Checotah, OK 74426
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June 16, 2026
Quick answer: Tree removal cost in Checotah, OK, depends on the tree’s size, species, condition, location on the property, what is underneath it, and whether specialized equipment is needed. Most residential tree removals fall within a wide range because every tree is different. The only accurate way to know what your specific tree will cost is an on-site quote.
Tree removal pricing is one of the most searched questions homeowners ask, and one of the hardest to answer with a single number. National averages range from a few hundred dollars for small, easy trees to several thousand for large, hazardous removals near structures. Those numbers are useful for ballpark thinking, but they do not tell you what your specific tree will actually cost.
Here is what actually drives the price.
Two trees can look identical from the road and cost very different amounts to remove.
One might be a 40-foot oak in the middle of a fenced yard with a power line above it and a swing set ten feet away. The other might be a 40-foot oak in an open field with a clear drop zone in every direction.
Same species. Same height. Completely different jobs.
The first tree might need to be climbed and dismantled piece by piece, with each limb roped down by hand. The second tree might be felled in one cut and cleaned up in a couple of hours.
This is why no honest tree service can give you an accurate price over the phone without seeing the tree. Anyone who quotes you a flat rate based only on a description is either guessing or planning to add charges later.
Height is the single biggest cost driver. A 20-foot tree and an 80-foot tree are not the same job at all. According to data tracked by Angi, trees taller than 80 feet often require crane work, which can add significant equipment and labor costs.
Beyond about 60 feet, climbing becomes more involved, drop zones get harder to manage, and the time on site increases.
Different species have different wood densities, different growth habits, and different difficulty levels.
Hardwoods almost always cost more than softwoods of the same height.
A healthy tree is more predictable than a dead or decayed one.
Dead trees, hollow trees, and trees with structural defects are more dangerous to work on. You cannot rely on the wood to hold weight while climbing or rigging. Sometimes a tree is in such poor condition that the only safe option is a crane.
Counterintuitively, a dead tree often costs more to remove than a healthy one of the same size.
Can the crew get a bucket truck close to the tree? Can debris be dragged straight to a chipper, or does it have to be carried through gates, around fences, or over delicate landscaping?
Common access challenges in the Checotah and Lake Eufaula area:
The harder it is to reach the tree, the longer the job takes.
A tree in open space can be felled and dropped. A tree over a house, a fence, a pool, a shed, a power line, or a neighbor’s property has to be taken down piece by piece.
Every piece is climbed, cut, roped, and lowered carefully. This is slow, skilled work. It is also the work that protects everything underneath the tree.
The more obstacles below the tree, the more dismantling is required, and the more the job costs.
Standard jobs need a bucket truck, a chipper, and trucks for hauling. Some jobs need more.
Specialized equipment is expensive to own, maintain, and run. When a job needs it, the cost reflects that.
Here is a real example of how this plays out.
Tree A: A 50-foot dead oak standing in the back of a five-acre rural property, well away from the house, with a clear drop zone in three directions and easy access for trucks.
This is a fell, buck, chip, and haul job. A small crew can finish it in a few hours.
Tree B: A 50-foot dead oak in a fenced suburban backyard, leaning toward a two-story house, with a chain link fence on one side, a shed on the other, and a power service line running through the canopy.
This tree has to be climbed. Each limb has to be cut, roped, and lowered. The trunk has to come down in pieces, possibly with a crane. The utility may need to drop the service. Debris has to be carried out through a gate, not driven out.
Both trees are 50-foot dead oaks. The second job can easily cost three to five times what the first one does. That is not the tree service being unfair. It is two completely different jobs.
Mature oaks are heavy. The wood is dense, the lateral limbs reach far, and the trunk diameters get large. Removal of a mature oak near a home is almost always a multi-day, full-crew job.
Pecans often grow wider than they are tall. The lateral spread means a lot of branches to process and a wide drop zone to protect. Pecan wood is also notoriously brittle, which adds risk.
Pines that have been partially broken or are leaning after a storm are unpredictable. They can shift suddenly. Working around damaged pines is slow and careful, which adds time.
Any tree where the canopy or trunk hangs over a roof, deck, pool, or other structure requires sectional dismantling. There are no shortcuts on these jobs.
Emergency tree work costs more for several reasons.
Time of day. Crews respond after hours, at night, on weekends, and through holidays when trees fall. That comes with higher labor costs.
Existing damage. When a tree has already fallen onto a structure, the crew has to work around that damage. They have to remove the tree without making the damage worse.
Utility coordination. If a tree is on a power line, the utility company has to be involved. Sometimes power has to be cut. Sometimes the utility responds first. All of this adds time.
Safety risk. A fallen tree is under tension. Wood that is bent, pinched, or loaded with weight can snap when cut. Emergency removals are some of the most dangerous work in the trade.
Insurance coordination. When the work goes through insurance, there is documentation, photos, adjuster communication, and sometimes scope changes mid-job.
The Spruce and other home improvement publications consistently note that emergency removals can cost significantly more than scheduled work for these reasons.
At Checotah Tree Service, we respond 24/7 to emergencies and bill insurance directly when applicable, which removes one of the biggest stress points for homeowners.
Accessibility is one of the most underappreciated cost factors. Two trees of the same size can have very different price tags based purely on how hard they are to reach.
