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Tree removal for land clearing

Tree removal that leaves ground you can build on.

We fell the standing timber and grub the stumps out to mineral soil — not a flush-cut arborist job. On a steep WNC ridge that means felling direction, erosion control before the canopy comes off, and clean ground the grading crew can compact. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.

3,639
Henderson homes since 2020
37.6%
Ridge felling slope
21.3%
Transylvania ≥5 ac
24hr
Callback
Prefer to talk? (828) 510-7217
Free Site Estimate Step 1 of 3

What do you need done?

Pick the closest — you can add detail next.

A few quick details

Project size
Under ¼ acre ¼–1 acre 1–5 acres 5+ acres
Timeline
ASAP 1–3 months Just planning
Where’s the job?

Where do we send the estimate?

No spam — we only call to schedule your free on-site estimate.

You’re all set.

A Ridgeline estimator will call within 24 hours to schedule your free on-site estimate. Need it sooner? Call (828) 510-7217.

Licensed & insured 15+ years in WNC Free on-site quote
What does tree removal for land clearing involve in WNC?

Tree removal for land clearing is the felling of standing timber across a build envelope plus grubbing the root balls out to firm mineral soil — not an arborist’s flush-cut of one ornamental tree. You can’t set a footing, driveway, or septic field over a stump, because a buried root ball rots, voids, and the fill settles into it. On WNC’s steep, fast-draining ridge soils — Transylvania’s dominant Unaka at a typical 37.6% slope, Henderson’s Ashe ridges at 40.2% — the canopy comes off only after erosion control is in, so the bare slope doesn’t wash. Removing trees that open more than one acre also needs an NC E&SC plan at $119/acre. We grub the build envelope and hand clean ground to the grading crew.

Removal for building ≠ a tree service

The single most common mistake here is treating land-clearing tree removal like calling a tree service. An arborist climbs and rigs a hazard tree off a house and flush-cuts or grinds the stump a few inches down. That’s the right call for one tree over a roof — and exactly the wrong outcome when you’re opening ground to build. For a homesite we take the standing timber off the whole build envelope and then grub the root balls out to firm mineral soil, because the next crew has to compact fill and set a footing on that ground.

Why the stump has to come out, not off

On the well-drained ridge soils that dominate WNC — Unaka, Ashe, Wayah, Evard — a buried root ball decays over a few years and leaves a void underground. Build a compacted pad, a driveway base, or a foundation over it and the fill settles into that void and cracks whatever’s on top. So inside the build envelope we pull every stump whole and strip to mineral soil. Cleared and grubbed, the envelope hands straight off to the grading crew for compacted fill and a benched pad — and that’s why one crew from removal through grade keeps the lines meeting.

Where we don’t pull the roots

The grub line stops at the build envelope on purpose. Outside it — view corridors, the approach, fence lines, acreage you’re keeping wooded — we leave the root mat intact, because on a 2–95% mountain slope those roots are what hold the soil from sliding. On the big-lot counties that’s most of the tract: in Transylvania 56.4% of parcels run over an acre and 21.3% over five; in Madison the median lot is 4.1 acres. For that acreage, forestry mulching grinds the smaller material in place and leaves a stable mulch mat. We remove and grub only where you build.

Fell the slope without washing it

Stripping a canopy off a steep WNC slope concentrates runoff fast, so removal and erosion control are one job. Before the saws start we put in silt fence on the down-slope side, a gravel construction entrance, and diversions where water concentrates (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973) expects them on disturbed ground), fell so timber drops uphill where we safely can, and stage the work so bare ground gets stabilized or seeded promptly. Open more than one acre of disturbance and you need an approved E&SC plan filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity at $119/acre — detail in our NC land-grading permits guide.

Wooded-lot removal NC OneMap

New wooded pads drive the work — Henderson has added 3,639 homes since 2020, most starting under canopy.

3,639
Henderson homes since 2020
1,438
Transylvania since 2020
37.6%
Felling slope (Unaka)
21.3%
Transylvania ≥5 ac
Where the trees come off

Lot size and slope decide the removal plan.

Median lot size, the share of parcels at or above one and five acres, and the dominant ridge soil series with its typical slope for each WNC county we clear — from 630,866 NC OneMap parcels and the USDA-NRCS Web Soil Survey. The bigger the wooded acreage and the steeper the ground, the more the job leans to mulching the acreage and grubbing only the build envelope.

