⛰️ Tree Removal Permit Requirements in Colorado
Updated 2025 · Covers private residential property within Colorado city limits and unincorporated areas
Colorado has no statewide tree removal permit requirement. Denver requires permits for significant trees (generally 10"+ DBH). Mountain resort communities may have stricter rules.
City-by-City Rules in Colorado
| City / Area | Permit Rules |
|---|---|
| Denver | Permit required for significant trees 10"+ DBH; $75–$200 fee; 7–14 day review |
| Boulder | Active urban forestry program; significant tree permits required citywide |
| Fort Collins | Tree ordinance in place; permits required for trees meeting city thresholds |
| Colorado Springs | Growing city; permit requirements for significant tree removal |
| Aurora | Permit requirements follow standard Colorado Front Range urban forestry practices |
General Guidance for Colorado Homeowners
Because Colorado has no statewide private-property tree removal law (or state-level rules that vary by city), the only way to be certain about your specific address is to contact your city's Development Services, Building Department, or Urban Forestry office directly. Provide your address and a description of the tree(s) you'd like to remove — most offices can answer in a single call.
How to Find Your City's Tree Removal Rules
- Use our Permit Checker — covers major Colorado cities with specific threshold and fee data. Try it now →
- Call your city's Development Services — describe your address and tree. Most offices can confirm permit requirements in one call.
- Search your city's ordinance — "[your city] tree ordinance" or "[your city] urban forestry code" will typically surface the relevant regulations.
Common Exemptions That Apply Statewide
- Trees below each city's size threshold (diameter at breast height)
- Confirmed dead trees (simplified process in most cities)
- Emergency removal of imminent hazard trees (notify city within 24–72 hours)
- Trees on actively farmed agricultural land (check county rules)
Frequently Asked Questions — Colorado
No — Colorado has no statewide private-property tree removal permit requirement (with the exception of specific protected species like saguaro in Arizona, which is governed by state law). All permit requirements are set at the city, county, or municipal level. This means the rules differ significantly between cities — sometimes between neighboring cities with different ordinances.
In cities with active tree ordinances, unpermitted removal of a protected tree can result in fines ranging from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands of dollars per tree, plus mandatory replacement planting requirements. The violation can follow the property deed through real estate transactions. See our violation and fines guide for detailed information.
Related: Do I Need A Permit · Tree Removal Permit Cost · Permit Checker