Quick Answer
Palm tree trimming in St. Augustine, FL typically runs from about $50–$75 per short Sabal palm up to $200+ per tall Washingtonia or Canary Island Date palm. Most residential yards with 3–10 palms see a per-palm price discount when bundled. Height, palm species, and access to the palm are the three biggest cost drivers.
Key Takeaways
- Short Sabal palms: roughly $50–$75 per palm.
- Medium Queen palms: roughly $75–$125 per palm.
- Tall Washingtonia palms (30–40+ feet): $125–$250 per palm.
- Specialty palms (Canary Island Date, Bismarck): higher due to careful work required.
- Most yards get volume pricing when trimming multiple palms in one visit.
Table of Contents
What drives palm trimming cost
Palm trimming price depends on five factors: palm species, palm height, number of palms on the property, access to each palm (open lot vs over pool vs between houses), and whether debris hauling is included. A tall Washingtonia between a house and a pool cage is far more labor than a short Sabal in an open front yard.
Cost by palm species
Sabal palms (Florida's state tree): Short to medium, relatively easy to trim, $50–$75 per palm is common. Trim annually at most — don't over-prune.
Queen palms: Medium height, heavy seed pods, two trims per year is common. $75–$125 per palm.
Washingtonia (Mexican fan palm): Tall, skirted with dead fronds, requires lift equipment. $125–$250 per palm depending on height.
Canary Island Date palms: Specialty work. $250+ per palm and should only be done by experienced crews.
Pygmy Date palms: Small, bundle into a lump rate.
When to trim
Pre-hurricane season (April–May) is the ideal trim window. A secondary trim in October works for fast-growing Queens and Washingtonians. Avoid heavy trimming in deep summer — overhead palm work in peak heat is harder on crews and on the palm.
DIY trimming is dangerous
Palm trimming from a ladder is one of the most common causes of homeowner injuries in Florida. Fronds weigh more than you'd expect, seed pods can knock you off a ladder, and falls from 20+ feet are catastrophic. This is one of the services where hiring a licensed, insured crew is genuinely safer.
Access and lift equipment
Palms over about 20 feet usually require a lift. Some yards can accept a lift on the driveway; others need a crew member with climbing spurs. Spur climbing damages palm trunks and should be avoided on ornamental palms that show trunk scarring. Expect lift-based pricing to include setup, trim, and cleanup.
What a trim should include
A proper palm trim includes: removal of all fully dead fronds, removal of seed pods, clean cuts near the trunk without damaging the frond boot, and cleanup/haul of all debris from the property. Avoid "hurricane cuts" (removing all living fronds up to the top 3–4) — research shows these cuts stress the palm and make it less wind-resistant.
Need help from a licensed local crew? We offer palm tree trimming or tree trimming and stump grinding across St. Johns County, FL. Call 904-429-5845.
How this applies to your St. Augustine yard
Every piece of advice above has to be filtered through the reality of North Florida — USDA hardiness zone 9a, humid subtropical climate, sandy coastal soils, a long growing season, and an Atlantic hurricane season that runs June through November. A tactic that works in Atlanta or Dallas often falls apart in St. Johns County because the climate is genuinely different. The calendar works differently, the grass species work differently, the pests work differently, and the irrigation needs are wildly different from inland Southern lawns.
On the coast — St. Augustine Beach, Vilano Beach, Anastasia Island, Crescent Beach — salt-laden air is a factor that inland yards never deal with. Salt tolerance matters for every plant selection. West of I-95 in the master-planned communities (World Golf Village, Palencia, TrailMark, Shearwater, SilverLeaf, Murabella, Beacon Lake, Nocatee) the big factor is HOA standards and tree canopy from mature oaks and pines. In older St. Augustine and St. Augustine Shores, live oak canopy and established beds create their own micro-conditions. One size does not fit all across the 15-mile service radius we work inside.
Why a local St. Johns County crew matters
There is a real gap between a national or regional lawn company running generic playbooks and a local St. Augustine crew that knows which streets flood first in a summer downpour, which HOA in Palencia wants dark brown mulch versus which section of Nocatee approves pine straw, and which homes on Anastasia Island have well-water irrigation that stains driveways if the heads are misaimed. That local knowledge is the difference between a yard that looks okay and a yard that looks genuinely cared for.
Lawnshark Landscaping Inc. is based in St. Augustine, FL. Our trucks park here, our crews live here, and our 15-mile service radius is strict so we can actually run a tight schedule. We are fully licensed and insured, and certificates of insurance are emailed directly to HOA property managers before the first visit on any HOA property. That single detail removes a lot of friction for homeowners in World Golf Village, Palencia, Beacon Lake, Nocatee, SilverLeaf, Murabella, TrailMark, and Shearwater.