WNC wooded-lot tree-removal demand by county — source: NC OneMap parcels + USDA-NRCS Web Soil Survey
CountyMedian lot≥1 acre≥5 acresDominant ridge soilTypical removal approach
Henderson 0.79 ac 41% 11.7% Ashe40.2% Grub pad, selective clear
Transylvania 1.24 ac 56.4% 21.3% Unaka37.6% Grub envelope, mulch acreage
Haywood 0.92 ac 47.4% 16% Wayah27.8% Grub pad, selective clear
Madison 4.1 ac 76.5% 46.5% lots only Grub envelope, mulch acreage
Buncombe 0.55 ac 30% 5.7% Clifton16% Full pad fell & grub

Smaller-lot counties like Buncombe (0.55-acre median) lean to full fell-and-grub for a single new-build pad; big-lot Transylvania and Madison lean to grubbing only the envelope and mulching the rest.

What it costs

Priced off the timber, stumps & slope.

We don’t publish a per-tree or per-acre removal price, because it swings on stem density and tree size, how many stumps have to be grubbed, slope, rock under the root balls, and access. Here’s how the three removal jobs break down — exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate.

Smallest scope
Single wooded pad
Varies with tree size & count

Fell the trees on one building envelope, grub the stumps to mineral soil, and strip the pad. The most common new-home start on smaller Buncombe and Henderson lots.

Drivers: stem count, tree size, haul-off
Mid range
Pad + driveway corridor
Varies with run & slope

Remove and grub the pad, then clear the driveway line up the slope. Felling direction and erosion control matter most here, where the corridor cuts across grade.

Drivers: corridor length, slope, culverts
Most involved
Acreage homesite clear
Varies with grub vs. mulch split

Grub the build envelope to mineral soil, mulch or selectively clear the wooded acreage, install erosion control on bare slope. The big Transylvania, Haywood, and Madison tracts.

Drivers: stump count, slope, rock, access

Exact pricing always comes from a free on-site estimate — call (828) 510-7217 or use the form above. Removing trees over an acre of disturbance? It needs an NC E&SC plan first — see the permit guide.

How it works

Four steps, slope respected.

01

Walk the timber

We read the slope, soil, stem density, and access, and mark where the grub line falls vs. what stays wooded.

02

Permit & controls

Confirm the 1-acre line, file the E&SC plan if needed, and set silt fence and entrances before any saws start.

03

Fell & grub

Fell the standing timber by direction, then grub the stumps out to firm mineral soil across the build envelope.

04

Clear & hand off

Chip, haul, deck timber, or burn slash; stabilize bare slope; shape the pad and hand straight to grading.

