Types of Tree Service Businesses Offering Landscaping

Tree service businesses vary widely in structure, credentials, specialization, and the landscaping functions they perform. Understanding these distinctions helps property owners, facility managers, and municipalities match the right type of provider to a specific scope of work — whether that involves routine maintenance, hazard removal, or long-term landscape design. This page classifies the primary business types, explains how each operates, and outlines the scenarios and decision factors that separate one from another.

Definition and scope

A tree service business offering landscaping is any commercial entity that provides tree-related work — removal, trimming, planting, health assessment, or structural support — as part of a broader landscape management context. The category spans sole proprietors with a single truck and chainsaw to multi-crew operations managing commercial campuses and urban tree inventories.

The International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) recognizes distinct credentialing tracks for arborists versus general landscape workers, and that credential boundary maps closely to the functional divisions between business types. Firms may hold a state contractor's license, an ISA Certified Arborist credential, or both — and licensing requirements vary by state (see tree service licensing requirements in the US for a state-by-state breakdown). Scope also varies: a business classified as a tree care firm under the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 561730 (Landscaping Services) may perform everything from pruning to land clearing, while a narrower arboricultural consultancy may limit work to diagnosis and reporting.

How it works

Tree service businesses offering landscaping typically operate under one of five structural models:

  1. General landscaping company with tree services — A landscaping firm whose primary revenue comes from lawn care, irrigation, or planting, but that employs or subcontracts certified arborists for tree-specific tasks. These operations handle routine pruning and seasonal tree maintenance but rarely perform large-scale removals or structural cabling in-house.

  2. Dedicated tree care company — Focuses exclusively on trees and woody plants. Crew members typically hold ISA certifications or state-required arborist credentials. These firms use specialized equipment — aerial lifts, chippers, and cranes — and are the primary providers for tree risk assessment, disease treatment, and cabling and bracing.

  3. Full-service landscape design and tree company — Integrates landscape architecture with tree care. Services span tree planting and landscape design, native tree selection, and long-term landscape maintenance plans. These firms typically employ or partner with licensed landscape architects in addition to arborists.

  4. Municipal or utility tree service contractor — Operates under government or utility contracts to manage trees along rights-of-way, in public parks, or near power infrastructure. Work is governed by ANSI A300 pruning standards and often requires compliance with OSHA 1910.269 for line-clearance work (OSHA 1910.269). See utility line tree trimming for operational specifics.

  5. Land clearing and site preparation firm — Specializes in bulk vegetation removal before construction or agricultural conversion. These businesses overlap with tree service when the clearing involves protected or high-value specimens. Work often requires permits under local tree ordinances (see tree service permits and local regulations).

The arborist vs. landscaper service distinctions page covers the credential and liability boundaries between these roles in greater detail.

Common scenarios

Residential property maintenance — A homeowner with 6 mature oaks typically engages either a dedicated tree care company or a full-service landscape firm. Routine trimming, storm damage response, and stump removal after a takedown are the most common service triggers. See residential tree service and landscaping for scenario-specific guidance.

Commercial campus management — Corporate parks, HOAs, and retail centers often contract full-service firms on annual maintenance agreements covering pruning schedules, health monitoring, and emergency response. Commercial tree service and landscaping addresses contract structures and scope expectations.

Post-storm emergency response — After major weather events, dedicated tree care companies and general landscaping firms with crews certified in aerial rigging handle hazard removals. Response speed, equipment capacity (crane vs. no crane), and ISA certification are the three primary differentiators in this scenario. The storm damage tree service page details response protocols.

New construction site prep — Land clearing firms handle bulk removal, but when protected species are present, a dedicated tree care company or ISA-credentialed arborist must assess and document the work to satisfy local ordinances. Tree preservation during construction outlines compliance requirements.

Decision boundaries

Choosing between business types depends on four criteria:

Credential requirement — Work on trees near power lines requires line-clearance training per OSHA standards. ISA Certified Arborist credentials are required by name in many municipal contracts and by insurance underwriters on commercial properties.

Equipment scale — Crane-assisted removals and aerial-lift pruning distinguish dedicated tree care companies from general landscapers. A firm without a crane or bucket truck cannot safely perform large-canopy work over structures.

Scope complexity — Single-task jobs (stump grinding, one removal) fit a specialized subcontractor. Multi-phase projects integrating deep root fertilization, pest management, and canopy management are better matched to full-service or dedicated tree care firms.

Liability and insuranceTree service insurance for landscaping contractors requirements differ by business type. General landscaping policies frequently exclude aerial tree work above a set height — often 15 feet — requiring a separate arborist-specific policy endorsement.

General landscaping companies with tree services suit routine, low-risk maintenance on accessible trees. Dedicated tree care companies are the appropriate choice when structural assessment, disease diagnosis, large removals, or utility proximity is involved. Full-service design-and-tree firms are best positioned for landscape renovation projects where species selection, long-term health, and aesthetic integration must be managed as a single scope.

References

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