Tree Service Insurance Cost. What you can expect to pay.
Real numbers, real ranges, and an honest read on what drives them. Tree service insurance pricing is built up from operations, payroll, equipment, claims, geography, and contract demands — and the cost moves quickly as the business adds employees and exposure.
What Tree Service Insurance Actually Costs
Three pricing anchors based on what we see at Kelly Insurance Group when we place tree service business. These aren't quotes — they're industry ranges that show how the cost moves as the operation scales up. Your specific number depends on the variables in the next section.
Solo Tree Trimmer · Under $25K Revenue
$1,500 – $2,000
Annual · General Liability OnlyWhen eligible, tree trimmers insurance starts around $1,500 to $2,000 annually for a business making under $25,000 per year with no employees. This is general liability only — no workers comp, no commercial auto, no umbrella. Just the GL piece.
Eligibility matters here. Not every carrier writes very small tree operations, and "eligible" means clean loss runs, light operations (trimming and deadwood), no crane work, and no energized line proximity.
Hiring Begins · GL Climbs Materially
↑ Climbs Quickly
As Employees & Operations ScaleOnce a tree business starts to hire employees, general liability premiums begin to increase fairly quickly. More crews means more crew-hours on jobs, more vehicles on the road, more potential for third-party property damage and bodily injury claims — and the carrier prices accordingly.
The jump is also driven by what hiring tends to come with: bucket trucks, larger jobs, removal work added to the operations mix, and contracts that require higher limits. The same business at $25K revenue and $200K revenue does not pay the same premium — even on identical coverage.
WC at 15–30% of Annual Payroll
15% – 30%
Of Total Annual Employee PayrollWorkers Compensation for a tree service business typically costs at least 15% to 20% of total annual employee payroll — and in some operations can run as high as 30% of payroll. Tree service WC class codes are among the higher-rated commercial classes because the work is genuinely hazardous.
A $300,000 employee payroll, for example, typically translates into $45,000 to $60,000 in WC premium at the lower end, and considerably more at the higher end of the range. Geography, claims history, and operations type drive where in the band an account lands.
What Pushes the Number Up or Down
Every quote you receive is the carrier's read on a specific risk profile. Each row below is one of the variables that shapes that read. The arrow shows directionally where the variable lives — left side reduces price, right side increases it.
How the Same Variables Read Across Different Operations
The same nine variables apply to every tree service. What changes is how each variable reads for a specific operation — and how that translates into a relative cost weight. Three illustrative operation profiles below show what that looks like.
Residential Trim Shop
Small operation, recurring residential work, light equipment, low claim activity, single-state.
Mid-Size Commercial Tree Co.
Multiple crews, mix of residential and HOA contracts, bucket trucks, occasional crane work, modest claim history.
Crane & Line-Clearance Contractor
Multi-state, crane-heavy operation, utility line clearance contracts, larger fleet, prior claim activity, high contract-driven limits.
What's Actually In That Number
Why a Suspiciously Low Quote Usually Costs More
The cheapest quote and the right quote are rarely the same number. When a price comes in materially below others, it's almost always because something has been removed, sub-limited, or written narrower than the others — and you find out which one at claim time.
The list to the right is the most common reason a low number is low. None of these are deal-breakers on their own, but each of them is a coverage decision you should make on purpose, not by accident.
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Lower Underlying Limits
Quoted at lower per-occurrence or aggregate limits than the operation actually needs. A clean apples-to-apples comparison is at the same limits.
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Energized-Line Exclusion in Place
The cheap GL excludes work in proximity to energized lines. Fine if you never work near power lines — a problem if you sometimes do.
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Crane / Rigging Sub-Limits
Crane operations are sub-limited or excluded entirely. Read the form, not just the headline price.
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Higher Deductibles
Lower premium with materially higher deductibles can shift cost rather than reduce it. Look at expected loss exposure, not just the premium line.
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Missing Coverages Entirely
No HNOA, no Inland Marine, no Pollution, no Umbrella. The "policy" is just the GL with everything else assumed to be elsewhere — and often isn't.
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Narrower Defense Provisions
Defense costs within limits rather than in addition to limits — meaning a defended claim eats into the limit available to pay damages.
