Tree service in Cape Coral.
Cape Coral's defining feature for tree work isn't the trees — it's the canal system. Many lots have a 50-foot setback to a canal seawall, which means tree access is from the yard side or from a neighbor's lot. Cape also has heavy invasive pressure (Brazilian pepper, Australian pine, melaleuca) from undeveloped lots, and we do a lot of invasive removal work here.
Cape Harbour · Tarpon Point · Pine Island Road · Surfside
Permits & local rules.
Lee County has tree-protection ordinances; Sanibel and Bonita Springs have additional local rules. Mangroves are MTPA-protected throughout. Invasive removal (Brazilian pepper, Australian pine, melaleuca) often has streamlined permitting and sometimes county incentive programs.
Tree services in Cape Coral.
Cape Coral questions we get often.
How does crane work happen on a Cape Coral canal lot?
Often it doesn't — the access just isn't there. We climb-and-rig the tree out in sections, sometimes staging from a neighbor's lot with permission, occasionally barging a smaller crane in for the bigger jobs. The photo bid tells us which approach fits before we commit.
How does tree removal work on a Cape Coral canal lot?
Access is the big factor. Many Cape lots can't fit a crane between the house and the seawall, so we either climb-and-rig from the yard side or stage from a neighbor's lot with permission. We assess access during the photo bid and tell you which approach fits.
Are Sanibel's tree rules really that strict?
Yes. Sanibel has one of the more protective local tree ordinances in the state, with mangrove protection, native-species preferences, and specific permitting for removals. We do the homework before quoting any Sanibel work.
Send us a photo of your tree.
Real written quote for any tree job in Cape Coral — no on-site sales walk, no surprise number on the invoice.
