Kendall covers more square miles than any other community in Miami-Dade — from the older live-oak streets near Dadeland to the deeper development off Kendall Drive and SW 137th Avenue. We've been working trees here for almost a decade and the patterns repeat: thirty-year-old slash pines weakened by lightning strikes, mango canopies that quietly grew into the eaves of a house, Florida holly that should have come out a decade ago, and royal palms next to driveways with roots starting to lift the pavers.
Most of Kendall sits in unincorporated Miami-Dade, which means tree removal permits go through the county DERM office rather than a city department. The threshold is lower than people expect — native specimen trees with a 5-inch DBH or greater can require a permit, and the county takes its native canopy seriously. We handle the application, the photos, and the per-tree fee so you don't have to learn the form.
We're licensed, insured, bilingual, and the same crew shows up every time. The quote is written on-site after we walk the tree with you, and there's no inflation for the Kendall ZIP — a lot of operators charge by neighborhood; we don't.
Four issues that come up on almost every Kendall removal job, and what handling them looks like.
The dominant canopy trees in older Kendall. Live oaks weather hurricanes well but drop massive limbs without warning when they're under-pruned. Slash pines are the opposite — they go down fast in tropical storms because the root plate is shallow. Removal of either over 5" DBH triggers the county permit. We rig sections out on rope to protect pool decks and screen enclosures.
Almost every Kendall yard built before 1990 has a mango or avocado that's now twice the size the original owner planted. Some are still productive and worth saving with structural pruning. Some have grown into the roof and need to come out. We tell you straight which one yours is. Mature mango wood is dense — full removal usually takes a full day with the chipper running.
Brazilian pepper (Florida holly) and Australian pine are illegal to plant and require removal under Miami-Dade's invasive species ordinance if you're getting any other tree work permitted. We pull them out at the same time, with stump grinding included, so you don't pay a separate trip charge.
Tree removal permit through the Miami-Dade Department of Environmental Resources Management (DERM). Application fee around $50, plus a per-tree mitigation fee for native specimen trees. Typical turnaround is 7–14 business days. Replacement plantings may be required at a 1:1 or 2:1 ratio depending on the species. We file on your behalf — you sign once.
What Kendall residents ask before booking us.
We'll walk the property with you, check drop zones and access, tell you straight whether the tree needs to come out or can be saved, and write the quote in front of you.