Tree removal permit rules: Arlington vs Fort Worth, Texas

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

Side-by-side comparison

Field Arlington Fort Worth
Protected tree definition Protected tree: 6 inches DBH or greater on non-single-family lots. Heritage trees (24+ inches DBH of qualifying species) receive enhanced mitigation requirements. Protected tree: any tree 6 inches DBH or greater on development sites. Significant trees 18+ inches DBH and Legacy trees 30+ inches DBH require enhanced mitigation ratios.
Heritage / landmark trees Heritage trees: 24+ inches DBH of qualifying native species (post oak, live oak, pecan, cedar elm, bur oak, bald cypress). Significant trees: 18+ inches DBH. Legacy trees: 30+ inches DBH of eligible native species (post oak, live oak, pecan, cedar elm, bur oak).
Who can apply Property owner or authorized agent with ISA Certified Arborist report Property owner or authorized agent with ISA Certified Arborist report
Replacement ratio Caliper-inch mitigation with enhanced ratio for heritage trees Caliper-inch mitigation: 1:1 for protected trees, 2:1 for significant, 3:1 for legacy
Replacement details On-site replacement preferred; payment to Arlington Urban Forestry Fund when infeasible. On-site replacement preferred; payment to Urban Forestry Fund when infeasible.
Typical processing time 4-6 weeks 4-8 weeks
Permit fee Not documented Not documented
Permitting department Planning & Development Services Development Services - Urban Forestry
Municipal code View ordinance → View ordinance →

How they differ

Which city has stricter heritage tree protections, Arlington or Fort Worth?
Both Arlington and Fort Worth maintain heritage / landmark tree designations. Arlington: Heritage trees: 24+ inches DBH of qualifying native species (post oak, live oak, pecan, cedar elm, bur oak, bald cypress). Fort Worth: Significant trees: 18+ inches DBH. Legacy trees: 30+ inches DBH of eligible native species (post oak, live oak, pecan, cedar elm, bur oak).
Where is a tree removal permit processed faster, Arlington or Fort Worth?
Arlington publishes a typical processing time of 4-6 weeks; Fort Worth publishes 4-8 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, Arlington or Fort Worth?
Arlington requires a replacement ratio of Caliper-inch mitigation with enhanced ratio for heritage trees. Fort Worth requires a replacement ratio of Caliper-inch mitigation: 1:1 for protected trees, 2:1 for significant, 3:1 for legacy. Arlington: On-site replacement preferred; payment to Arlington Urban Forestry Fund when infeasible. Fort Worth: On-site replacement preferred; payment to Urban Forestry Fund when infeasible.

Filing in Arlington or Fort Worth?

Capture an ISA TRAQ Level 1, 2, or 3 assessment in the field and export a municipality-ready PDF that fits each city's required report sections. Free, no account required.

Start a TRAQ assessment