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Unfamiliar Carriers
Non-admitted markets without strong financial ratings or a track record of paying tree service claims. The premium savings rarely justify the placement risk.
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Misclassified Operations
The operation has been classed as something less risky than it actually is — driving an artificially low premium that audit will correct, often unfavorably.
Pricing is a read on the operation.
The right number isn't the cheapest — it's the one that matches the work.
If you're shopping tree service insurance, the most useful thing the next conversation can do is decode the quotes you've already received and identify what's actually different between them. That's a 20-minute conversation. It almost always changes the decision.
Get a Real Quote Built On Your Operation
Send us your operations, equipment, payroll, claims history, and the limits your contracts demand. We market the file to the carriers that actually write your work — and you compare the quotes that come back on apples-to-apples coverage.
Start the Intake Form →Search the Kelly Insurance Group Site
Other Tree Service Coverages We Place
By Operation Type
Cost, Quotes & Buyer Resources
Hard-to-Place & Problem Risk Pages
Other KIG Resources
Tree Service Insurance Cost Questions Answered
How much does tree trimmers insurance cost for a brand-new business?
For an eligible solo tree trimmer making under $25,000 per year with no employees, general liability typically starts around $1,500 to $2,000 annually. That's GL only — not workers comp, not commercial auto, not umbrella. Eligibility means clean operations (trimming, deadwood, light removal), no crane work, no energized line proximity, and clean loss runs.
What happens to my premium when I hire employees?
Two things happen at once. First, general liability premium starts to climb materially as crews and operations scale up — more crew-hours, more vehicles, more potential exposure. Second, workers compensation enters the program, and tree service WC is typically 15–20% of total annual employee payroll, sometimes reaching 30%. The transition from solo to employed-crew operation is one of the bigger pricing shifts in the business.
Why is tree service workers comp so expensive?
Tree service WC class codes are among the higher-rated commercial classes because the work is genuinely hazardous — climbing, chainsaws, falling debris, equipment operations. The rate per $100 of payroll runs meaningfully higher than for office or retail classes. 15–20% of payroll is common; 30% can apply to operations in higher-rated states or with claim activity. See our Arborist Workers Comp page.
What are the biggest single drivers of cost?
For most tree services, the largest individual contributors are operations mix (more crane and removal work means higher rates), payroll volume (workers comp scales directly with payroll), claims history (severity matters more than frequency), and required limits (high contract-driven stacked limits add to the total). The rest of the variables fine-tune from there.
Do tree service rates vary by state?
Yes — meaningfully. Workers Comp class code rates are state-specific, tort climate varies by state, specialty market appetite varies, and storm-exposure considerations vary. A multi-state operator should expect different totals state to state on the same operation.
Can I lower my premium?
Several levers help. Documenting safety programs and ANSI Z133 compliance, maintaining clean loss runs, reducing 1099 reliance and vetting subs properly, raising deductibles where appropriate, and consolidating program lines with one specialty broker. Each is a real lever with a real tradeoff.
Why does my umbrella cost so much?
Umbrella and excess pricing scales with the operations they sit above. A residential trim umbrella prices differently than an umbrella sitting above a crane-heavy line clearance operation — same limit, very different exposure. See our Excess Liability page.
How do I evaluate two quotes that came in at different prices?
Line them up by coverage category — GL, Auto, WC, IM, Umbrella, Pollution, specialty endorsements. Same limits? Same deductibles? Same exclusions? Same carriers? The cheaper quote is rarely actually cheaper if it's missing a category, has lower limits, or has narrower terms. The decoder section above is the framework for that comparison.
Where do I start?
Start with the intake form. It captures the variables that drive pricing — operations, equipment, payroll, claims, limits, geography. Once we have those, we market the file and bring back real quotes from carriers that actually write the work. Or reach out via the contact page or (412) 212-2800.
Get Real Numbers, Built Right.
Send us the variables that matter — operations, equipment, payroll, claims, limits — and we'll market the file to specialty tree service carriers. The quotes that come back are real numbers built on your operation, not estimates pulled from a marketing page.
Start the Intake Form → Contact Kelly Insurance Group →