How Much Does Mulch Delivery and Installation Cost in 2026? Complete Pricing Breakdown

March 22, 2026

Most homeowners underestimate how quickly mulch delivery and installation costs add up—or how much they overpay by buying bags at a garden center when bulk delivery would have been cheaper and easier. If you’re staring at bare beds in February or refreshing a full property after a renovation, the numbers in this guide will give you a realistic baseline before you make any calls.

This is a pricing guide built from actual project experience delivering and installing mulch across the Seattle, Sammamish, and Issaquah areas. The figures here reflect 2026 regional rates, the variables that drive quotes up or down, and an honest look at when professional installation is worth the cost versus when a wheelbarrow and a Saturday morning is the right answer.

Ready to skip the research and get a number? Request a quote from MTS Tree & Landscape or call (425) 369-8733 and we’ll get you a fast, itemized estimate.

How Much Does Mulch Delivery and Installation Cost?

Mulch delivery and installation cost breaks into three components: the material itself, the delivery fee, and the labor to spread it. Combined, most residential projects run $85 to $225 per cubic yard delivered and installed, or roughly $3 to $8 per square foot at a standard 3-inch depth.

2026 Mulch Delivery and Installation Cost Summary

Mulch material:$30 to $80 per cubic yard (varies by type)

Delivery fee:$25 to $80 per load (distance-dependent; often reduced or waived for larger orders)

Professional installation/spreading:$30 to $65 per cubic yard

Total delivered and installed: Approximately $85 to $225 per cubic yard, or $3 to $8 per square foot at 3-inch depth

Average residential project (5 to 10 cubic yards):$500 to $1,800 fully delivered and installed

The spread in those numbers is real. A small front-yard refresh with economy bark mulch at $35 per yard looks nothing like a full-property cedar installation with slope access and bed preparation. The sections below explain exactly what moves the price.

What Is the Average Cost of Mulch Per Cubic Yard?

Material cost is the first variable to nail down, and it depends almost entirely on which mulch type you choose. The table below reflects 2026 pricing for the Seattle area.

Mulch Type Cost Per Cubic Yard Notes
Utility/economy wood chips $25 to $35 Basic ground cover; breaks down faster
Double-ground hardwood bark $35 to $50 Most popular residential choice; good color retention
Cedar bark mulch $45 to $65 Natural pest-deterrent properties; aromatic; slower decomposition
Hemlock bark mulch $40 to $55 Rich color; popular in Pacific Northwest landscapes
Colored/dyed mulch (black, red, brown) $40 to $60 Aesthetic variety; always verify non-toxic, vegetable-based dyes
Playground-certified wood fiber $50 to $70 Meets ASTM F1292 fall-height safety standards
Premium aged compost mulch $45 to $65 Dual-purpose: mulch and soil amendment
Arborist wood chips (recycled) $0 to $20 Often free or low-cost from tree operations; variable texture

What Is the Cheapest Type of Mulch to Have Delivered and Installed?

Arborist wood chips are the lowest-cost option. The material is often free or near-free from tree service operations, so you’re paying delivery only. Economy utility wood chips are the cheapest commercially purchased option at $25 to $35 per cubic yard.

The trade-off is worth understanding. Cheaper mulch decomposes faster, may contain weed seeds, and typically needs more frequent replacement. For homeowners who want a clean, consistent look that holds for 18 months or more, double-ground hardwood or cedar bark offers better long-term value even at a higher upfront cost per yard.

Want help choosing the right mulch type for your property? Call MTS Tree & Landscape at (425) 369-8733 or visit our mulch delivery page for options and pricing.

How Much Does Professional Mulch Installation Cost Per Square Foot?

Most homeowners think in square footage, not cubic yards. At a standard 3-inch depth, one cubic yard covers approximately 108 square feet. Professional installation combining material, delivery, and spreading typically runs $3 to $8 per square foot depending on mulch type and site conditions.

For a 500-square-foot bed area at mid-grade material and standard access, expect to budget around $600 to $900 fully installed. A larger 1,500-square-foot property with cedar bark and slope access will land toward the upper end of that range.

What Factors Affect the Total Price of Mulch Delivery and Installation?

The gap between the cheapest and most expensive quote for the same volume of mulch usually comes down to one or more of the variables below. Understanding them helps you evaluate whether a quote is reasonable or whether something is being missed.

