Tree trimming & pruning · Treasure Coast

Tree Trimming & Pruning On Florida's Treasure Coast

Branches scraping the roof line, canopy throwing shade where you want light, hurricane season closing in, or the HOA just left a notice on the door — your tree needs to be pruned the right way the first time. Crews work to ANSI A300 Part 1 pruning standards under ANSI Z133 safety requirements, with an ISA Certified Arborist. Same-day assessment · Written quote in 4 hours · COI before work begins.

Why Treasure Coast property owners choose Swift

Why Treasure Coast Property Owners Trust Swift For Pruning

  • Family-Owned by Johnathan Portillo & Danny Ramirez (met at church)
  • ISA Certified Arborist On Staff or partnered per job complexity
  • ANSI A300 Pruning Standard + ANSI Z133 Safety Standard on every cut
  • No Topping. No Lion-Tailing. No Hat-Racking — we refuse the destructive shortcuts
  • Fully Insured — General Liability, Workers’ Comp, Commercial Auto (COI before work)
  • ISA Certified Arborist & Wisetack Financing Available
  • Same-Day Assessment · Written Quote in 4 Hours · Mon–Sat 7 AM – 7 PM
  • Kenya Ministry Partnership — a portion of every job funds orphan schools

We prune to preserve, not to topple. Every cut belongs to one of the five ANSI A300 pruning types — named in writing on your quote. Stewardship is not a slogan; it is the reason we refuse to top a tree on the Treasure Coast even when asked. Family-owned. Locally-owned. Church-rooted.

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Tree Trimming & Pruning by Swift Tree & Landscape on the Treasure Coast
When to call Swift

Trees Rarely Fail Without Warning. They Tell You In Advance.

If any of these describe your tree, the next step is an arborist assessment — not a guess.

Canopy is touching the roof, soffits, or pool cage

Branches are sweeping driveways, sidewalks, or hanging over the car

Sun-scald is showing on interior bark from past over-thinning or lion-tailing

Broken, torn, hanging, or split limbs after a storm or microburst

Hurricane season approaching and the canopy has not been structurally reduced in years

Turf or ornamentals underneath are thinning out from too dense a canopy

The HOA or city has issued a pruning or clearance notice

What's included

Every Job Comes With This — In Writing.

  • Proper collar cuts only — no flush cuts, no stubs, no lion-tailing, no topping
  • Each cut belongs to one of 5 ANSI A300 types — crown cleaning, thinning, reduction, raising, or restoration (named on the written quote)
  • ISA Certified Arborist on-site assessment with documented risk evaluation before any cut
  • ANSI Z133 safety setup on every job — traffic control, PPE, drop zone, rigging plan, line-clearance check
  • Climbing rig or bucket truck deployed based on access, lot size, and species
  • Full debris & chip cleanup — lot left cleaner than we found it
  • Documentation — photos, pruning type, percentage removed, aftercare notes
  • Written quote in 4 hours with scope, complexity factors, and pruning-type callouts
The 5 ANSI A300 pruning types Swift performs

Every Cut Belongs To One Of Five Named Types. No Vague “cleanup.”

ANSI A300 Part 1 is the consensus pruning standard for the U.S. tree care industry. Naming the type up front protects the tree — and protects you from vague, over-priced “tree trimming.” Your written quote names the type, the percentage of canopy affected, and the goal.

Crown cleaning

Removing dead, dying, diseased, broken, or weakly attached branches.

Crown thinning

Selectively removing live branches to reduce density and improve light and air movement.

Crown reduction

Reducing the size of a tree by cutting back to appropriate laterals, preserving structural integrity.

Crown raising

Removing lower branches to clear roofs, vehicles, sight lines, and walkways.

Restoration pruning

Correcting storm damage or improperly pruned trees over multiple cycles.

How it works

From Your Call To A Clean Property — Four Steps.

Same-day arborist assessment

ISA Certified Arborist walks each tree, identifies the ANSI A300 pruning type required, evaluates risk (target zone, defects, decay, attachment angles, lean), and documents access constraints.

Written prune plan in 4 hours

Quote names the pruning type, the percentage of canopy affected, and the goal. No vague “cleanup” — every cut accounted for in writing.

ANSI Z133 safety setup + climb

Traffic control, PPE, drop zone, rigging plan, line-clearance check. Climbing rig or bucket truck deployed per access, lot size, and species. Proper collar cuts only.

Cleanup + documentation walkthrough

Lot left cleaner than we found it. Photos, pruning type, percentage removed, and aftercare notes handed to the property owner before we leave.

Topping & lion-tailing — off the table

Swift Will Not Top Or Lion-Tail A Tree On The Treasure Coast.

Even when a customer or HOA requests it. We will explain a compliant alternative on the same visit.

Removes a major portion of the leaf area in one cut

Topping is the indiscriminate cutting of large branches back to stubs (also called hat-racking, heading, or tipping). Lion-tailing strips all interior foliage and leaves only a puff of leaves at the branch tips.

Triggers weakly attached water sprouts

New growth that erupts from topping cuts is poorly attached and fails in storms. The tree is left less safe, not more.

Exposes interior bark to sun-scald

UF/IFAS and the International Society of Arboriculture have documented the damage for decades.

Increases long-term storm failure risk

Topped trees statistically fail more often than properly pruned ones. The cosmetic shortcut becomes a structural liability.

Prohibited or penalised under Treasure Coast codes

Topping is explicitly prohibited under Fort Pierce city code §123-66, and Vero Beach Chapter 72 triggers mitigation requirements when it occurs. Not recognized under ANSI A300.

