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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Tree Trimming

Dunedin vs Pinellas Park

How do tree trimming rules compare between Dunedin, FL and Pinellas Park, FL?

Dunedin and Pinellas Park have similar restriction levels.

Dunedin, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Dunedin allows routine maintenance trimming of most protected trees without a permit, but Grand Trees and any pruning that removes over 25 percent of canopy require permits and an Approved Arborist.

View full Dunedin rules →

Pinellas Park, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Routine pruning of trees on private property is allowed in Pinellas Park, but heavy cutting that damages a protected tree can trigger the same permit and replacement obligations as removal under Article 4 of the Land Development Code.

View full Pinellas Park rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactDunedinPinellas Park
Permit thresholdOver 25% canopy removal-
Grand Tree size30 inches DBH and above-
Grand Tree workRequires Approved Arborist-
ToppingProhibited without permit-
Code sectionChapter 105, Division 3-
Code chapter-LDC Article 4
Routine pruning-Allowed without permit
Topping protected tree-Treated as removal
Standard referenced-ANSI A300

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Dunedin FAQ

Do I need a permit to trim my tree in Dunedin?

Routine maintenance trimming is exempt. You need a permit if pruning removes over 25 percent of the canopy, involves topping, or affects a Grand Tree of 30 inches DBH or larger.

What is a Grand Tree in Dunedin?

A Grand Tree is any tree measuring 30 inches or more in diameter at breast height, except Laurel Oaks. Pruning Grand Trees requires an Approved Arborist regardless of pruning amount.

Pinellas Park FAQ

Do I need a permit to trim my own backyard tree?

Light maintenance pruning of a tree on your property usually does not need a permit. Heavy cutting that damages a protected tree, removes most of its canopy, or amounts to a removal does require permitting under Article 4.

Who handles trees in the city right-of-way?

Trees in the public right-of-way are managed by the city. Contact Pinellas Park Public Works before any trimming so the work does not damage city-owned trees or violate the Land Development Code.

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