Factor How It Affects Cost
Mulch type and quality Premium materials (cedar, colored, playground-rated) cost more per yard
Volume ordered Larger orders often reduce per-yard pricing; bulk discounts typically kick in above 10 yards
Delivery distance Most companies include delivery within 10 to 20 miles; surcharges apply beyond that radius
Site accessibility Easy driveway dump versus wheelbarrow-only access to backyard beds significantly affects labor time
Bed preparation Old mulch removal, weeding, or edging before spreading adds labor and time
Mulch depth Standard is 2 to 3 inches for maintenance; 3 to 4 inches for new beds; deeper application uses more material
Property terrain Flat lots versus slopes, hillside beds, or terraced gardens affect spreading difficulty
Minimum order requirements Many bulk delivery companies require 3 to 5 cubic yards per delivery

Site accessibility is the most commonly underestimated cost driver. A backyard with a narrow gate or no direct vehicle access can double the labor time compared to a front-yard bed the truck can reach directly.

Is It Cheaper to Buy Bagged Mulch or Bulk Mulch Delivery?

The math is straightforward. A standard 2-cubic-foot bag of mulch costs $3 to $6 at retail. There are 13.5 bags per cubic yard, which puts bagged mulch at $40 to $81 per cubic yard in material alone before you factor in your time, fuel, and vehicle trips. Bulk delivery runs $30 to $80 per yard plus a one-time delivery fee.

For anything over 2 to 3 cubic yards, bulk is almost always cheaper. The convenience factor adds up quickly as well.

Metric Bagged Mulch (Retail) Bulk Mulch (Delivered)
Material cost per cubic yard $40 to $81 (13.5 bags at $3 to $6 each) $30 to $80
Delivery cost $0 self-haul, but factor in vehicle trips, fuel, and time $25 to $80 per load
Labor (self-install) Your time: 1 to 2 hours per cubic yard Your time: 1 to 2 hours per cubic yard
Labor (professional install) Rarely offered for bagged material $30 to $65 per cubic yard
Best for Small projects under 2 cubic yards Any project over 2 to 3 cubic yards
Convenience Multiple store trips, heavy lifting, bag disposal One delivery, dumped where you need it

The bulk advantage: For most residential mulch projects requiring 3 or more cubic yards, bulk mulch delivery saves 20% to 40% compared to retail bags, even after factoring in the delivery fee.

How Many Cubic Yards of Mulch Do I Need for My Property?

Use this formula to calculate your volume: Length (ft) x Width (ft) x Depth (in) / 324 = cubic yards needed.

For irregular bed shapes, break the area into rectangles, calculate each section separately, and add them together. Then add 10% as a buffer for settling and coverage variations.

Total Bed Area (sq ft) Cubic Yards Needed (3" depth) Approximate Material Cost Range
250 2.3 $70 to $185
500 4.6 $140 to $370
750 6.9 $210 to $555
1,000 9.3 $280 to $745
1,500 13.9 $420 to $1,115
2,000 18.5 $555 to $1,480

Not sure how much mulch your property needs? Contact MTS Tree & Landscape for a free volume estimate and delivery quote.

How Deep Should Mulch Be Installed?

Standard recommendation: 2 to 3 inches for established beds being refreshed; 3 to 4 inches for new beds or bare soil. Never exceed 4 inches of total depth, and always keep mulch 3 to 6 inches away from tree trunks and plant stems.

The Volcano Mulching Warning: Piling mulch against tree trunks traps moisture against the bark, promotes fungal disease, encourages girdling roots, and can slowly kill an otherwise healthy tree. This “volcano mulching” mistake is one of the most common and damaging errors in residential landscaping. Always maintain a clear gap between mulch and the base of any tree or woody shrub. The USDA Forest Service provides additional guidance on proper mulching technique and depth recommendations.

In the Pacific Northwest, where soils stay consistently moist through fall and winter, proper depth and trunk clearance matter more than in drier climates. Overmulching in this region creates conditions for crown rot and root problems that can take years to fully manifest.

How Does the Cost Differ Between Hiring Professionals and Doing It Yourself?

For small projects under 3 cubic yards, DIY is often the practical choice. For anything larger, the calculation changes quickly once you account for the full cost of self-installation.