FAQ

Tree removal for land clearing — common questions

What's the difference between tree removal for land clearing and a tree service?
They are two different trades. An arborist or tree service takes down individual hazard or ornamental trees, climbs and rigs over a house, and usually flush-cuts the stump or grinds it a few inches below grade. Tree removal for land clearing takes off the standing timber across a build envelope and then grubs the root ball out to firm mineral soil, because you cannot set a footing, driveway, or septic field over a stump or a root mat — a buried stump rots, voids, and the fill settles into it. On a WNC homesite we fell with a tracked machine, push and pile or chip the timber, and pull the stumps so the grading crew gets clean ground. If you only need one tree off the house, call an arborist; if you’re opening ground to build, that’s clearing work.
Do you have to grub the stumps, or can you just cut the trees down?
For a build envelope you grub them. Cutting trees flush leaves the root ball in the ground, and on the well-drained ridge soils that dominate WNC — Ashe, Evard, Unaka, Wayah — that root ball decays over years and leaves a void. Build a compacted fill pad, a driveway, or a foundation on top and it settles into that void and cracks. So on the part of the lot you’re building on, we pull the stumps out whole and strip to mineral soil. Outside the build envelope — view corridors, the approach, acreage you’re keeping wooded — we often leave the root mat intact on purpose, because on a steep slope those roots are what hold the soil from sliding. The site walk decides where the grub line falls.
How many trees can I clear before I need an NC permit?
It is governed by disturbed area, not tree count. Under the NC Sedimentation Pollution Control Act (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)), removing trees and grubbing that uncovers more than one acre on a tract requires an approved Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan, filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity, at $119 per acre as of 2025-07-01. Clearing trees off a single house pad usually stays under that line; opening an acre or more for a homesite, pasture, or road almost always trips it — and in the big-lot counties that’s common, with 21.3% of Transylvania and 46.5% of Madison parcels at five acres or more. We confirm whether the state DEMLR Asheville office or a delegated county program has jurisdiction before any saws start.
Will clearing the trees off my slope cause a washout?
It can if the canopy comes off with no plan — which is exactly why mountain tree removal is its own job. The dominant ridge soils here are steep and fast-draining: Transylvania’s Unaka typifies a 37.6% grade and Henderson’s Ashe ridge soils sit at 40.2%, running to 95% in spots. Strip the trees and the bare slope concentrates runoff and slides in the first hard summer storm. Before the canopy comes off we set the controls the Sedimentation Pollution Control Act expects on disturbed ground — silt fence on the down-slope side, a gravel entrance, diversions where runoff concentrates — fell so timber drops uphill where we can, and stage the work so bare ground gets stabilized or seeded promptly. We tie in drainage where the slope needs it.
What do you do with the trees, brush, and stumps after removal?
There’s more than one way to handle it, and we sort it on the site walk. Merchantable timber we can deck to the side for you to sell or mill — tell us up front. The rest we chip on site where access allows, haul off where it doesn’t, or, where the county permits open burning, burn slash under the proper rules. Stumps we pull and either chip, haul, or bury in an approved spoil area off the building envelope — never inside it. On a tract where most of the acreage stays wooded, forestry mulching grinds the smaller material into a mulch mat in place, so there’s nothing to haul. We don’t leave a lot full of slash piles and stump holes; we strip and shape the build area so it’s ready to grade.
Can you clear trees for a new-home building pad near Asheville or Hendersonville?
Yes — wooded-pad tree removal is the steadiest part of this work, because most WNC lots that get built on start under canopy. Henderson County alone has added roughly 3,639 homes since 2020 (about 6,175 since 2015), and Transylvania another 1,438 — much of it on wooded ridge and valley-edge lots where the trees have to come off and the stumps have to come out before a footing goes in. We fell and grub the building envelope, strip to firm mineral soil, then hand straight to site preparation and pad grading. One crew from tree removal through compacted pad means the grade lines actually meet.
Do you remove trees on steep or hard-to-access mountain lots?
That’s most of our ground. WNC building lots routinely sit on 30%+ slopes — Henderson’s county slope envelope runs from 0% in the valleys to 95% on the steepest ridge series, and Transylvania’s is similar. Steep, tight-access removal means tracked machines instead of wheeled, careful felling direction so timber drops where we can work it, winching where a tree can’t be safely pushed, and erosion control staged in before the slope goes bare. Access is the wild card — a long, steep, narrow driveway slows everything and shapes the plan. We walk the slope and the timber before we put a number on it, and we flag access and rock early.
What areas do you remove trees and clear land in around WNC?
We do tree removal for clearing across the wooded WNC counties — Henderson (Hendersonville), Buncombe (Asheville), Transylvania (Brevard), Haywood (Waynesville), and Madison — plus the towns in between. We’re a Hendersonville-based crew, so most local jobs get a same-week site walk and a callback within 24hr. Whether it’s a single wooded house pad or a forty-acre tract, we read the timber, the slope, and the access before quoting — and we don’t scalp a lot we don’t have to.
Free estimate

Trees to come off a wooded WNC lot?

Tell us the acreage, the slope, and what you're building. We'll walk the timber, mark the grub line, and put a real number in writing — free.

Prefer to talk? (828) 510-7217
Free Site Estimate Step 1 of 3

What do you need done?

Pick the closest — you can add detail next.

A few quick details

Project size
Under ¼ acre ¼–1 acre 1–5 acres 5+ acres
Timeline
ASAP 1–3 months Just planning
Where’s the job?

Where do we send the estimate?

No spam — we only call to schedule your free on-site estimate.

You’re all set.

A Ridgeline estimator will call within 24 hours to schedule your free on-site estimate. Need it sooner? Call (828) 510-7217.

Licensed & insured 15+ years in WNC Free on-site quote
Call Free estimate →