Lake properties. Many homes around Lake Eufaula sit on slopes, have narrow driveways, or have docks, decks, and outbuildings that block direct equipment access. Hand-carrying debris adds significant time.
Fenced yards. Bucket trucks need open access. If they cannot drive to the tree, the work has to be done by climbing, and the debris has to come out a different way. Some fences have to be partially removed and replaced.
Septic systems: Heavy equipment cannot drive over septic tanks, lateral fields, or shallow water lines. Routes have to be planned around them, sometimes adding hours.
Steep terrain: Trees on slopes are harder to access, harder to work around, and harder to control during the fall.
Soft, wet ground. After heavy rain, our clay soils can swallow truck tires. Sometimes work has to be delayed, or specialized track equipment has to be brought in.
When you get a quote, the tree service should walk the property with you and identify these factors. If they do not look at access, the quote is probably not accurate.
Cranes are not a default piece of equipment. They are brought in for specific situations.
When a crane usually makes sense:
Crane work adds cost, but it also reduces risk. For the right tree, a crane removal can actually be safer and faster than a climbing removal, which sometimes makes it the better value.
A good tree service tells you honestly whether your tree needs a crane. If you are told you need a crane for a tree that does not need one, get a second opinion. If you are told you do not need one for a tree that clearly does, get a second opinion the other way too.
A complete tree removal estimate should include:
Things that may or may not be included, and that you should always ask about:
A line item estimate is always better than a single lump sum. You should know exactly what you are paying for.
Before you sign anything, ask these questions:
A reputable tree service answers these questions without hesitation. If you get vague answers, get another quote.
This is the hard truth of tree work.
Tree removal is dangerous, skilled labor performed with expensive equipment. The companies that quote significantly below everyone else are usually missing something.
Common reasons one quote is much lower than the others:
When you get a quote far below other quotes, ask what is different. There is almost always a reason.
The actual cheapest job is the one done right the first time, by an insured, equipped crew, with no surprises and no property damage.
We get called in regularly to finish jobs that started cheap.
The pattern is always the same. A homeowner gets one low quote and accepts it. The crew shows up with the wrong equipment, drops a limb on something they should not have, runs into trouble they cannot handle, and either disappears or adds charges to finish.
By the time we get there, the homeowner has paid most of the original quote, has damage to repair, and still has a partially removed tree.
The difference between a good removal and a bad one is not usually the price. It is preparation, insurance, equipment, and experience. The price reflects all of those things.
The best way to know what your tree will cost is the simplest one. Have someone look at it.
Checotah Tree Service provides free, no-obligation quotes anywhere in our service area. We walk the property, look at the tree, identify the access challenges, and give you a clear written estimate with everything spelled out.
If your situation is an emergency, we respond 24/7 and bill insurance directly when the tree has caused damage to a covered structure.
Related services:
Call Checotah Tree Service at (918) 992-4344 for a free quote, or send us photos of your tree through the website. Stand back far enough to capture the whole tree plus anything close to it. The more we can see, the better we can estimate.
What Our Clients Say
Highly recommend Checotah Tree Service! They were professional, efficient, and did an amazing job from start to finish. It's hard to find a company that takes this much pride in their work, but they definitely delivered. If you're needing tree work done, Jeff is the guy to call.
Excellent work and will be using again! They removed a large tree close to my house, ground two stumps, and cleaned everything up beautifully including blowing sawdust off my porch. They even placed the wood in the perfect spot for burning. I will definitely recommend them!
These guys were absolutely amazing. They cut down two trees that were between power lines and next to the house. They cleaned up the area and left it in better shape than when they arrived. I will recommend them to anybody who is looking for tree removal and I will definitely use them again.
Fantastic job! The crew took out a large tree located in my front yard with careful precision and did an amazing job of cleaning up. Regular updates of pics and videos throughout the process and very reasonable price.
Excellent, professional service! They did the work they quoted in a timely manner, and even cleaned up a few extra problem roots. These are my go-to guys for tree work from now on!
Jeff & his crew did an outstanding job. I had quite a challenging job & they absolutely nailed it. I have more trees to remove this fall & I can tell you they are the only company to call.
If you've got a tree concern anywhere across Eastern Oklahoma, the next step is straightforward.
Call Checotah Tree Service today at
(918) 992-4344
for your free consultation.
Checotah Tree Service • Checotah, OK • (918) 992-4344 • 24/7 Emergency Service
From the first phone call to the final cleanup, here's how a Checotah Tree Service project actually runs.
Call (918) 992-4344 or contact us online. For emergencies, we dispatch a crew immediately. For routine work, we schedule a free on-site consultation at a time that works for you. Phone and virtual consultations are also available at no charge.
We come out to the property, walk it with you, evaluate the trees and the access, identify any safety concerns, and ask about anything we need to know before quoting. This is the conversation where you tell us what you've noticed, and we tell you what we see - including honest recommendations on what work is needed and what isn't.
Detailed written estimate covering scope, timeline, and total price, locked in by our No-Surprise Guarantee. Take your time deciding - there's no pressure to sign on the spot, and the quote is good whether you book now or in a couple of weeks.
Crew arrives on time, walks the plan with you, executes the work safely and efficiently, and completes a full cleanup before leaving. A final walkthrough confirms you're satisfied with the result.
Fill out the form below, and we'll get back to you.