Cost Element DIY Professional (Delivered and Installed)
Mulch material (10 yards, mid-grade) $350 to $500 (self-pickup or delivery fee) Included in project quote
Delivery fee $0 to $80 if delivered, or multiple truck trips Included
Spreading labor Your time: 6 to 10 or more hours of physical work Professional crew: 2 to 4 hours
Wheelbarrow/tools $0 if owned, or $30 to $50 rental Included
Bed prep (edging, weeding) Your time: 2 to 4 additional hours Often included or quoted separately
Vehicle wear/fuel (if self-hauling) $20 to $60 or more N/A
Estimated Total $400 to $690 plus 8 to 14 hours of physical labor $850 to $1,800 turnkey, completed in half a day

The gap in dollar terms is real. But the gap in time and physical labor is what most homeowners don’t fully price when they decide to go the DIY route on a 10-yard project.

If you’d rather spend Saturday doing something other than moving mulch, MTS Tree & Landscape handles the full job —delivery, spreading, and cleanup—across Seattle, Sammamish, and Issaquah. Call (425) 369-8733 for a same-week quote.

How Much Does Colored Mulch Delivery and Installation Usually Cost?

Colored mulch (black, red, and brown dyed options) typically runs $5 to $15 more per cubic yard than natural mulch of equivalent quality. Installed and delivered, expect to add $50 to $150 to a mid-size project compared to standard bark.

Quality matters here more than with natural mulch. Always ask about the dye source and the base wood material. Premium colored mulch uses vegetable-based, non-toxic dyes that are safe for plants, pets, and soil biology. Lower-cost dyed products are sometimes made from recycled construction lumber that may include CCA-treated wood, which introduces chemicals you don’t want in your beds. If the company can’t tell you what the base material is, that’s worth noting before you order.

What Is the Average Cost to Deliver and Install Mulch for a Rental or Investment Property?

For rental and investment properties, the priority is typically cost efficiency combined with enough curb appeal to keep the property looking maintained. Mid-grade double-ground hardwood bark or economy bark hits that balance well.

A standard rental property with 500 to 1,000 square feet of beds typically runs $400 to $1,200 delivered and installed, depending on mulch type and site conditions. Annual or biannual mulch refreshing is consistently one of the highest-ROI maintenance investments for income properties. It takes one morning of work, costs a fraction of other landscaping improvements, and has an immediate visible impact on how the property presents.

How Much Does Mulch Blowing Service Cost Compared to Hand Spreading?

Hand spreading and mulch blowing are two different installation methods with different cost and speed profiles.

Hand spreading uses wheelbarrows, rakes, and crew labor. It runs $30 to $65 per cubic yard and works well for most residential projects, tight spaces, and areas where precision placement around plants matters.

Mulch blowing uses a truck-mounted pneumatic blower to place mulch at volume and speed. It runs $45 to $85 per cubic yard but dramatically reduces installation time, particularly on slopes, large areas, and sites with limited direct access.

Method Labor Cost Per Cubic Yard Speed Best For
Hand spreading (wheelbarrow and rake) $30 to $65 1 to 1.5 yards per crew-hour Residential beds, tight spaces, under 15 yards
Mulch blowing (pneumatic truck) $45 to $85 5 to 15 yards per hour Large properties, slopes, commercial sites, 15 or more yards

For most residential projects under 15 yards, hand spreading is the more cost-effective choice. The higher per-yard rate for blowing makes sense when the volume or site complexity justifies the speed advantage.

Is Mulch Delivery Included in Landscaping Services?

Many full-service landscaping companies include mulch delivery as part of broader landscape installation or annual maintenance packages. When bundled with bed preparation, weeding, edging, and seasonal planting, the effective per-yard cost is often lower than ordering delivery and installation as a standalone service.

Standalone bulk mulch delivery and spreading is also widely available as a separate service, which is useful for homeowners who maintain their own beds year-round and just need material delivered and spread on a schedule.

MTS Tree & Landscape offers standalone bulk mulch delivery and professional installation as well as bundled landscaping packages for the Seattle, Sammamish, and Issaquah area.

What Type of Mulch Is Best for Landscaping Beds?

The right mulch depends on what the bed is doing and the conditions it faces. Here’s a practical guide by application:

Use Case Recommended Mulch Type Why
General flower and shrub beds Double-ground hardwood bark Good moisture retention, clean appearance, moderate cost
Pacific Northwest native plantings Arborist wood chips or coarse bark Mimics natural forest floor; supports beneficial fungal activity
Slopes and erosion-prone areas Coarse bark nuggets or shredded bark Heavier pieces resist washout better than fine-ground mulch
Vegetable gardens Straw, compost mulch, or leaf mulch Breaks down quickly and enriches soil; avoid dyed products
Playground areas Engineered wood fiber (EWF) ASTM-certified for fall-height safety standards
High-visibility curb appeal beds Cedar bark or premium colored mulch Long-lasting color, aromatic, natural pest-deterrent properties

The EPA’s composting and mulching guidance provides additional context on organic mulch selection and soil health benefits if you’re evaluating the environmental performance of different materials.

