From the ponderosa pines shouldering up against your roof to the firs and aspens filling a back acre, we remove, trim, and grind stumps all around Deer Park, with a free written estimate for you.

Up here the lots run bigger and the trees run taller, and the pine foothills start right at the edge of town. We handle removal, trimming, and stump grinding all around Deer Park, licensed, bonded, and insured, with free written estimates and the cleanup built into every job.
Deer Park sits about 22 miles north of Spokane along US-2 and US-395, and it is its own city, not a neighborhood of Spokane. Work inside the city limits goes through the City of Deer Park, while the surrounding unincorporated areas of north Spokane County fall under Spokane County rules. That line matters when you are figuring out whether a removal near the road or a lot-line tree needs a sign-off before a saw comes out. We are up here every week, so we can tell you before anything starts whether the city or the county typically requires a call.
Deer Park is also the gateway to the upper county, the last real stop on the way toward Chewelah, Colville, and Loon Lake. The tree work up here is mostly residential: bigger lots, taller pines, and firs and hardwoods that have had decades to lean toward rooftops and driveways. A leaning ponderosa holding a full snow load a few feet off your roof is not the same job as a backyard maple in the city, and we plan for it that way.
The crew covers Deer Park and the country around it, from in-town residential streets out into the larger-lot acreage that runs north toward the foothills. Estimates are free, on-site, and in writing: one specific number for the job in front of us, not an hourly meter and not a range that means nothing.
Ponderosa pine is the dominant canopy up here. Mature ponderosas tower over back fences, sheds, and rooflines all over Deer Park, and a healthy one is a fine thing to live under; a dead top or a heavy limb hanging over the house is not. We check ponderosas for deadwood and weak unions, clear the hazards, and when one has to come down whole, we bring the rigging and the crew a tree that size demands.
Douglas fir is the other big conifer around Deer Park, especially where the lots get larger and the ground starts rolling up toward the foothills. Firs grow tall and dense, and once one is leaning over a driveway or a power drop, taking it down on a calm day beats picking it up after a storm. We rig firs for tight corners and haul every stick.
Lodgepole pines show up across the north county in clusters, and they are notoriously shallow-rooted and quick to go over in a wet, heavy snow or a Chinook wind. If a stand of lodgepoles is crowding a structure or a driveway, thinning the weak ones before winter is cheaper than clearing them after. We take them down clean and haul the brush.
Quaking aspen and birch love the wetter pockets around Deer Park, and they are planted all over for the white bark and the fall color. Both stay healthiest on a regular trim: thinning crossed trunks, clearing deadwood, and keeping the shape the tree wants rather than the one neglect gives it. We prune them with a light hand so they still look like themselves when we leave.
In the older residential parts of Deer Park, maples, crabapples, and fruit trees line driveways and shade front yards. A once-a-year pruning keeps them healthy, keeps their size in check, and keeps them from tangling into a thicket. It is careful, seasonal work, and the difference between a shaped tree and a butchered one is the crew holding the saw.
Controlled takedowns near houses, shops, fences, and power drops, from small ornamentals to full-grown ponderosa and fir. We rig for tight corners on bigger north-county lots, and cleanup is part of the job. See our tree removal page.
Pruning that clears rooflines, walks, and driveways while keeping pines, firs, and ornamentals healthy for the long haul. We shape the tree; we never top it. See our trimming page.
We grind stumps below grade and clear the chips so you can seed, sod, or plant right over the spot. Priced per stump, with a better rate when we grind several in one trip. See our stump grinding page.
Downed trees, blocked driveways, limbs resting on a roof: storm calls get priority attention across Deer Park. Call (509) 632-4080 to check on timing.
The city and the county write different rules. Deer Park is its own incorporated city, so tree work inside the city limits goes through the City of Deer Park, while the surrounding unincorporated areas of north Spokane County fall under Spokane County. Removals near the right-of-way, lot-line work, and clearing in sensitive areas can need a sign-off from one or the other. We can tell you which jobs typically need the phone call and which don't.
The lots are bigger, and so are the trees. Deer Park is where suburban Spokane gives way to rural residential and the pine foothills. Larger lots mean taller, heavier trees standing farther from the road and closer to outbuildings, shops, and power drops. That scale changes the rigging, the crew size, and the cleanup, and we plan for it before the truck rolls.
Snow load and ice are the real hazard up here. Cold, snowy winters and ice storms are part of living in north county, and a Chinook wind event on top of a heavy snowpack will drop limbs and whole pines that have been leaning for years. A leaning pine holding a full snow load a few feet off a roof is the kind of job worth taking down before the storm rather than after.
Lodgepoles and shallow-rooted firs go over fast. The lodgepole stands around Deer Park are shallow-rooted and quick to fail in wet ground, and dense fir can catch the wind like a sail. Storm calls get priority attention, call or text and we'll tell you honestly what the schedule looks like.
Paperwork happens at the estimate, not the last minute. Property managers and homeowners up here like written scope and documentation before day one. Ask about it during your free estimate, so when the crew arrives the only thing left to do is the work.
Deer Park winters mean heavy snow, ice storms, and the occasional Chinook wind event that shakes loose whatever was ready to fail. When one hits, storm calls get priority attention: downed trees, blocked driveways, anything resting on a structure.
For everything that isn't urgent, call or text and we'll tell you honestly what the schedule looks like. We tell you when we're coming and we show up when we said we would. Nobody should burn a vacation day waiting on a tree crew.
Urgent or routine, call or text Spokane Tree Pros at (509) 632-4080 and we'll take it from there.
It depends on exactly where the tree sits. Deer Park is its own incorporated city, so work inside the city limits goes through the City of Deer Park, while the surrounding unincorporated areas of north Spokane County fall under Spokane County. Most removals on your own property don't need a permit, but trees near the right-of-way, on a lot line, or in a sensitive area can need a sign-off. We sort that out during your free estimate and make the call to the city or county if one is needed.
What a residential removal in Deer Park costs depends on the tree's size, where it stands, and how easily we can get equipment to it. A small ornamental in an open yard is a simpler job than a big ponderosa or fir over a fence line or roof. We put a written estimate in your hand after walking the job in person, so the number you see is the number for your tree.
Yes. Deer Park's cold, snowy winters, ice storms, and Chinook wind events drop limbs and whole pines every year. When a tree is down across a driveway or resting on a roof, that call gets priority attention. Call (509) 632-4080 and we'll tell you honestly what the schedule looks like.
Ponderosa pine is the dominant canopy up here, with Douglas fir and lodgepole pine close behind, plus quaking aspen and birch in the wetter spots and maples, crabapples, and fruit trees in the older residential parts of town. We remove, trim, and grind stumps on all of them, from small ornamentals to full-grown pines and firs.
Yes, and that is some of the most common work up here. A ponderosa holding a full snow load a few feet off a roof is a real hazard, and taking it down on a calm day before the storm is cheaper and safer than clearing it after. We bring the rigging and the crew a tree that size demands, and cleanup is part of the job.
We cover Deer Park itself and the surrounding unincorporated north Spokane County areas, out along the US-2 and US-395 corridors toward Chewelah, Colville, and Loon Lake. Whether you're inside city limits or out on acreage beyond, we can get to you, and routine estimates usually land within a day or two.
Yes. Unless you ask us to leave trunk wood for firewood, we haul the brush and limbs, then rake and blow the work area before we go. The only sign we were there should be the missing tree.
We handle tree removal, trimming, and stump grinding in Deer Park and the surrounding north Spokane County areas, out along the US-2 and US-395 corridors toward Chewelah, Colville, and Loon Lake.
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