Tree Service in Southaven, Mississippi
tree service contractor serving Southaven and nearby Mississippi communities. Honest pricing, quality work, lasting results.
Call (555) 123-4567 Free Estimatetree service contractor serving Southaven and nearby Mississippi communities. Honest pricing, quality work, lasting results.
Call (555) 123-4567 Free EstimateResidential and commercial tree service across the Southaven, MS area.
Complete lot clearing — brush, trees, stumps removed. Ready for construction or landscaping.
$1,500 - $10,000
Expert tree trimming and crown thinning — healthier trees, better appearance, reduced hazards.
$200 - $2,000
Safe tree removal using crane and rigging — protecting your property through every step of the takedown.
$500 - $5,000
Stump grinding that reclaims your yard — roots removed, tripping hazards gone, pests eliminated.
$100 - $800
24/7 emergency tree service for storm damage, fallen trees, and anything threatening your home right now.
$300 - $3,000
I've been cutting trees in DeSoto County for over 25 years. My crew handles tree removal, trimming, stump grinding, storm damage cleanup, and land clearing in Southaven and the surrounding area. We're licensed, insured, and we don't send unlicensed guys up your tree.
DeSoto County has a real problem with unlicensed tree crews. After a bad storm, they show up fast and charge whatever they can get. No insurance. No experience with rigging. One wrong cut and a tree lands on your roof or your neighbor's fence. I've cleaned up those messes. It costs more to fix a botched removal than to hire right the first time.
My crew uses proper rigging to lower limbs in controlled sections. Every climber on my team has worked with me for years. We carry general liability insurance and workers' compensation — you can call my insurance agent directly to verify. We pull permits when the city requires them.
Bradford pears are everywhere in Southaven. They were planted all over DeSoto County subdivisions in the 1990s and 2000s, and they're failing now. The species has a structural flaw in the branching pattern — the V-crotches don't fuse properly, and once the canopy gets heavy, splits happen. Usually during a thunderstorm. Often onto a car or fence.
If you have Bradford pears on your property, get them assessed. A tree that looks healthy from the street can have cracks at major branch unions that you can't see from the ground. We can tell you whether yours are at risk and give you an honest recommendation. We don't push removals — if cabling can buy you another five years safely, I'll tell you that.
April and May are the worst months in DeSoto County. Tornado watches, derecho events, sustained 60+ MPH winds. Mature oaks and loblolly pines on residential lots can come down fast. The damage pattern I see most is the large-limb failure on a structurally compromised tree — the kind of failure that proper crown reduction work would have prevented.
Don't wait until a branch is over your roof to call. Pre-storm trimming — removing dead wood and reducing crown weight — cuts the risk significantly. It's less expensive than storm cleanup, and it doesn't require a crane.
During active storm events, my crew prioritizes calls with structures at immediate risk. I'm on call during tornado season. If a tree falls on your house in Southaven at 2 AM, call me.
We get ice events in DeSoto County most winters. Ice-loaded branches snap under weight that a healthy tree would carry in a wind event. The trees that fail in ice storms are usually the same ones I'd have recommended thinning the previous fall — dense canopy structure that accumulates ice load faster than an open canopy.
Ice damage shows up in two ways: immediate failure during the event, and delayed failure in the weeks after. Trees that were weakened by ice loading but didn't fall right away can drop major limbs in the following weeks. If ice hit your trees hard, get them looked at before spring green-up makes cracks harder to see.
I work throughout DeSoto County and across the state line into Shelby County, Tennessee. Regular coverage includes Olive Branch, Horn Lake, Memphis, and Collierville. If you're outside these areas, call and I'll tell you straight whether we can fit the job.
Signs to watch for: cracks or splits at major branch unions, deadwood visible in the upper canopy (brown or missing bark, no leaves in summer), fungal growth or mushrooms at the base, significant lean that developed recently, hollow sections you can see or hear (tap with a mallet). Any of these warrants a professional assessment. Bradford pears in particular — check the V-crotches in the canopy.
Yes. During storm events, I'm available 24 hours. Emergency calls with structures at risk — roof impact, blocked access, live wire contact — get priority response. Call the main number. I answer it myself.
Depends on the tree: size, species, location, and what's below it. A straightforward 40-foot pine in an open yard runs differently than a 70-foot oak over a fence with power lines nearby. I don't quote over the phone because the site conditions drive the price. Free estimates, in person, same week you call.
Yes. Stump grinding is a separate service. If you have stumps left by previous work — mine or someone else's — we grind them. Standard depth is 6-10 inches below grade, which is enough for lawns and landscaping over the top. Deeper grinding is available if you're building over the stump area.
Yes. Licensed tree service contractor, general liability insurance, and workers' compensation. I provide proof of insurance to any customer who asks before we start. If a crew shows up without being able to verify their insurance, send them away. This is not an industry where you want to assume.
Yes. We handle full lot clearing — trees, brush, stumps, surface root removal. We work with grading contractors and builders. If you're developing a residential lot in Southaven or DeSoto County, call me early in the process so the clearing is done right and you're not fighting stumps during the foundation pour.
Call me directly. I look at the job myself on the first visit — not an estimator, not an office person. I know what the work involves and I price it honestly. Southaven and all of DeSoto County, same week scheduling.
Hire a certified arborist for pruning, health assessments, disease diagnosis, and work near structures or power lines. ISA certification means the arborist has passed exams on tree biology, safety, and best practices.
A tree that has always had a natural lean is usually safe. A tree that recently started leaning with exposed or heaving roots is dangerous. Mature leaning trees with root damage usually need removal. Get a professional assessment.
Most professional tree services in Southaven include debris hauling, brush chipping, and log removal in their quotes. Some offer discounted rates if you keep the firewood. Stump grinding chips are usually left as backfill.
Tree removal in Southaven costs $500-$5,000 depending on tree size and complexity. Small trees cost $200-$500. Medium trees $500-$1,500. Large trees over 60 feet cost $1,500-$5,000. Most homeowners pay $800-$2,000 for a typical removal.
Remove a tree if you see large dead branches over your home, trunk cracks or cavities, mushrooms at the base, a severe lean that has changed recently, or more than 50% of the crown is dead. Get a certified arborist assessment.