How Often Should Mulch Be Replaced?

Most organic mulch should be refreshed every 12 to 18 months to maintain a consistent 2 to 3-inch depth. In the Pacific Northwest, where moisture and decomposition rates are higher than in drier climates, annual top-dressing is standard practice rather than the exception.

Cedar and coarse bark hold up longest, typically lasting 18 to 24 months before needing significant refresh. Fine-ground mulch decomposes fastest and may need attention in 8 to 12 months. A quick test: probe the existing mulch layer with your finger. If you’re below 2 inches in most spots, it’s time to top-dress.

Is There a Minimum Order for Bulk Mulch Delivery?

Most bulk mulch delivery companies require a minimum of 3 to 5 cubic yards per delivery. Some companies will accommodate 1 to 2 yard deliveries at a higher per-yard rate or a flat small-load surcharge. For orders under 2 cubic yards, bagged mulch from a local garden center is often more practical once you factor in the delivery fee relative to the material volume.

How Can I Compare Quotes for Mulch Delivery and Installation?

A quote that gives you one total number without a breakdown tells you almost nothing useful. When comparing estimates for mulch delivery and installation cost, you need to see each component separately.

What to Ask When Getting Mulch Delivery Quotes

  • What is the per-cubic-yard cost for the mulch type I want?
  • Is delivery included, or is it a separate charge? What is the delivery radius?
  • Is professional spreading included, or is that an additional labor charge?
  • Does the quote include bed preparation (weeding, edging, old mulch removal)?
  • Is there a minimum order? What is the expected lead time for delivery?

Any company that won’t itemize those components when asked is either not organized enough to stand behind the quote or pricing in a way they’d rather not show clearly. Either is worth noting before you sign anything.

Get a transparent, itemized mulch delivery and installation cost breakdown from MTS Tree & Landscape. Contact us online —we serve Seattle, Sammamish, Issaquah, and the surrounding Eastside.

Smart Mulching Is the Highest-ROI Landscape Investment You Can Make

Mulch gets treated as a finishing touch, something applied after the real landscaping work is done. In our experience, that framing undersells it significantly.

A properly mulched landscape retains 25% to 50% more soil moisture than unmulched beds , which means less irrigation through Seattle’s dry summers. It moderates soil temperature fluctuations that stress shallow-rooted plants through cold Pacific Northwest winters. It suppresses weed germination, which compounds over multiple seasons as fewer viable weed seeds survive in well-maintained mulched beds. And it feeds the soil biology below as it decomposes, gradually improving the structure and fertility of the root zone.

The University of Washington Botanic Gardens and Oregon State University Extension both document the measurable soil health benefits of consistent organic mulching, particularly for the range of species and soil conditions common across the Puget Sound region.

For most homeowners, professional bulk mulch delivery and installation pays for itself within one to two seasons in reduced watering costs and fewer weed treatments, to say nothing of the time saved. Choose the right mulch type for your application, order in bulk to reduce per-yard cost, and work with a local company that delivers and installs so the project gets done correctly in a single visit rather than across three weekends.

Ready to get your mulch project quoted, delivered, and professionally installed? MTS Tree & Landscape serves Seattle, Sammamish, Issaquah, and the surrounding Eastside with bulk mulch delivery and expert spreading services. Call (425) 369-8733 to schedule your delivery.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does mulch delivery and installation cost on average?

The average residential mulch delivery and installation project costs $500 to $1,800 for 5 to 10 cubic yards of mid-grade mulch, fully delivered and spread.

How much does a cubic yard of mulch cost?

A cubic yard of mulch typically costs $30 to $80 for material alone, depending on the type and quality.

What is the average cost of mulch installation per square foot?

Professional mulch installation averages $3 to $8 per square foot at a standard 3-inch depth, including material, delivery, and spreading.

Is bulk mulch cheaper than bagged mulch?

Yes, bulk mulch delivery is typically 20% to 40% cheaper per cubic yard than purchasing the equivalent volume in retail bags.

