# Tree Removal Permits in Westchester County, NY | Guide | Westchester Tree Pros

> Which Westchester towns require a tree removal permit, how DBH is measured, and how we handle the filing for you. Scarsdale, Mamaroneck & Rye rules explained.

URL: https://westchestertreepros.com/guide/tree-removal-permit-westchester/
Last-Modified: 2026-07-01

Guide

# Do I Need a Permit to Remove a Tree in Westchester County?

Which Westchester towns require a tree removal permit, how DBH is measured, and how we handle the filing for you. Scarsdale, Mamaroneck & Rye rules explained.

![Arborist measuring DBH on a mature Westchester tree](/images/misc/arborist-measuring-trunk-diameter-at-chest-height-.webp)

## The Short Answer

Some Westchester towns require a permit to remove a tree over a certain size. Others don’t. It comes down to your municipality and the tree’s diameter — and there are exceptions for hazardous or dead trees in almost every ordinance.

Rather than guess, our first step on any tree removal in a regulated town is to measure DBH and check the local rule. Here’s what to know.

## Towns With Notable Tree Ordinances

**Scarsdale** is the strictest in Westchester. The Village of Scarsdale regulates removal of trees over 6 inches DBH on private property. Permit applications require site plans, arborist justification, and often a replacement-planting commitment. Enforcement is active.

**Mamaroneck** (both Town and Village) has a tree ordinance covering removal on private lots, with thresholds and requirements varying between the Town and the Village.

**Rye** (City of Rye) regulates larger trees and has specific permit requirements for shoreline and buffer areas.

Other towns (Bronxville, Larchmont, New Rochelle, White Plains) have varying and evolving rules — some cover public trees or street trees specifically, some address development-related clearing separately.

We check the current rule for your specific address before we quote any removal in a regulated town.

## What DBH Is and How We Measure It

DBH stands for Diameter at Breast Height. It’s the diameter of a tree’s trunk measured 4.5 feet above ground level — about chest height on an adult. We use a DBH tape (a specialized tape that reads diameter directly from circumference) to measure it.

Why 4.5 feet? Because trunk diameter changes with height, and 4.5 feet is a global standard that makes measurements consistent between arborists and consistent with municipal ordinances.

For multi-stemmed trees, ordinances usually count each stem separately (or use the largest stem, depending on the town). For trees with a fork below 4.5 feet, we measure below the fork.

## When You Don’t Need a Permit

Most Westchester tree ordinances include exceptions for:

-   **Immediately hazardous trees** — trees threatening to fall on a structure or block emergency access
-   **Dead trees** — usually with arborist certification that the tree is dead
-   **Certain undersized trees** — below the ordinance’s DBH threshold
-   **Certain species** (some ordinances exempt specific invasive species)
-   **Development-related removal** — often handled by a separate development approval process

Documentation matters. Even for exempt removals, we photograph the tree and note the condition so there’s a record if a neighbor complains or the town questions the removal later.

## How Our Permit Filing Works

For any permit-required removal we handle:

1.  **DBH measurement and site notes** during the initial estimate
2.  **Ordinance check** — we verify the current rule for your specific town
3.  **Permit application preparation** — including any required arborist justification
4.  **Filing with the municipality** on your behalf
5.  **Follow-up** — some permits require post-removal replacement plantings, and we track that

This is included on any 

tree removal

[/tree-removal/ →](/tree-removal/)

 in a regulated town — no separate charge unless the town’s own fees are unusually high (rare).

## Why the Rules Exist

Westchester’s tree ordinances are about canopy preservation — the mature-tree cover that gives towns like Scarsdale and Bronxville their character. From a homeowner’s perspective, they’re occasionally inconvenient. From a town-wide perspective, they slow the erosion of a canopy that took a century to grow.

We’re aligned with that goal in principle. In practice, we help you navigate the rules efficiently so a legitimate removal doesn’t get bogged down in paperwork.

## When You’re Not Sure

Call us. We’ll come measure DBH, check your municipality’s current ordinance, and tell you honestly whether a permit is required. There’s no charge for an on-site check as part of any removal estimate.

For a real-world example, see how permits interact with 

tree service in Scarsdale

[/service-areas/scarsdale/ →](/service-areas/scarsdale/)

 and the overall 

tree removal service

[/tree-removal/ →](/tree-removal/)

 page.

FAQ

## Common Questions

### Which Westchester towns require a tree removal permit?

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Several, including Scarsdale, Mamaroneck, and Rye, regulate removal of trees above a set DBH. Rules vary by town — some require a permit for anything over 6 inches DBH; others only over 12 or 18 inches.

### What is DBH and why does it matter?

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DBH is Diameter at Breast Height — measured roughly 4.5 feet up from ground level. Many municipal ordinances only regulate trees over a threshold DBH, so it's the first measurement we take on any permit-sensitive job.

### Do you handle the permit application?

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Yes. We measure DBH, prepare the application, and manage the filing process with the town so you don't have to.

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## Have Questions About Your Trees?

Free, on-site estimates across Westchester County. Call 914-907-4131 for same-day service.

Call 914-907-4131

[tel:+19149074131 →](tel:+19149074131)

 

Free Estimate

[/contact/ →](/contact/)
