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| Tree condition | What it often means | Likely next step |
|---|---|---|
| Overgrown canopy | Tree needs shape, clearance, or weight reduction | Trimming review |
| Dead branches | Falling-limb risk, but tree may still be stable | Trimming or inspection |
| Major trunk damage | Pruning may not solve the core issue | Removal review |
| Root loss or soil movement | Service choice depends on stability | Inspection before service choice |
| Sudden lean | Possible root or trunk instability | Call for review |
| Utility clearance issue | May require safety-first scheduling | Call before trimming |
Answer a few visible-condition questions to see whether trimming may be enough, removal should be reviewed, or the situation needs urgent help.
This tool does not decide whether a tree is safe. It helps narrow the likely service path based on visible issues. A crew still needs to confirm structure, access, and site conditions before recommending trimming or removal.
If the trunk and roots look stable, canopy shaping and roof-clearance trimming may solve the problem without removing the tree.
Deadwood, canopy thinning, and brittle limbs can make a tree look manageable until branches begin failing.
Height, frond weight, limb drop, and access can change whether trimming is simple or riskier than expected.
Homes, pools, fences, driveways, and utility lines can turn a normal tree issue into a safety planning problem.
| Detail | What to look for |
|---|---|
| Tree health | Green canopy, dead top, dead limbs, or mostly dead tree |
| Trunk condition | Large wounds, cavities, decay, or wood that may not support pruning work |
| Root area | Root damage, grade changes, construction cuts, or soil movement near the base |
| Clearance | Branches over roof, driveway, walkway, pool, or fence |
| Service urgency | Whether the work can be scheduled normally or needs same-day review |
Sometimes. If the tree is alive and the main problem is deadwood, overgrowth, or clearance, trimming may help. Structural trunk or root issues need review first.
Sometimes. A long-standing, stable lean may only need monitoring or clearance work, but a new or worsening lean should be reviewed before trimming is chosen.
Removal may be more practical when pruning would leave the main problem unresolved, especially with a mostly dead tree, major trunk damage, root loss, or repeated limb failure.
Often, yes. If the tree is otherwise stable, canopy reduction, clearance pruning, or palm cleanup can solve the issue without taking the tree down.
It depends on the situation. Routine clearance may be planned work, but branches touching or very close to utility lines should be treated as a safety issue and handled by phone first.