How many cubic yards of mulch do I need?

Calculate cubic yards by multiplying length (feet) by width (feet) by depth (inches), then dividing by 324.

How deep should mulch be applied?

Mulch should be applied 2 to 3 inches deep for established beds and 3 to 4 inches deep for new or bare-soil beds, never exceeding 4 inches total.

How often should mulch be replaced or refreshed?

Most organic mulch should be refreshed every 12 to 18 months to maintain proper depth, with annual top-dressing being standard in the Pacific Northwest.

Is there a minimum order for bulk mulch delivery?

Most bulk mulch delivery companies require a minimum order of 3 to 5 cubic yards per delivery.

Do landscaping companies spread mulch after delivery?

Yes, most professional landscaping companies offer mulch delivery and spreading as a combined service, with labor charged per cubic yard or as a flat project rate.

What is the cheapest type of mulch available?

Arborist wood chips are often the cheapest option (sometimes free), while economy utility wood chips are the lowest-cost commercially purchased mulch at $25 to $35 per cubic yard.

Does mulch blowing cost more than hand spreading?

Yes, mulch blowing typically costs $45 to $85 per cubic yard compared to $30 to $65 for hand spreading, but it is significantly faster for large or hard-to-access areas.

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Note any recent changes —unusual lean, visible root heaving, bark damage, or signs of decay. Tell the arborist what you observed before the storm. Can I Remove a Fallen Tree Myself or Do I Need a Professional? Small brush and minor limbs—possibly manageable with the right tools and careful judgment. Anything beyond that is a different conversation. Small, accessible debris with no tension or structural involvement can sometimes be handled by a careful homeowner with the right equipment and experience. But most fallen-tree situations don't fit that description. When DIY Tree Removal Becomes Dangerous Never Attempt DIY Removal When: The tree is in contact with any power line or utility infrastructure The trunk diameter exceeds 6 inches The tree is resting on a structure—roof, fence, vehicle, or shed Limbs are visibly bent, twisted, or under tension (spring-loaded wood releases without warning) The tree is "hung up" in another tree, with weight distributed unpredictably You do not own or are not trained to operate a chainsaw safely Chainsaw kickback, spring-loaded limbs, and shifting weight from a trunk resting on a structure are the three most common causes of serious injury in amateur tree removal attempts. These are not theoretical risks —they send people to emergency rooms every year. If a tree falls on your car, the same logic applies. Move to safety, call 911 if the road is blocked, document with photos, contact your auto insurance provider, and then call a professional emergency tree removal company. Don't attempt to move the tree off the vehicle yourself. Who Is Responsible for a Fallen Tree Between Neighbors? The general rule in most U.S. jurisdictions, including Washington State: the property owner where the tree lands is typically responsible for cleanup and the insurance claim —regardless of where the tree was rooted. That means if your neighbor's healthy tree falls into your yard during a storm, your homeowners insurance handles the removal. Your insurer may then pursue the neighbor's policy through a process called subrogation if there's a recoverable liability. The exception involves prior notice of a hazardous condition. If you have documented written communication telling a neighbor their tree was diseased, dead, or structurally compromised—and they failed to act—they may bear liability for the resulting damage. This shifts into legal territory quickly, and a consultation with an attorney is the appropriate next step for disputed situations. What a tree service can and cannot do: provide documentation of the work performed and the condition of the tree. What they can't do is resolve a legal dispute between property owners. Keep that distinction clear. Which Local Tree Companies Provide Priority Emergency Response for Downed Trees? The difference between a company that markets emergency service and one that actually delivers it comes down to infrastructure, not just availability. A true 24/7 emergency tree service has: Dedicated on-call crews —not a single dispatcher forwarding calls to whoever is available Owned heavy equipment —cranes, bucket trucks, and chippers on standby, not rented from a third party during peak demand Established relationships with local utilities —which is what allows faster coordination when power lines are involved Storm-response protocols —crew call trees for prioritization, equipment staging, and multi-site coordination Local knowledge —familiarity with soil conditions, tree species, neighborhood access patterns, and permit requirements in Seattle, Sammamish, Issaquah, and Bellevue After-hours emergency support for a dangerously leaning tree is exactly the scenario where that infrastructure matters. A company scrambling to locate a crane at midnight is not the company you want. MTS Tree & Landscape maintains dedicated emergency crews and heavy equipment across the Seattle, Sammamish, and Issaquah service areas. For 24/7 storm damage tree removal and urgent tree cutting, call (425) 369-8733 or request service online . Are Emergency Tree Removal Services Available 24/7? Reputable