Tree down? Tree leaning? We dispatch help fast.
One call routes you to a local Seattle tree crew that's available now — emergency removal, storm damage, fallen trees, and standard tree work.
A real person answers, day or night. Overnight windstorms are exactly what this line is for.
Puget Sound trees fail in specific ways. We route your call to a crew that already works your neighborhood.
We tell you what to document for insurance and what to verify with any contractor before work starts.
If it's happening right now
Instead of calling ten crews and leaving voicemails, call one dispatch line. We route your job to a local Seattle tree crew that's available now.
If a tree just came through your roof or wall, the first hour matters. Here's the sequence that keeps you safe and protects your insurance claim.
Vehicle claims for tree damage usually go through your auto comprehensive coverage, not homeowners. Get the documentation right before anything moves.
A sudden lean, fresh soil heave at the base, a large crack in the trunk, or a big split at a fork — those are the patterns that turn into overnight failures.
When a tree is on your house, on your car, blocking your driveway, or leaning hard toward a structure, that's an emergency. We dispatch a local crew and stay with the job.
Trees don't only fail during business hours. Our dispatch line is staffed around the clock so you can reach a local crew at 2 a.m. when the wind hits.
Not every job is a middle-of-the-night emergency, but plenty of them can't wait a week. Same-day dispatch is what we do most days.
Pacific Northwest windstorms drop hundreds of trees across the metro in a single night. Dispatch queues fill fast — calling early matters.
Whether it fell overnight or two weeks ago and you finally want it gone, we dispatch a crew that can handle the size and access.
Before the crew arrives
The first hour after a tree failure is where most homeowners either protect their claim or accidentally undermine it. Here's a clean sequence to follow.
Coverage varies by carrier and policy. This is a general overview — not legal or insurance advice. Always confirm with your own carrier.
Tree work is one of the more dangerous trades. Verifying a contractor before they climb your tree is standard, not paranoid.
Most tree failures give at least some warning if you know what to look for. Here are the patterns that should prompt a same-week call, not a same-year one.
Common questions
- What areas do you dispatch to?
- We route calls to local crews across the Seattle & Puget Sound area, including Seattle, Bellevue, Redmond, Kirkland, Renton, Bothell, Shoreline, Federal Way, Kent, Auburn, Tacoma, Everett, Sammamish, Issaquah, and Mercer Island.
- Is this available 24/7?
- Yes. The dispatch line is staffed around the clock. During major Puget Sound windstorms, response times reflect how many calls are stacked metro-wide.
- What if a tree is on power lines?
- Call your utility (and 911 if there is any immediate danger) before you call us. Never approach a tree that is in contact with electrical service.
- Are the crews you dispatch licensed and insured?
- Independent local crews vary. Before any contractor starts work on your property, ask them directly for proof of current license and general liability insurance, and confirm coverage with your homeowners insurance carrier. This is standard consumer guidance for any tree job.
- Do you charge for the dispatch call?
- No. The dispatch call is free. The crew you're connected with will quote the actual job.