicable | $800 – $2,500+ | ✅ Remove |
| Emerald Ash Borer / Dutch Elm Disease | Treatment: $300–$700/yr | $1,000 – $3,500 | Arborist assessment needed |
| Blocked view / aesthetic thinning | $250 – $700 | Not applicable | ✅ Trim |
| Construction / development clearance | Not applicable | $800 – $5,000+ | ✅ Remove (with permit) |
For a deeper look at the full cost and decision framework, see our dedicated Toronto tree removal cost guide. If you’re weighing both options with real project pricing, our tree removal vs pruning comparison covers specific GTA case studies.
Species-Specific Trimming Costs in Toronto
Hardwood species with dense wood — oak, hard maple, and ash — cost $100–$300 more to trim than softwood species like pine or birch because dense wood is harder on saw chains, requires more careful rigging, and produces heavier debris to manage. Here’s how common GTA tree species break down:
| Species | Wood Type | Cost Modifier | Common GTA Neighbourhoods |
|---|---|---|---|
| Silver Maple | Soft-moderate | Base rate | North York, Scarborough, Etobicoke |
| Sugar / Hard Maple | Dense hardwood | +$100 – $200 | Rosedale, Forest Hill, Leaside |
| Red / White Oak | Very dense hardwood | +$150 – $300 | High Park, Beaches, Cabbagetown |
| Ash (Green / White) | Dense hardwood | +$100 – $250 | Markham, Vaughan, Mississauga |
| White Birch | Moderate | Base rate | Etobicoke, Scarborough ravines |
| Eastern White Pine | Soft | Base rate or -$50 | North York, Brampton |
| Norway Spruce | Soft-moderate | Base rate | Etobicoke, Mississauga |
| Heritage / Old-Growth Oak | Very dense + protected | +$200 – $400 | Rosedale, Cabbagetown, High Park |
Heritage oaks and old-growth maples often require additional consideration under Toronto’s Chapter 813 Private Tree Bylaw — any DBH over 30 cm puts the tree in the protected category. Our ISA Certified arborists confirm compliance before starting any large-canopy trimming work. Read our full Chapter 813 permit guide for details on protected tree rules across the GTA.
Seasonal Pricing Variation for Tree Trimming in Toronto
Winter (December–March) is the cheapest time to book tree trimming in Toronto — off-peak rates run 10–15% below summer prices, and dormant trees are easier to assess and prune correctly. Summer (May–August) is peak season with premium pricing; fall (September–October) sits in between and is also an excellent window.
| Season | Months | Price Modifier | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Winter / Dormant Season | Dec – Mar | 10–15% discount | Best time for structural pruning — no foliage obscuring branch structure; disease spread minimized |
| Spring Flush | Apr – May | Standard rates | Good window for light crown-thinning; avoid pruning oaks in April–June (oak wilt risk) |
| Summer Peak | Jun – Aug | Standard to +10% | Highest demand; book early or expect 1–2 week waits; post-storm emergency slots at premium |
| Early Fall | Sep – Oct | Standard rates | Ideal for maples and birch after summer stress; prepares trees for winter load |
| Late Fall | Nov | 5–10% discount | Crews transitioning to winter schedule; good availability |
Pro tip for GTA homeowners: Book trimming in January or February for the best rates and fastest availability. Our arborists can assess and prune dormant trees safely in all but the most extreme cold (-20°C or lower), and tree health outcomes from winter pruning are typically superior for structural work.
Why Choose Toronto Tree Removal?
Toronto Tree Removal is the GTA’s ISA Certified trimming and removal specialist — the credentials and insurance that protect you when the work involves large trees near structures.
- ISA Certified Arborists — every trimming job is assessed and supervised by a credentialed professional, not just a labourer with a chainsaw
- $5M Liability Insurance + WSIB — full commercial coverage protects your property and eliminates your liability for on-site crew injuries
- ANSI A300 Pruning Standards — we never remove more than 25% of live crown in a single season; no topping, ever
- 15+ Years GTA Experience — Scarborough to Brampton, North York to Mississauga, we know the species, bylaws, and access challenges of every GTA neighbourhood
- 2-Hour Emergency Response — for storm-damaged limbs or imminent hazards, we’re on site faster than most arborists return your call
- Transparent Pricing — free written quotes with line-item breakdown; no surprise fees for debris removal or equipment
- Permit Guidance Included — if your tree falls under Toronto’s Chapter 813 protection, we’ll tell you before we start and handle the paperwork
For answers to broader tree service questions, our Toronto tree removal FAQ covers over 30 common homeowner questions with specific cost ranges and bylaw guidance.
