ISA Certified Arborist — Serving the Bay Area
Call: (415) 881-0124
Woodside, CA · Updated March 2026
Yes — a permit is required

Do I Need a Tree Permit in Woodside?

Woodside has the most severe tree violation enforcement in the Bay Area — a documented $212,500 fine for 22 trees in 2016. Thresholds vary by species growth rate, and the permit process takes 6–10 weeks. Here's how to navigate it.

Varies
Protection threshold
~$150
Permit fee
6–10 wks
Typical timeline
$100K+
Penalty

Does my tree need a permit?

Select your tree type and measure the trunk to get an instant answer based on Woodside's ordinance (Significant Tree Ordinance).

Permit required. Contact Planning & Building at (650) 851-6790 before scheduling any work.

Measure circumference at 48 inches above mean natural grade. Wrap a flexible tape around the trunk.

What trees are protected in Woodside?

Woodside uses a three-tier circumference system based on growth rate: slow-growing natives (madrone, blue oak, buckeye) at 24 inches, fast-growing natives (coast live oak, valley oak, redwood, bay laurel) at 30 inches, and non-native trees at 36 inches — all measured at 48 inches above mean natural grade. Eucalyptus, acacia, and Monterey pine are fee-exempt (fee waived) but still require a permit. The 2016 case of $212,500 in fines for 22 trees demonstrates the town's enforcement commitment.

Protected tree thresholds in Woodside
Category Protected at Notes Penalty
Slow-growing natives (madrone, blue oak, buckeye, alder) ≥24″ circumference At 48″ above natural grade Up to $100,000+
Fast-growing natives (coast live oak, valley oak, redwood, bay laurel) ≥30″ circumference At 48″ above natural grade Up to $100,000+
Non-native trees ≥36″ circumference At 48″ above natural grade Up to $100,000+
Eucalyptus, Acacia, Monterey Pine Fee-exempt species Permit still needed but fee is waived Varies
Defensible Space Program trees Any size Fee-exempt when part of fire safety N/A if permitted

Not sure if your tree qualifies?

Measure first. An arborist consultation ($150–$300) is far cheaper than violation penalties. Call Planning & Building at (650) 851-6790 — they can often tell you on the phone whether your tree is likely protected.

How to get a tree removal permit in Woodside

Woodside's permit process runs through Planning & Building. Here's the step-by-step sequence:

1

Identify species and measure

Determine the growth rate category: slow-growing native (24″ circ threshold), fast-growing native (30″), or non-native (36″). Measure circumference at 48 inches above mean natural grade.

2

Hire a certified arborist

An ISA Certified Arborist report is required. Given Woodside's enforcement severity, invest in a thorough report documenting condition, reason for removal, and alternatives. Budget $400–$800.

3

Submit Tree Destruction Permit

File the application with Planning & Building at (650) 851-6790. Include arborist report, site plan, photos, and species identification. Pay the permit fee (approximately $150) unless the species is fee-exempt.

4

Town review

Planning & Building reviews the application. Processing takes 6–10 weeks — the longest on the Peninsula. Significant trees on large rural properties may involve site visits and additional documentation.

5

Receive permit and schedule work

Once approved, hire a licensed tree service (CSLB C-61/D-49). Replacement planting is typically required. Keep the permit on-site during all work. Given enforcement history, ensure full compliance.

What happens if you remove a tree without a permit?

Up to $100,000+ per tree — Woodside means it

Woodside imposes the Bay Area's most severe tree violation penalties. A documented 2016 case resulted in $212,500 in fines for cutting 22 mature oaks, bay laurels, and madrone trees without permits. The town takes unauthorized tree removal extremely seriously. Even fee-exempt species (eucalyptus, acacia, Monterey pine) still require a permit — only the fee is waived, not the permit itself.

A permit costs approximately $150 and takes 6–10 wks. The penalties for skipping it are orders of magnitude higher. There's no scenario where unpermitted removal saves money.

Woodside Planning & Building — contact and resources

Department
Planning & Building
Permit fee
~$150
Typical timeline
6–10 wks
Ordinance
Significant Tree Ordinance
Arborist report
Required — ISA Certified Arborist assessment

Call before you apply

Planning & Building staff at (650) 851-6790 can often tell you whether your tree is likely protected before you spend money on an arborist report. Worth a 10-minute call.

Frequently asked questions

Does pruning require a permit in Woodside?
Pruning that follows ISA standards and doesn't significantly alter the tree's structure does not typically require a permit. Major structural pruning on significant trees should be discussed with Planning & Building first.

What if the tree is dead or hazardous?
Dead or hazardous trees may qualify for expedited removal, but contact Planning & Building at (650) 851-6790 first. Given Woodside's enforcement history, always get approval in writing before any removal.

Are eucalyptus trees exempt from permits in Woodside?
Eucalyptus, acacia, and Monterey pine are fee-exempt — the permit fee is waived. However, you still need to apply for and receive a Tree Destruction Permit before removal. 'Fee-exempt' does not mean 'permit-exempt.' Trees removed under the Defensible Space and Home Hardening Program are also fee-exempt.

Related reading for Woodside tree owners

🍂 Sudden Oak Death on the Peninsula 🪲 Shot Hole Borer in the Bay Area 🔥 Defensible Space Guide ⚖️ California Tree Law & Neighbor Disputes 🌿 Coast Live Oak Guide 🌲 Coast Redwood Guide 🗺️ Woodside Neighborhood Map

Need a permit-experienced arborist?

Every company in our Woodside rankings has been verified for CSLB licensing, ISA credentials, and permit experience.

Written by Michael Schuck, ISA Certified Arborist WE-15750A. Ordinance data verified March 2026 against Woodside Significant Tree Ordinance. Rules change — always confirm with Woodside Planning & Building before scheduling work. This page is general guidance, not legal advice.

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