Related services worth combining
Most questions about pricing overlap with other services. Weekly lawn maintenance pairs naturally with quarterly mulch and pine straw refresh, semiannual palm tree trimming, and an annual irrigation audit. Sod installations almost always make more sense when combined with a full bed refresh and an irrigation tune-up because a new lawn is only as good as the water delivery behind it. Hardscape projects (paver patios, walkways, retaining walls) usually trigger a landscape design refresh on the surrounding beds because newly finished hardscape highlights every tired planting it sits next to.
We run all nine of our services under one crew with one invoice, which means you are not juggling three contractors who each blame the others when something slips. One call, one accountable team. If you want to bundle we will quote it as a single flat rate — a common bundle for a St. Johns County home is weekly lawn maintenance, quarterly mulch refresh, and palm trim twice a year, which is enough to keep a property at HOA standard year round without any additional scheduling effort from you.
What a free estimate looks like
Every estimate is free, on-site, written, and flat-rated before any work begins. There are no deposits required, no trip fees, and no obligation after the quote lands in your inbox. We walk the property with you (or alone, if you prefer), measure the lawn, count the bed linear feet, identify the grass cultivar, check irrigation coverage, and note any HOA requirements for the property. The written quote typically lands in your email within 48 hours of the visit.
If you move forward, recurring services can usually start within 3–7 days of approval and we lock a fixed day of the week for your property. One-time projects (sod installs, paver patios, landscape design) are scheduled based on current queue — fall (October through February) is our fastest hardscape window because the lawn-maintenance load drops. Call 904-429-5845 or email lawnshark904@gmail.com to schedule an estimate. For snowbird, seasonal, or out-of-state owners we run photo-documented service so you have full visibility into property condition without needing to visit.
The St. Augustine seasonal calendar in plain English
Because our climate runs on a different rhythm than most of the country, it helps to have a simple month-by-month frame for how St. Johns County yards behave. January and February are cool and dormant — St. Augustine grass goes semi-dormant below 55°F and you will see color fade, which is normal, not a problem. This is the right window for hardscape work, tree trimming, bed refresh, and landscape design because the lawn is quiet. March is the wake-up: first mow of the season. A licensed chemical lawn company (not us — fertilizer and pre-emergent are a separate FDACS license) will typically want to apply pre-emergent crabgrass control and the first light fertilization once nighttime temps hold above 65°F. April and May are the strong growth window — weekly mowing, sharp blades, and the first real irrigation tune-up of the year.
June through September is the hard season. Daily afternoon storms, high humidity, and soil temperatures over 85°F create perfect conditions for chinch bugs, gray leaf spot, take-all root rot, and fungal pressure on St. Augustine grass. Mowing frequency stays weekly, sometimes every five days on irrigated lawns. Irrigation should run early morning only — never evening — to avoid leaf wetness overnight. Hurricane season is also live, so homeowners need a plan for pre-storm yard prep and post-storm debris cleanup. October and November are recovery months — a last fertilization of the year is typical before the winterizer cutoff (handled by your licensed applicator, not us), plus gutter and leaf cleanup under live oak canopy, and prepping irrigation for cooler nights. December is quiet maintenance mode.
Common mistakes we see on St. Augustine properties
A handful of mistakes show up on almost every new estimate we walk. Mowing too short is the most common — St. Augustine grass should be cut at 3.5 to 4 inches, never lower. Scalping a Floratam lawn opens the door to weeds, chinch bugs, and fungal disease within one or two mow cycles. Watering every day on a timer is the second most common error — deep, infrequent watering (roughly 3/4 inch twice a week) produces far stronger roots than daily light watering, which trains roots to stay shallow and makes the lawn fragile the first time a timer fails or a storm knocks out power.
Over-fertilizing in summer is the third — a mistake we see on estimate walkthroughs, though the fertilization itself is done by a separately licensed applicator, not by us. Heavy nitrogen applications when soil temperatures are high push fast top growth that chinch bugs and fungal disease love. Applying mulch too thick against tree trunks and plant bases (volcano mulching) is the fourth — two to three inches total is plenty, pulled back from trunks by a few inches. Ignoring irrigation coverage gaps is the fifth — most yards we audit have at least one zone with a head that has drifted, clogged, or been clipped by a mower. A thirty-minute irrigation walk once per quarter catches all of that before a brown patch appears in the wrong place.