emergency tree services operate around the clock—but "available" means different things depending on the situation. A legitimate 24-hour tree service has someone answering the phone at 3 AM. That person assesses the hazard, documents the call, and either dispatches a crew immediately for life-safety situations or schedules the earliest possible response for high-priority, non-life-threatening situations. For after-hours tree service , genuine emergencies—a tree on a roof, a tree blocking road access, a tree on a power line—get crew dispatch regardless of the hour. A tree that fell in the back yard and damaged no structure may be triaged for first-light response. Honest companies will tell you this upfront. What to avoid: companies that list an emergency number on their website that routes to voicemail after 6 PM. Ask directly: "If I call this number at 2 AM, does a person answer?" The answer tells you everything. When Every Hour Matters, Preparation Is Your Best Defense The homeowners who fare best during tree emergencies are almost never the ones who acted fastest in the moment—they're the ones who prepared before the storm hit. We've seen it repeatedly: a family in Sammamish loses half a Douglas fir to a wind event, and because they had a licensed tree company's number already saved, their insurance documentation organized, and a general understanding of the process, the situation gets resolved efficiently. Contrast that with a homeowner making frantic calls to unlicensed crews at midnight, authorizing work without written estimates, and discovering three weeks later that the costs weren't covered because documentation was incomplete. The practical steps are straightforward. Know your homeowners insurance policy—specifically what structures are covered and what your deductible is. Verify the licensing and insurance of any tree company you'd consider calling before you need them. Understand that power line situations require utility coordination, not DIY intervention. And if you've had an arborist assess any mature trees on your property for structural concerns, keep that documentation—it matters for insurance and for neighbor liability conversations. Emergency tree service is not complicated when the right people are involved. It becomes complicated when homeowners are making high-stakes decisions without information, under pressure, in the middle of a crisis. When a tree emergency strikes in the Seattle, Sammamish, or Issaquah area, MTS Tree & Landscape provides the fast, insured, professional response your property needs. Save our number now—call (425) 369-8733—or reach out through our contact page to discuss your situation with a certified arborist. Frequently Asked Questions What is considered an emergency tree service? An emergency tree service is any urgent response to a fallen, damaged, or dangerously leaning tree that poses an immediate threat to people, structures, or utilities. How much does emergency tree removal typically cost? Emergency tree removal typically ranges from $500 to $5,000 or more depending on tree size, location, hazard level, and whether after-hours labor is required. Who do you call when a tree falls on your house? Call 911 if anyone is in danger, then contact your utility company if power lines are involved, followed by a licensed emergency tree removal service and your homeowners insurance provider. Does homeowners insurance cover fallen tree removal? Most homeowners insurance policies cover tree removal when the tree damages a covered structure, but generally do not cover removal if the tree falls without causing structural damage. How quickly can an emergency tree service respond? Most reputable emergency tree services respond within one to four hours, though severe storm events with widespread damage may extend response times. What should I do if a tree falls on my car? Move to safety, call 911 if the road is blocked, document the damage with photos, contact your auto insurance provider, and then call a professional emergency tree removal company. Can arborists safely remove trees near power lines? Only line-clearance certified arborists are authorized to work near energized power lines, and they coordinate directly with the utility company before beginning removal. Is emergency tree removal more expensive than scheduled removal? Yes—emergency tree removal typically costs two to three times more than scheduled service due to urgency, hazard premiums, specialized equipment, and after-hours labor rates. What equipment is used for emergency tree removal? Emergency tree crews commonly use chainsaws, cranes, bucket trucks, wood chippers, stump grinders, and rigging systems depending on the complexity of the job. Do tree services offer storm cleanup? Yes, most full-service tree companies offer comprehensive storm cleanup including debris removal, limb chipping, log haul-away, and site restoration. How do I prepare for emergency tree removal? Clear vehicle access to the tree, secure pets indoors, photograph all damage for insurance documentation, and locate your homeowners insurance policy information before the crew arrives.
Landscape Experts: Custom Design, Installation & Native Plant Specialists
March 22, 2026
Learn what professional landscape design and installation covers, what it costs, and how to choose the right team. MTS Tree & Landscape serves Seattle, Sammamish, and Issaquah with custom design-build services.

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