For residential property, you generally do not need a city permit to remove a tree in Jacksonville when a certified arborist documents in writing that the tree is a hazard or a danger, under Florida's HB 1159. Trimming and pruning need no permit. Commercial, multi-family, and protected zones — wetlands, mangroves — can differ.
It's the question we hear more than any other: someone has a leaning oak over the bedroom or a storm-split pine in the backyard, and before they think about a crew they think about red tape. The good news for Jacksonville homeowners is that Florida law has made this a lot simpler than it used to be. Here's the plain-English version — and where the real exceptions still live.
The short answer
On a residential property, you generally don't need to pull a city permit to remove a tree when a certified arborist provides written documentation that the tree is a danger. That's the standard Florida set statewide, and it's what governs most single-family homes in Duval, Clay, St. Johns, and Nassau. Routine trimming and pruning never require a permit at all. The exceptions that still matter are commercial and multi-family land, protected or mitigation zones like wetlands, and any private HOA rules — we'll walk through each below.
What Florida HB 1159 changed
In 2019, Florida enacted HB 1159, a private-property rights law that reshaped how local governments can regulate tree removal on residential property. In short, it provides that a homeowner may remove a tree on residential property without a local permit, fee, or mitigation requirement when a certified arborist or a licensed landscape architect provides written documentation that the tree presents a danger to people or property. Before this law, many Florida cities — Jacksonville included — ran their own tree-removal permit systems, complete with applications, fees, and replacement-tree ("mitigation") rules. HB 1159 curtailed those local ordinances for qualifying residential removals. The practical effect: for a genuinely hazardous tree at a house, the arborist's written assessment does the work the old permit application used to do.
What counts as "documentation of danger"
The linchpin of the whole thing is that written assessment. It comes from an ISA Certified Arborist (or a licensed landscape architect) who inspects the tree in person and puts the hazard in writing. Trees that commonly qualify include ones that are:
- Dead or dying — the canopy is failing and the wood is losing integrity.
- Diseased or decaying — rot, cankers, or fungal conks at the base or in the trunk.
- Structurally unsound — a split trunk, co-dominant stems pulling apart, or a lifted root plate.
- Leaning toward a home, driveway, or walkway, especially after wind.
- Storm-damaged — hung limbs, cracked leaders, or a partially uprooted trunk.
- Threatening a structure — a canopy or root system encroaching on the house, garage, or foundation.
The arborist doesn't just wave it through; the documentation has to reflect a real, assessable hazard. A perfectly healthy shade tree that you'd simply rather not rake under is a different conversation.
Trimming and pruning: no permit needed
If your project is maintenance rather than removal, you can stop worrying about permits entirely. Deadwooding, canopy thinning, raising the canopy for clearance, and cutting limbs back off your roof or away from a power line are all standard residential care that requires no city approval. Good pruning is also the cheapest insurance you can buy before hurricane season — see tree trimming for how pre-season work keeps limbs off the house.
When you DO still need to check
HB 1159's exemption is specifically for residential property and genuine hazards. Outside that lane, the older rules can still apply, so verify before you cut in these cases:
- Commercial and multi-family property. Office sites, retail, apartments, and HOA-owned common areas are not covered by the residential exemption and may need local approval.
- Protected, heritage, or mitigation zones. Some jurisdictions still protect specimen or heritage trees and can require permits or replacement plantings.
- Wetlands, mangroves, and conservation easements. These carry separate environmental protections; removals near them often need approval regardless of who owns the land.
- HOA rules. Your homeowners association can impose its own requirements on top of the law — a private covenant, not a city permit, but still binding on you.
Not sure which bucket your tree falls in?
Tell us where the tree is and what's wrong with it. We'll route a licensed, insured Jacksonville crew that can inspect it, arrange the arborist documentation if it's a hazard, and tell you straight if it's a case where you need to check with the city first.
Call (904) 371-6603How this works with your crew
You don't have to hunt down an arborist and a removal crew separately. On hazard removals, the crew arranges the certified arborist documentation as part of the job — the inspection, the written assessment, and then the safe takedown, all in one call. That's how most residential removals actually happen here: the same team that documents the danger is the team that clears the tree. See tree removal for planned takedowns, or emergency tree service when a tree is already down or on a structure and the clock is running.
A note on insurance
One thing worth keeping separate in your head: permit-free is not the same as insurance-covered. HB 1159 answers whether the city requires a permit; it has nothing to do with whether your insurer pays for the work. As a rule, homeowners insurance covers tree removal when a storm-felled tree damages an insured structure, not the preventative removal of a tree you're worried about. Because that line comes down to proof, crews document the scene with photos and a written estimate. For the full breakdown, see storm damage cleanup.
This is general information, not legal advice.
Tree ordinances change and every property is different. Before you remove a tree, verify the specifics for your address with the City of Jacksonville or your county — and let a certified arborist document the hazard in writing. We cite HB 1159 to explain the general rule, not to give a legal opinion on your situation.