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🎋 Invasive Plant Rules/Palm Tree Rules

Palm Tree Rules: Los Angeles vs South San Gabriel

How do palm tree rules rules compare between Los Angeles, CA and South San Gabriel, CA?

South San Gabriel has fewer restrictions than Los Angeles.

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Los Angeles' Street Tree Master Plan replaces aging non-native palms (Mexican fan, Canary Island date) with shade trees as they die. LAMC §62.169 prohibits planting any tree in the parkway without a Bureau of Street Services permit, and palms are no longer on the approved replacement species list.

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South San Gabriel, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Los Angeles County Department of Public Works street tree program shifts from non-native palms toward native shade species under community plan policies, citing low shade canopy and water inefficiency of palms.

View full South San Gabriel rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactLos AngelesSouth San Gabriel
AuthorityLAMC §62.169 parkway permits-
Replacement speciesCrape Myrtle, Tipu, Chinese ElmCoast live oak, sycamore
Private yardsPalms still allowed-
RemovalBSS handles parkway palms-
DPW palm planting-No new palms in parkways
Native palm-Washingtonia filifera only
Permit threshold-Eight inch trunk diameter
Policy basis-Sustainability Plan goals

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Los Angeles FAQ

Can I plant a palm tree in front of my house?

Not in the parkway strip between sidewalk and curb. LAMC §62.169 requires a Bureau of Street Services permit, and current approved species lists prioritize shade trees over palms. Palms remain allowed on private property.

What if my parkway palm dies?

Bureau of Street Services Urban Forestry will remove it at city expense and replant with an approved shade species. Property owners can request a specific replacement from the BSS species list when scheduling.

South San Gabriel FAQ

Can I plant a palm tree in my front yard?

Yes on private property, though community plans discourage new non-native palms. Mexican and queen palms are not banned but no longer favored. Native Washingtonia filifera is acceptable in most zones without special review.

Can I cut down the palm in my parkway strip?

Not without DPW permission. Parkway street trees belong to the County and removal requires a Department of Public Works tree permit, even if the tree is dying or you planted it yourself.

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