Most Monmouth County municipalities with tree protection ordinances require replacement planting when permitted trees are removed. Standard replacement ratios are 1:1 to 3:1 depending on tree size and species. Replacement trees must meet minimum caliper (typically 2 to 2.5 inch) and come from approved native/adapted species lists. Fee-in-lieu payments fund municipal tree funds. Monmouth County Shade Tree Commission supports native planting with species appropriate to coastal plain and Inner Coastal Plain physiographic regions.
Tree replacement requirements accompany most Monmouth County tree removal permits. Standard replacement ratios: 1:1 for small permitted trees (6 to 12 inch DBH removed), 2:1 for medium (12 to 24 inch), and 3:1 or greater for large or significant specimens (24+ inch DBH). Replacement tree minimum caliper is typically 2 to 2.5 inches measured 6 inches above ground (or 6 feet for evergreens). Approved species lists across Monmouth favor native and adapted trees including white oak (Quercus alba), red oak, swamp white oak, willow oak, sugar maple, red maple, American beech, sweetgum, tulip poplar, black gum (Nyssa sylvatica), American holly (state tree), eastern redbud, and serviceberry. Shore-adjacent towns emphasize salt-tolerant species β live oak variants, southern magnolia, American holly, and eastern red cedar. Invasive species like Norway maple, Bradford/Callery pear, and tree-of-heaven are prohibited as replacements. Replacement trees must be planted on the same property when space allows; if not feasible, fee-in-lieu is paid to the municipal tree fund (typically $300 to $500 per required tree). A 1 to 2 year establishment period requires owner maintenance β dead replacements must be re-planted. Commercial site development requires tree plans reviewed by municipal engineer or shade tree commission.
Failure to plant required replacements: $250 to $1,000 per missing tree plus mandatory planting. Unpaid fee-in-lieu: property lien attached. Planting prohibited invasive species as replacement: must remove and replant with approved species. Failure to maintain establishment period: replanting required at owner cost.
Red Bank, NJ
Red Bank's animal ordinance requires dogs to be under control at all times. Barking dogs that disturb neighbors fall under both the noise ordinance (Ch. 450)...
Red Bank, NJ
Red Bank Chapter 450 prohibits loud, excessive, or disturbing noise from phonographs, radios, TVs, musical instruments, and sound devices. Places of public a...
Red Bank, NJ
Red Bank restricts construction to 7:30 AM to 6:00 PM on weekdays and Saturdays under Chapter 450. No construction on Sundays. Pile drivers, pneumatic drills...
Red Bank, NJ
Red Bank enforces metered parking Monday through Saturday 9 AM to 9 PM. Free parking after 9 PM and all day Sunday. Residential permits available. Vehicles o...
Red Bank, NJ
Red Bank bans recreational vehicles, boat trailers, and vehicles over 10,000 lbs from borough streets between 7 PM and 7 AM. No RV-specific permit program ex...
Red Bank, NJ
Red Bank zoning requires off-street parking for residential properties. Driveway vehicles must not block sidewalks. The borough regulates lot coverage (max 4...
See how Red Bank's tree replacement requirements rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.