FAQs: Common Tree Trimming Cost Questions
How much does tree trimming cost in Toronto?
Tree trimming in Toronto costs $200–$1,500+ CAD depending on tree size. Small trees (under 30 ft) average $200–$500; medium trees (30–60 ft) average $450–$800; large trees (60+ ft) run $800–$1,500 or more. Emergency, over-structure, or crane-assisted work can exceed $2,500. A free on-site assessment from an ISA Certified arborist gives you the most accurate number for your specific tree.
Is tree trimming cheaper than tree removal in Toronto?
Yes — tree trimming is typically 50–75% cheaper than full removal for healthy trees. A medium maple that costs $600 to prune would cost $1,500–$2,500 to remove completely. The only situations where removal is the better financial choice are dead trees, trees with advanced disease, or trees causing ongoing structural damage that trimming cannot resolve. See our full tree removal cost comparison for side-by-side pricing.
Do I need a permit to trim a tree in Toronto?
Trimming generally does not require a permit in Toronto unless the tree is on City-owned property (boulevard, ravine zone) or qualifies as a protected private tree under Chapter 813 (trunk ≥ 30 cm DBH). Removing more than 30% of the crown of a protected tree can trigger bylaw review. Our arborists confirm permit status for free during every assessment — unauthorized work on protected trees carries fines of $500–$100,000.
Can I trim my own tree in Toronto?
DIY trimming is only safe for small branches (under 2 inches in diameter) on trees you can prune from the ground with hand tools. Any work requiring a ladder, chainsaw, or climbing on trees over 15 feet poses serious injury risk — falling branch injuries send thousands of Canadians to emergency rooms every year. Large-tree trimming requires ISA-trained climbers, rigging systems, and proper drop-zone control that homeowners cannot safely replicate. Professional cost ($200–$800 for most residential trees) is justified by liability protection, insurance coverage, and correct technique that doesn’t damage the tree.
Does tree trimming kill the tree?
No — proper tree trimming following ANSI A300 standards does not kill healthy trees. The key limit is removing no more than 25% of the live crown per season, which preserves the tree’s photosynthetic capacity. What does damage or eventually kill trees is “topping” — the practice of cutting all main branches back to stubs — which Toronto Tree Removal explicitly does not perform. Improper topping creates large wound surfaces that invite decay, fungal infection, and structural failure over 5–15 years.
What time of year is cheapest for tree trimming in Toronto?
Winter (December–March) is the cheapest season for tree trimming in Toronto, with rates typically 10–15% below peak summer pricing. Dormant-season pruning also has tree health advantages — no foliage obscures the branch structure, disease-spreading insects are inactive, and cuts heal without the stress of active growing season. Book in January or February for the best rate and fastest scheduling.
How long does tree trimming take in Toronto?
Small tree trimming (under 30 ft) takes 2–4 hours with a two-person crew. Medium trees (30–60 ft) typically take a full day, four to eight hours. Large heritage trees (60+ ft) may require one to two days depending on canopy complexity, access, and how much rigging is involved. Multi-tree bookings take proportionally longer but save on mobilization time per tree.
Does homeowner’s insurance cover tree trimming costs in Toronto?
Standard homeowner’s insurance does not cover routine tree trimming — it’s considered maintenance, not damage. However, if a storm causes a branch to fall and damage your home, fence, or vehicle, the resulting property damage claim may be covered under your policy’s All Perils or Named Perils coverage. The fallen limb removal is often covered when it’s blocking access or attached to a covered structure. Always confirm with your insurer before filing a claim.
How much does it cost to trim a large oak tree in Toronto?
Trimming a large oak tree (60+ ft) in Toronto costs $900–$1,800+ CAD, reflecting the dense hardwood that’s harder on equipment, the certified climbers required for safe ascent, and the careful rigging needed to lower heavy limbs without damaging surrounding structures. Heritage oaks may also require arborist documentation under Toronto’s Chapter 813 bylaw before work begins — our team handles this at no additional charge.
Get Your Free Quote Today
Call: 647-558-1366
Toronto Tree Removal’s ISA Certified arborists provide free, written, on-site quotes for all GTA trimming and removal work — Scarborough, North York, Etobicoke, Vaughan, Mississauga, Markham, and Brampton. We carry $5M liability insurance and WSIB on every job. After your trimming, if you also need stump work, check our stump grinding vs stump removal guide for pricing and options. For urgent situations, our 2-hour emergency response is available 24/7 across the GTA.