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🌳 Tree Protection/Tree Replacement Requirements

Pinellas Park vs Safety Harbor

How do tree replacement requirements rules compare between Pinellas Park, FL and Safety Harbor, FL?

Pinellas Park and Safety Harbor have similar restriction levels.

Pinellas Park, FL

Pinellas County

Heavy Restrictions

When removing protected trees, Pinellas Park requires replacement plantings under Section 18-408. Property owners must replace removed inches with new trees from the city's approved species list or pay into the tree mitigation fund.

View full Pinellas Park rules →

Safety Harbor, FL

Pinellas County

Heavy Restrictions

Safety Harbor's Tree Ordinance requires replacement of removed protected trees per the Tree Replacement Ratio in the Land Development Code, with mitigation contributions to the tree fund accepted when on-site replanting is not feasible.

View full Safety Harbor rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactPinellas ParkSafety Harbor
Code referenceLDC Sec. 18-408-
Replacement basisInch-for-inch DBHDBH-scaled inch-for-inch ratio
Preferred speciesFlorida natives-
Fee in lieuTree mitigation fund payment-
Invalid replacementsInvasive species ineligible-
Authority-Article X tree ordinance
Species source-Approved Tree List
Fee-in-lieu-Tree fund payment available
Free programs-Spring Give-Away, Street Tree

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Pinellas Park FAQ

How many trees must I plant after removal?

Replacement is calculated on an inch-for-inch DBH basis. Removing one 12-inch protected tree typically requires planting trees totaling 12 inches DBH using approved species.

Can I pay a fee instead of replanting?

Yes. When site constraints prevent on-site replacement, Pinellas Park allows a payment in lieu to the tree mitigation fund, used for public tree planting.

What species qualify as replacement trees?

Approved species emphasize Florida natives like live oak, southern magnolia, bald cypress, and slash pine. Invasive species are never eligible as replacements.

Safety Harbor FAQ

Do I have to replant after removing a protected tree?

Yes. Healthy protected trees removed for construction must be replaced under the city's Tree Replacement Ratio, using species from the Approved Tree List.

What if my lot has no room for replacement trees?

Applicants may contribute fee-in-lieu mitigation to the Safety Harbor tree fund, which finances public-property planting and the city's Street Tree program.

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