The details

Trees Swift Prunes Most Often On The Treasure Coast

Live oak — high wind resistance

Per UF/IFAS research: high wind resistance, slow growth. Requires structural pruning spread over multiple cycles, never all at once. The 25% canopy-maximum rule is non-negotiable.

Laurel oak & water oak — low wind resistance

Frequent storm failure. Often candidates for removal rather than aggressive pruning — we tell you honestly on the assessment. See Tree Removal →

Slash pine — deadwood-priority

Regular dead-wood removal is the priority. Limb shedding is normal for slash pine. Pruning is assessment-driven — we don’t over-trim a healthy pine.

Citrus — sucker management

Sucker management on healthy specimens, post-harvest before the spring flush. HLB-affected specimens may warrant evaluation rather than pruning.

Mahogany · gumbo limbo · magnolia · sea grape · ficus

Selective thinning and crown raising in keeping with each species’ growth habit and salt tolerance. Salt-tolerant tropicals get a different rhythm than mainland hardwoods.

Palms — separate protocol

Palms are NOT pruned on tree-timing rules. Palms follow a separate frond-grading and seasonality protocol. See Palm Trimming →

Best time of year to prune

Timing Matters As Much As Technique On The Treasure Coast.

Most major structural pruning on shade trees is best performed in the dormant season. UF/IFAS guidance for oaks, mahogany, and other large shade trees recommends dormant-season cuts because the tree compartmentalizes wounds before pest and disease pressure ramps back up — including oak wilt vectors.

Dec – Feb

Major Structural Pruning

Dormant season on the Treasure Coast. Best window for oaks, mahogany, and other large shade trees. Cuts heal before summer pressure.

Mar – May

Pre-Hurricane Structural Reduction

Before peak storm activity. Pair with hurricane prep — see Hurricane Prep.

Any time

Dead Wood & Hazard Reduction

Hazard limbs and deadwood can be removed any time of year, including the active growing season.

Post-harvest

Citrus Pruning

After harvest, before the spring flush. Sucker management on healthy specimens only.

Palms are not pruned on tree timing rules. Palms follow a separate frond-grading and seasonality protocol. See Palm Trimming →

Permits for major pruning

Most Routine Pruning Does Not Require A Permit. Major Canopy Work On Protected Trees Often Does.

The rules vary by city and county across St. Lucie, Martin, and Indian River. Swift handles the paperwork end to end on every qualifying job. For city-specific pruning-permit thresholds, see the tree trimming page for your city.

Common questions

Frequently Asked About This Service.

How Often Should I Prune My Trees?

Most shade trees on the Treasure Coast benefit from a pruning cycle every two to three years. Fast-growing species like laurel oak and water oak run on a shorter cycle, while slow-growing live oaks can often go three years or more if the structure is sound. Your same-day assessment will recommend a cycle based on species, age, and prior pruning history.

When Is the Best Time of Year to Prune?

December through February for major structural pruning on most shade trees, following UF/IFAS dormant-season guidance. Dead wood and hazard limbs can be removed any time of year. Pre-hurricane structural reduction is best handled March through May.

What Is the Difference Between Trimming and Pruning?

In professional arboriculture, pruning is the selective removal of specific branches under ANSI A300 standards to improve structure, health, or safety. Trimming is a colloquial term often used for cosmetic shaping. Swift applies pruning standards on every job — including the ones customers call “trimming.”

Why Is Topping Bad for My Trees?

Topping removes a major portion of the tree’s food-producing leaves, triggers weak water-sprout regrowth, opens stubs to decay, and increases long-term storm failure risk. UF/IFAS and the ISA both classify topping as destructive. Several Treasure Coast city codes prohibit it. Swift will not top trees.

Do I Need a Permit to Prune My Trees?

Most routine pruning does not require a permit. Major canopy reduction on protected or specimen trees often does, and the thresholds vary by city. Swift handles the paperwork end to end. For city-specific rules, see the tree trimming page for your city.

Can Swift Prune Trees near Power Lines?

Pruning within ten feet of energized primary conductors is regulated work in Florida. Swift assesses every job for line clearance, applies ANSI Z133 standards, and coordinates with the utility when proximity to primary conductors is involved. We do not allow uncertified crew members to enter a regulated proximity zone.

How Long Does a Typical Pruning Job Take?

Most single-tree pruning jobs are completed in a few hours. Multi-tree lots, large live oaks, or restoration pruning may run a full day or multiple visits. The same-day assessment provides a duration estimate in writing.

Storm-damaged tree pruning & emergency response

Restoration Pruning, After The Wind Drops.

Hurricanes, microbursts, and squall lines on the Treasure Coast leave torn, hanging, and split limbs that require restoration pruning spread over multiple visits to bring the tree back to structural integrity. For acute hazards — limb on a roof, tree across a driveway, branch into a pool cage — Swift’s 24/7 human-answered emergency line targets a 60 to 90 minute on-site response. See 24/7 Emergency Tree Service.

What customers say

Real Reviews — This Service.

They refused to remove more than 25% canopy even when I asked for more. I was annoyed at first, then looked up the ISA standard — they were right. Trees are thriving six months later.

Vero Beach, FL
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✓ Verified customer

ISA-certified crew, written prune plan before they started, before-and-after photos when they finished. This is how tree trimming should work. Already booked them for the annual cycle.

Jensen Beach, FL
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Ready To Book This Work?

Same-day on-site assessment · Written quote in 4 hours · Fully insured · Family-owned