
Newport Beach Tree Services offers tree trimming, removal, stump grinding, and emergency response for homeowners and businesses across Newport Beach - licensed, insured, and ready to come out for a free estimate.

Newport Beach trees grow year-round in the mild coastal climate, which means untrimmed branches can reach your roofline or power lines faster than in inland cities. Our tree trimming service in Newport Beach keeps canopies shaped, deadwood cleared, and clearances maintained before the next Santa Ana wind event.
Newport Beach has a protected tree ordinance that requires a permit before removing trees above a certain size, and we handle that permit process for you. Whether you have a dead eucalyptus on the Balboa Peninsula or a large Ficus pushing up hardscape in Corona del Mar, we assess the job and remove the tree safely.
Structural pruning matters in Newport Beach because salt air and onshore winds put extra stress on tree canopies, making poorly structured branches more likely to fail. We prune to improve branch attachment, reduce wind load, and encourage long-term health in species common along the coast.
Leftover stumps in Newport Beach yards attract termites and are a tripping hazard on smaller lots like those found on Balboa Island. We grind stumps below grade so you can lay sod, plant a replacement, or simply reclaim a usable patch of yard.
Santa Ana wind events can drop large branches or topple whole trees overnight, and Newport Beach eucalyptus trees are especially prone to sudden limb failure. We respond quickly to storm damage, downed trees, and hazardous limbs threatening your home or blocking access.
Newport Beach has a mix of waterfront hotels, retail blocks, and office properties, many of which have mature trees that need regular maintenance to stay healthy and presentable. We work with property managers and HOAs on scheduled programs and one-time projects.
Newport Beach sits directly on the Southern California coast, and that position shapes every aspect of how trees grow and fail here. Salt-laden air blowing in off the Pacific degrades wood tissue, weakens bark, and accelerates decay in species that would live longer in a drier inland climate. Add in the year-round growing season and it becomes easy for trees to outgrow their space, push into structures, or develop structural problems that aren't obvious until a strong wind tests them.
The city's diverse housing stock adds complexity to the work. Older cottages on Balboa Island sit on lots 30 feet wide or less, which means crew access is limited and every cut has to be calculated to avoid neighboring structures. Newport Coast estates on the eastern side of the city have large lots with mature trees planted in the 1990s that are now hitting a critical age for assessment and maintenance. Newport Beach also maintains a protected tree ordinance that governs what can be removed and when, so working here requires knowing city requirements, not just tree biology. A tree service crew that works here regularly knows these layers well.
Our crew works throughout Newport Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect tree service work here. We pull permits through the Newport Beach Community Development Building Division when jobs require it, and we check HOA requirements in communities like Harbor View and Bonita Canyon before scheduling any removal. The palm trees, eucalyptus groves, and large Ficus trees that define so many Newport Beach properties each come with their own removal and trimming challenges, and our crew has worked on all of them.
Newport Beach is organized into distinct neighborhoods that each have a different character and a different set of tree service needs. Balboa Island and the Balboa Peninsula have tight lots and older vegetation that requires careful hand-climbing rather than bucket trucks. Corona del Mar has hillside properties with ocean views and canyon-adjacent lots where debris disposal and equipment placement require advance planning. Residents along Newport Harbor deal with salt spray at a higher intensity than most of the city, which means their trees need more frequent inspections to catch crown dieback early.
If you are in Corona del Mar or out in Newport Coast, we cover your area and understand the specific conditions that affect your property. We also serve neighboring Costa Mesa, so if you have a neighbor or family member there who needs tree work, we can help.
Call us at (949) 849-0315 or use the contact form on this page. We reply within one business day and can usually schedule an on-site visit within a few days of your call.
We come to your property and assess the tree in person before quoting. We check for permit requirements under the Newport Beach tree ordinance and any HOA rules that apply, so you know the full scope and cost before agreeing to anything.
Our crew arrives at the scheduled time with the right equipment for your specific job. We use tarps and plywood to protect your lawn and hardscape, and we lower heavy branches with ropes and rigging rather than dropping them.
When the work is done, we chip or haul away the debris and rake the area clean. Before we leave, we walk you through what was done so you can see the result and ask any questions.
We serve all of Newport Beach - from Balboa Island to Newport Coast. Call us or fill out the form and we'll get back to you within one business day.
(949) 849-0315Newport Beach is a coastal city of about 85,000 residents on the southern Orange County shoreline, anchored by one of the largest small-craft harbors on the West Coast. The city is organized into distinct neighborhoods - Balboa Island, with its densely packed 1920s and 1930s cottages on narrow lots; the Balboa Peninsula, which wraps around the harbor; Corona del Mar, with hillside homes and canyon views at the city's southern edge; and Newport Coast, a newer area of larger Mediterranean-style estates developed primarily in the 1990s. Newport Heights and older parts of the city near Cliff Drive have a mix of original mid-century homes and newer infill construction. Each neighborhood has its own housing character and its own tree service challenges. More information about the city of Newport Beach is available on Wikipedia.
The trees that define Newport Beach neighborhoods - Canary Island palms along the harbor walks, mature eucalyptus groves near older residential areas, Ficus hedges and trees in landscaped yards across the city - all reflect the mild coastal climate and the decades-long planting history of each area. Residents here tend to invest in their properties and expect contractors to work carefully and cleanly. We have served Newport Beach and the surrounding communities since 2016, and we understand both the city's permit environment and the specific species and property types our crews encounter here. Neighboring cities including Costa Mesa are also part of our regular service area.
Professional tree care tailored to commercial properties of any size.
Learn MoreCall us today for a free on-site estimate - we typically schedule within a few days and reply to all inquiries within one business day.