Tree Removal & Storm Cleanup
Dead, dying, hazardous, or storm-broken trees taken down safely — including tight removals near homes, fences, and power lines, plus fast cleanup after Iron County's wind and heavy snow load.
Learn more →From a hazard leaning over the house to a stand of pinyon that needs thinning, we connect you with licensed, insured tree crews who know Cedar City's wind, snow load, and high-desert trees. Serving Cedar City, Enoch, and Parowan.
A healthy tree is shaped, not scalped.
Plenty of outfits will "top" a tree flat and call it trimming — but topping starves the tree, invites decay, and forces weak, whippy regrowth that snaps in the next windstorm. The crews we connect you with prune the way an arborist should: thinning and shaping back to the branch collar so the tree stays strong, balanced, and healthy. On a 5,800-foot high-desert lot, that difference shows up the first hard winter.
A proper job also means cleaning up like the crew was never there — branches chipped, logs cut to length or hauled off, and the ground raked, not left in ruts. Every contractor we work with carries liability insurance and stays clear of Rocky Mountain Power lines, because tree work near the ground is one thing and tree work near energized wires is another entirely.
A focused set of tree services — sized to the tree, the season, and how close it stands to your home, never off a template.
Dead, dying, hazardous, or storm-broken trees taken down safely — including tight removals near homes, fences, and power lines, plus fast cleanup after Iron County's wind and heavy snow load.
Learn more →Crown thinning, deadwood removal, clearance pruning, and shaping — cut to the branch collar to keep pinyon, cottonwood, elm, and shade trees strong through wind and snow.
Learn more →Stumps ground below grade so you can replant or pave, plus lot, pasture, and defensible-space clearing — thinning pinyon and juniper back from the house for wildfire safety.
Learn more →A sense of the tree work done across Cedar City and Iron County — your own job photos would live here.
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A measured approach to tree care — the right cut, the right season, and honest advice on whether a tree should come down or can be saved, for the way Iron County trees really grow.
It starts with a free on-site look — someone walks the property, checks the trees for hazards, decay, and how they lean, then connects you with a licensed local crew and a clear written quote. If a tree can be saved with pruning instead of removed, you'll hear that too.
Then the crew does the work safely — roping down limbs near structures, chipping brush, cutting logs to length, and grinding stumps if you want them gone — and leaves the site raked and clean, not rutted and buried in debris.
Someone walks the property, checks each tree for hazards and decay, and gives you a clear written quote — plus an honest call on prune-versus-remove.
The crew ropes down limbs near structures, works clear of power lines, and takes the tree or branches down without tearing up the yard.
Brush chipped, logs cut to length or hauled off, stumps ground if you want them gone, and the ground raked clean before they leave.
From Cedar City and Enoch to Parowan, Kanarraville, Paragonah, and Summit — tree care for the high-desert wind, heavy snow load, and pinyon-juniper country of the Cedar Valley.
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There's no flat rate — it depends on the tree's height and species, how close it stands to your house or power lines, whether a crane or a climber is needed, and whether you want the stump ground and the wood hauled. A big cottonwood over a roof is a very different job than a dead pinyon out in the open. The on-site estimate is free, with a written quote before any work starts.
For most Iron County trees, late fall through early spring — while they're dormant — is ideal: cuts heal cleaner and the branch structure is easy to read. Storm-broken or clearly hazardous limbs are the exception and should come off whenever they happen, any season. The crew can tell you what's worth waiting on and what shouldn't.
Cedar City and the surrounding Iron County towns — including Enoch, Parowan, Kanarraville, Paragonah, Summit, and up toward Brian Head. If you're in or near the Cedar Valley, there's likely a crew close by.
Yes. Tree work is genuinely dangerous — chainsaws, heights, and heavy limbs near homes and wires — so we only connect you with contractors who carry liability insurance and, for the right jobs, workers' comp. Always ask to see a current certificate of insurance before anyone climbs; a reputable crew hands it over without hesitation.
Not every leaning or thinning tree needs to come down. Where pruning, cabling, or treating a pest like the pinyon ips beetle will do, the crews we connect you with will say so — before you pay to remove something worth keeping.
Send your address or describe the tree — leaning, dead, overgrown, or storm-damaged — and we'll set up a free on-site estimate anywhere in Cedar City or Iron County.
(435) 555-0199