Tree removal permit rules: Centennial vs Denver, Colorado

A side-by-side comparison drawn from each city's tree-protection ordinance. For the underlying full ordinance text, see the Centennial ordinance page or the Denver ordinance page.

Side-by-side comparison

Field Centennial Denver
Protected tree definition Significant tree: 6 inches DBH or greater on development sites. Tree preservation required during development review. Ash species subject to EAB management. All trees in the public right-of-way are regulated regardless of size. Street trees and park trees require Office of the City Forester approval for any work. Trees on private property affected by development subject to landscape and tree preservation review.
Heritage / landmark trees Significant Trees defined under Centennial Land Development Code (Tree Preservation) at 6-inch DBH or greater on development sites trigger Tree Preservation Plan review with retention and mitigation requirements during plat, site plan, and building permit applications — Centennial's enhanced-protection tier in lieu of a separate heritage-tree designation. Denver Revised Municipal Code Chapter 57 (Parks and Recreation — Tree Regulations) regulates all public-right-of-way and park trees regardless of size; on private development sites, trees ≥4-inch DBH subject to landscape and tree-preservation review with replacement obligations to the Tree Planting Fund — Denver's enhanced-protection tier in lieu of a separate heritage-tree designation.
Who can apply Property owner or authorized agent with arborist report Property owner, authorized agent, or Denver-licensed tree service company
Replacement ratio Based on tree size and condition (typically 1:1 to 2:1) 1:1 to 2:1 for street tree removal; on-site landscape replacement for development
Replacement details On-site replacement preferred; fee-in-lieu when infeasible. Replacement required on-site or in nearby right-of-way; in-lieu fees to Tree Planting Fund when infeasible.
Typical processing time 3-6 weeks 2-4 weeks
Permit fee Not documented $50.00
Permitting department Community Development Department Denver Parks and Recreation / Office of the City Forester
Municipal code View ordinance → View ordinance →

How they differ

Which city has stricter heritage tree protections, Centennial or Denver?
Both Centennial and Denver maintain heritage / landmark tree designations. Centennial: Significant Trees defined under Centennial Land Development Code (Tree Preservation) at 6-inch DBH or greater on development sites trigger Tree Preservation Plan review with retention and mitigation… Denver: Denver Revised Municipal Code Chapter 57 (Parks and Recreation — Tree Regulations) regulates all public-right-of-way and park trees regardless of size; on private development sites, trees ≥4-inch DBH…
Where is a tree removal permit processed faster, Centennial or Denver?
Centennial publishes a typical processing time of 3-6 weeks; Denver publishes 2-4 weeks. Compare each city's published timeline and plan removal accordingly — emergency-tree provisions may shorten the wait in either city.
Where are tree replacement obligations heavier, Centennial or Denver?
Centennial requires a replacement ratio of Based on tree size and condition (typically 1:1 to 2:1). Denver requires a replacement ratio of 1:1 to 2:1 for street tree removal; on-site landscape replacement for development. Centennial: On-site replacement preferred; fee-in-lieu when infeasible. Denver: Replacement required on-site or in nearby right-of-way; in-lieu fees to Tree Planting Fund when infeasible.

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