Tree Health Survey in West Midlands

Tree Health Surveys in the West Midlands

Concerned a tree’s condition could become a safety or liability issue in the West Midlands?

We assess tree health objectively and proportionately, giving clear guidance that supports planning decisions, duty-of-care obligations and responsible management.

Fast, Clear, Planning-Ready Support

Fast response 

Calls answered in 2 rings, emails replied to within the hour.

Free expert advice

Clear guidance before you commit.

Cost-effective

Working in partnership with clients to ensure planning approval first time

Typical 10-day turnaround

Industry Leading Standard

Expert Team

We stay with you from first call through to submission. 

Do you need a Tree Health Survey for Planning in the West Midlands?

If you’re a homeowner, you may need a Tree Health Survey where a mature tree shows signs of decline, disease, instability or damage close to a house, driveway or boundary. Insurers, lenders and local authorities often request independent evidence before decisions are made.

If you’re a developer or landowner, Tree Health Surveys are commonly required where retained trees influence layout, access, safety or long-term site viability. Early clarity avoids unnecessary retention assumptions, late redesign or post-consent complications.

A Tree Health Survey provides a clear, professional view of tree condition, risk and realistic management options.

Across the West Midlands, tree health issues often arise where mature trees sit within dense urban and suburban environments. Typical contexts include:

  • Residential neighbourhoods where boundary trees overhang homes, footpaths or highways

  • Road and rail corridors where declining trees raise safety and operational concerns

  • Regeneration and brownfield sites with retained trees lacking ongoing maintenance

  • Locations exposed to severe weather events increasing structural risk

In these areas, tree condition is tested primarily for safety, liability and compliance.

We provide Tree Health Surveys across Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Solihull and surrounding areas, supporting landowners, developers and managing agents across the West Midlands.

Why Tree Health Evidence Matters in the West Midlands

Tree health can quickly become a material consideration where decline, disease or structural weakness creates risk to people, property or development proposals. Local authorities, insurers and landowners rely on clear arboricultural evidence to distinguish between trees that can be responsibly retained and those requiring intervention.

Under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, trees may influence planning decisions where safety, amenity or future management is relevant. Where works are proposed, BS 3998 (Tree Work – Recommendations) provides the professional framework for appropriate arboricultural intervention, while BS 5837 may apply where tree condition affects layout, access or development feasibility.

Local Case Insight

A homeowner in the West Midlands reported concerns regarding a mature tree located close to a rear extension, following progressive canopy decline. A Tree Health Survey identified advanced physiological stress, structural weaknesses and a limited remaining lifespan. The comprehensive reporting provided clarity for planning officers and insurers, enabling removal to be agreed without further conditions and avoiding delays to construction.

The Process - Tree Health Surveys

Our Tree Health Surveys are commercially aware, proportionate and planning-led, designed to support real-world construction sequencing, access logistics and foundation strategy without unnecessary escalation.

Key Deliverables for Tree Surveys in the West Midlands

Our Tree Health Survey typically provides:

  • Professional assessment of tree condition and structural integrity

  • Identification of disease, decline or defect risk

  • Practical management or remediation recommendations

  • Reporting aligned with the West Midlands LPA, insurer and lender expectations

Our experts provide clear decision-ready arboricultural evidence across the West Midlands.

Step 1

Initial
Review

Review of site details, concerns and any planning or insurance context.

Step 2

On-site
Assessment

Detailed inspection of tree condition, structure, vitality and defects.

Step 3

Risk
Interpretation

Clear evaluation of safety, longevity and management implications.

Step 4

Reporting & integration

Integration with other arboricultural or ecological surveys where required.

Next Steps

Need clarity on tree health in the West Midlands?


We’ll assess any risk thoroughly and help you move forward with confidence.

FAQ - Tree Health Surveys in the West Midlands

Do I need a tree health survey for planning in the West Midlands?

A tree health survey is often needed where trees may influence a planning application in the West Midlands. Local Planning Authorities across the region may request arboricultural information to assess tree condition, structural safety, and the effect trees may have on site constraints before a proposal is determined.

On redevelopment sites, existing trees can create both opportunities and constraints. A tree health survey helps identify whether trees are suitable for retention, whether there are safety concerns, and whether management works may be needed before construction or site clearance begins.

A tree health survey looks at the overall condition of each tree, including visible signs of decay, disease, damage, poor vitality, and structural weakness. It also considers how the tree relates to nearby buildings, access areas, and proposed site activity.

Yes, tree health surveys are often important for commercial sites, especially where trees are close to staff parking, access routes, service yards, offices, or public facing areas. Understanding tree condition helps support safety, maintenance planning, and development decisions.

Yes, one of the main purposes of a tree health survey is to identify whether a tree presents a foreseeable risk to nearby people, buildings, vehicles, or infrastructure. The report helps clarify the level of concern and sets out proportionate recommendations.

Do mature trees need to be checked before site works begin?

Mature trees should usually be assessed before site works begin, particularly where excavation, access changes, demolition, or construction activity is planned nearby. Early assessment helps avoid damage to retained trees and identifies any condition issues that may affect the project.

In more built up areas of the West Midlands, common issues can include restricted rooting conditions, past pruning wounds, physical damage, soil compaction, and decline linked to development pressure. These factors can affect long term health and stability.

Yes, a tree health survey can support ongoing estate or property management by identifying maintenance priorities, monitoring needs, and trees that may require further investigation. This is useful for landlords, managing agents, schools, and commercial property owners.

If a tree is protected by a Tree Preservation Order or stands within a conservation area, consent may be needed before work is carried out. A tree health survey provides the professional evidence needed to support proposed management or justify action where condition and safety are concerns.

It is best to arrange a tree health survey as early as possible where planning, redevelopment, safety, or land management decisions are involved. Early advice helps identify constraints, reduce delays, and ensure informed decisions are made before works progress.

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