Serving Coconut Grove & all of Miami-Dade · Licensed & Insured · Est. 2017 Habla Español · Free On-Site Estimates
Coconut Grove, Miami-Dade · Tree Removal

Tree Removal in Coconut Grove

Banyans, royal poincianas, the live oaks off Main Highway — we work the trees that make the Grove the Grove, and we handle the City of Miami permit.
ZIP codes served: 33129 · 33133
Neighborhood Specialists

Why Grove residents call Martin's Tree Solution

The Coconut Grove canopy is one of the oldest in South Florida — much of it predates incorporation. Aerial-rooted banyans, the gumbo limbos with their bronze peeling bark, mahoganies dropping pods by the thousand in late spring, and the giant royal poincianas that bloom red over Main Highway in May. Working trees in the Grove means knowing the ecosystem AND knowing the City of Miami's tree code, which is stricter than most people realize.

The Grove is part of the City of Miami, so tree work falls under Chapter 17 of the city code (the Tree Protection Code) and is administered by the Office of Resilience and Sustainability. Specimen-class trees — defined by both species and size — require a permit before any removal or significant pruning. For Center Grove, properties inside the historic district may also need Historic and Environmental Preservation Board sign-off, which adds time but isn't difficult if you start the application early.

We're licensed, insured, and bilingual. We've been working Grove trees since 2017 and we know which streets have utility lines threading through banyan canopies, which yards have specimen mahoganies that can't legally come out without mitigation plantings, and which lots are inside the historic boundaries. Quote on-site, written in front of you, no inflation for the ZIP code.

What we see on Grove trees

Four patterns we hit on almost every Coconut Grove removal job.

Banyans & Aerial-Root Ficus

The Grove's most iconic trees, and the most regulated. Most banyans in the Center Grove and along Bayshore are specimen-protected — full removal requires city arborist sign-off and often mitigation plantings at 2:1 or 3:1 ratios. Aerial-root removal and selective canopy reduction is usually a better answer than full takedown. We coordinate with City of Miami arborist before quoting these.

Royal Poincianas

Stunning in May, structurally weak in August. The classic V-crotch on a poinciana splits under wind load, especially after a wet spring loads the canopy with weight. We see two or three a year that come down on a pool cage during tropical storms. Structural pruning to balance the canopy is the right call before removal — but if it's already split, full takedown with replanting is the move.

Mahoganies & Gumbo Limbos

Native, specimen-class, almost always permit-requiring. The mahoganies in particular drop large pods that crack windshields and patio screens — homeowners often want them out, but the city wants them preserved. We thread the needle: significant canopy reduction (legal, less paperwork) instead of full removal, when the tree is otherwise healthy.

The City of Miami permit process

Tree removal permit through the Office of Resilience and Sustainability. Base fee around $40 plus per-tree assessment. Typical turnaround is 10–15 business days for non-specimen trees. Specimen trees and historic-district properties add 2–4 weeks for arborist visits and HEPB review. We handle the photos, the application, and the inspector visit.

9
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On-Site Estimates

Coconut Grove tree removal — common questions

The questions Grove residents ask before they book.

[{'q': 'Do I need a permit to remove a tree in Coconut Grove?', 'a': 'Yes for almost any tree above 5" DBH that isn\'t on the exempt list (Florida holly, Brazilian pepper, Australian pine, etc.). Specimen-class trees — including most native hardwoods, all banyans, and any tree above 24" DBH — require a more involved permit with city arborist visit. Historic district properties may also need HEPB approval. We file everything.'}, {'q': 'How much does tree removal cost in the Grove?', 'a': 'A 30-ft mahogany with permit and mitigation planting included: $1,800–$3,000. A 60-ft banyan in Center Grove with HEPB review: $4,000–$8,000+ depending on the canopy size and access. A simple Florida holly removal with stump grind: $400–$600. We write the quote on-site after walking the property — no phone-only estimates on the historic stuff.'}, {'q': 'Do you work inside the historic district?', 'a': "Yes. We're familiar with HEPB submittal requirements and have done multiple historic-district jobs along Main Highway, Devon, and the older streets near Vizcaya. Historic-district work adds 2–4 weeks to the timeline but isn't difficult if the application is filed correctly the first time."}, {'q': 'What about trees over the seawall or bayfront?', 'a': "Bayfront properties have additional considerations — the DEP shoreline buffer requirements and sometimes Miami-Dade Environmental Permitting (DERM) on top of city permits. We've worked seawall-adjacent removals on Bayshore and along the bayfront streets. The quote includes the additional permitting time."}, {'q': '¿Trabajan en español?', 'a': "Sí, somos una empresa familiar cubana — el estimado y el contrato se los damos en español si lo prefiere. (Yes, we're a Cuban family business — quote and contract in Spanish on request, fully bilingual crew.)"}]

Ready for a free on-site estimate?

We'll walk the canopy with you, check the permit class and access, tell you straight whether removal or canopy reduction is the right answer, and write the quote on the spot.