Removal, trimming, stump grinding, and 24/7 storm response in Hollywood and Broward County — one free call connects you with an independent licensed local pro.
Tell us what's going on — storm damage, a leaning tree, stumps, overgrowth — and we match you with a pro serving your Hollywood ZIP. Free referral, free estimate.
(866) 313-3285
Hollywood and Fort Lauderdale tree care runs on hurricane time: June through November is preparation or response, and the canopy splits into keepers and liabilities — live oaks, mahoganies, and gumbo limbos that ride storms out; ficus, melaleuca, and earleaf acacia that come apart in them. Royal and coconut palms need their fronds and nuts managed before every season, Florida's arborist-documentation law shapes what can come down without a permit, and insurance pressure has made proactive canopy work a financial decision as much as a safety one.
With a median build year of 1996, much of Hollywood is newer construction — which in tree terms means builder-planted stock reaching its first real size, construction-stressed keepers from the development years starting to show decline, and the first round of too-close-to-the-house plantings coming due for honest decisions.
Hollywood is big-city tree country — 137,995+ residents in the covered ZIPs — where access is the hidden variable: tight lots, shared drives, parkway rules, and permit layers that make crew experience with the city's process worth as much as the equipment.
At 83% owner-occupancy, this is a community of people maintaining their own places — the audience every honest tree pro prefers: owners who want the tree assessed straight, the quote explained, and the yard respected.
What sends Hollywood homeowners to the phone: hurricanes June–November (the calendar's anchor); daily summer thunderstorms; king-tide flooding stressing coastal root zones. When one of those events lands, every crew in the area starts triaging — a tree on an occupied house outranks everything, blocked driveways come next. Calling (866) 313-3285 early is how you get served in the first wave instead of the third.
Call (866) 313-3285 — TreeCrewFinder connects you free with an independent licensed tree pro serving Hollywood (ZIPs 33026, 33027, 33029). Searching "tree removal near me" from Hollywood mostly surfaces directories and companies that may not cover you; our referral goes straight to a pro who does.
Yes — 24/7. In Broward County, the emergency calendar runs on hurricanes June–November (the calendar's anchor), and after a big event local crews triage: trees on homes first, blocked access next. Calling (866) 313-3285 early puts you ahead in that queue, any hour.
The local cast: ficus (the faller), live oak, royal and coconut palm, mahogany, black olive, brittle melaleuca and acacia exotics. Which of those is YOUR problem is a driveway conversation — the referred pro will read the specific tree, not the species reputation.
Treat new lean as urgent, full stop. A tree that moved in the ground has broken roots you can't see, and the next wind event — not a hypothetical one, given hurricanes June–November (the calendar's anchor) — finishes the job on its own schedule. Keep people and cars out from under it and call (866) 313-3285 for a same-day professional look.
Florida statute 163.045 lets owners remove trees documented as dangerous by an arborist without local permits; otherwise Broward municipalities do regulate removals and require replacements. The documentation route is exactly the kind of thing your referred pro handles. When in doubt, ask the pro before anything is cut — it's a routine part of quoting here.
The licensed pro sets the price after seeing the job — size, condition, access, and what's under the tree drive every Hollywood quote. The estimate is free, our referral is free, and comparing quotes costs you nothing but the calls.
Hardiness zone 10a-ish winters make dormant season (late fall through late winter) the workhorse window in Florida — visibility is best, disease pressure lowest, and grounds are firmest. Hazards and deadwood come down whenever they're found.
Generally: removal from a covered structure after a fall, yes (minus deductible); preventive removal of a standing tree, no — even a dead one. That gap is the argument for dealing with a hazardous tree on your schedule instead of the storm's. Document everything if a claim is ever in play.
Free referral to an independent licensed local pro. Free estimate. No obligation — and a real answer about your tree.
Call (866) 313-3285 — Free Referral