Tree removal permit rules: College Station vs Houston, Texas
A side-by-side comparison drawn from each city's tree-protection ordinance. For the underlying full ordinance text, see the College Station ordinance page or the Houston ordinance page.
Side-by-side comparison
| Field | College Station | Houston |
|---|---|---|
| Protected tree definition | Protected tree: 8 inches DBH or greater on development sites. Heritage trees (24+ inches DBH of qualifying species) receive enhanced protection. | Qualified tree: any living tree 6 inches DBH or greater on private development property. Trees in the public right-of-way are regulated regardless of size. |
| Heritage / landmark trees | Heritage trees: 24+ inches DBH of qualifying native species (post oak, live oak, pecan, cedar elm, bur oak, bald cypress). | Not documented |
| Who can apply | Property owner or authorized agent with ISA Certified Arborist report | Property owner or authorized developer |
| Replacement ratio | Caliper-inch mitigation with enhanced ratio for heritage trees | Based on caliper inches removed (site-specific) |
| Replacement details | On-site replacement preferred; payment to Tree Mitigation Fund when infeasible. | Trees replaced on-site or mitigation fees paid to Houston Parks Board Tree Mitigation Bank. |
| Typical processing time | 4-6 weeks | 3-6 weeks |
| Permit fee | Not documented | Not documented |
| Permitting department | Planning and Development Services | Department of Planning & Development |
| Municipal code | View ordinance → | View ordinance → |
How they differ
- Which city has stricter heritage tree protections, College Station or Houston?
- College Station has a heritage tree program (Heritage trees: 24+ inches DBH of qualifying native species (post oak, live oak, pecan, cedar elm, bur oak, bald cypress).). Houston does not document a heritage / landmark designation in its ordinance, so heritage protections are stricter in College Station.
- Where is a tree removal permit processed faster, College Station or Houston?
- College Station publishes a typical processing time of 4-6 weeks; Houston publishes 3-6 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, College Station or Houston?
- College Station requires a replacement ratio of Caliper-inch mitigation with enhanced ratio for heritage trees. Houston requires a replacement ratio of Based on caliper inches removed (site-specific). College Station: On-site replacement preferred; payment to Tree Mitigation Fund when infeasible. Houston: Trees replaced on-site or mitigation fees paid to Houston Parks Board Tree Mitigation Bank.
College Station next steps
Houston next steps
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