Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🌳 Tree Protection/Heritage & Protected Trees

Englewood vs Mahwah

How do heritage & protected trees rules compare between Englewood, NJ and Mahwah, NJ?

Englewood and Mahwah have similar restriction levels.

Englewood, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Englewood's City Council may designate landmark trees of abnormal size, history, or aesthetic value, recording each in a Landmark Tree Register for protection and monitoring.

View full Englewood rules →

Mahwah, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Mahwah Chapter 14 protects mature trees by regulating any specimen 12 inches or greater in diameter and requiring township review before any removal, cutting, or substantial injury occurs.

View full Mahwah rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactEnglewoodMahwah
Designation authorityEnglewood City Council-
Recommending bodiesEngineer, Arborist, EEC-
Adopting ordinanceOrd. 17-04 (2017)-
RegistryLandmark Tree Register-
Protected threshold-12-inch diameter or 38-inch circumference
Measurement standard-DBH at 4.5 feet
Preferred replacements-Oak, maple, hickory hardwoods
Fee alternative-Mahwah Tree Bank escrow

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Englewood FAQ

How does a tree become a landmark tree in Englewood?

The City Engineer, City Arborist, or Environmental Commission recommends the tree to the City Council, which decides based on size, history, or scenic value.

What does the Landmark Tree Register record?

It records each designated tree's code marks, designation, location, number, species, age, size, and other distinguishing characteristics for periodic monitoring.

Mahwah FAQ

Does Mahwah have a designated heritage tree program?

Mahwah does not maintain a separate heritage list, but Chapter 14 protects all trees of 12-inch diameter or larger, effectively giving mature specimens regulatory heritage status.

How is tree size measured under Mahwah's ordinance?

Diameter at breast height is measured 4.5 feet above the uphill ground side; multi-stem trees are measured at the highest point before the trunk divides.

Are native species required when replacing a protected tree?

Yes. Replacement trees must reflect the mature northern New Jersey forest, including species like oak, maple, hickory, or other hardwoods.

Compare other topics

See how Englewood and Mahwah compare on other ordinance categories.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool