Sion Tree ServiceSion TreeService
Tree service in Mansfield, TX by Sion Tree Service
Tarrant County · Texas

Tree Service in Mansfield, TX

When Mansfield, TX homeowners need a dependable tree service, Sion Tree Service is the local, owner-operated crew they call. From the established post oaks shading older streets near Walnut Creek Country Club to the younger live oaks and red oaks lining newer Mansfield subdivisions off Matlock and Lone Star Road, we know the trees that grow in this corner of Tarrant County and how the area's tight clay soils and storm-prone springs affect them.

4.9 · 146 reviews Open Daily 6 AM–7 PM

Led by owner Edgar, our team handles tree trimming, removal, stump grinding, and storm cleanup across Mansfield, and we back every job with the immaculate haul-away our reviews are known for. With more than 146 real Google reviews and a roughly 4.9-star rating, licensed and insured service, and free estimates, we make it easy to get the work done right the first time. We're open daily from 6 AM to 7 PM, so reaching us for a same-day or next-day look is rarely a problem.

Mansfield homeowners choose Sion because we're a local owner-operator, not a national chain passing through. Edgar and the crew respond fast — often same-day or next-day — and show up with trained climbers and well-maintained equipment to do the job safely. We quote honestly, and the price we give is the price you pay, with no surprise add-ons. Best of all, we clean up and haul away everything when we're done, so your Mansfield yard looks like we were never there.

Neighborhoods & Areas We Serve in Mansfield

We work throughout Mansfield, including Walnut Creek, South Pointe, Twin Creeks, The Reserve at Quail Ridge, Woodland Estates, Park West / Mansfield National area, and nearby ZIP codes 76063, 76084, 76014, 76028. You'll often find our crews near Walnut Creek Country Club, Hawaiian Falls Mansfield, Mansfield National Golf Club.

Common Tree Problems in Mansfield

  • Oak wilt risk that makes timing critical — we avoid pruning oaks February through June to protect live oaks and red oaks common around Mansfield
  • Drought and heat stress on post oaks growing in the area's shallow, expansive clay soil
  • Spring storm season bringing hail, straight-line winds, and broken or hanging limbs along Broad Street and US-287 corridors
  • Lingering structural weakness and dieback on trees damaged by the February 2021 freeze

Mansfield Tree Permits & Ordinances

The City of Mansfield has tree-preservation rules that protect certain trees, including larger protected and heritage-size trees, and removal of qualifying trees may require review or a permit. Requirements vary by property type and situation, so we're glad to help you confirm what applies before any work begins.

Not sure if your tree needs a permit? We'll help you figure it out during your free estimate.

Mansfield Tree Care, Up Close

The local conditions, rules, and tree stock that shape tree work in Mansfield — and what they mean for your property.

Tree Care for Mansfield's New-Build Communities and Established Neighborhoods

Mansfield is really two tree-care worlds at once, and the right approach depends on which one your home sits in. The streets around Walnut Creek Country Club, Katherine Rose Memorial Park, and the older grid near Broad Street are shaded by decades-old post oaks, cedar elms, and pecans, while the south and east sides are filling in fast with master-planned communities full of young, builder-planted trees. We tailor the work to each.

Young trees in South Pointe, M3 Ranch, Somerset and other new builds

In Mansfield's newer subdivisions, most trees are live oaks and red oaks that went in the ground only a few years ago on tight, freshly graded clay lots. The common problems we see are nursery ties and stakes left on too long, girdling roots from being planted in a small hole in heavy Blackland clay, poor early structure with competing leaders, and trees set too close to a new foundation. Early structural pruning and corrective work now saves these homeowners from expensive removals a decade down the road.

  • Removing forgotten stakes, ties, and trunk wrap that strangle young trunks
  • Structural pruning to establish one strong central leader on new live oaks and red oaks
  • Assessing trees planted too close to slabs, walks, and utility easements in communities like South Pointe, M3 Ranch, Kings Mill, and Colby Crossing
  • Advice on watering young trees through North Texas summers in shallow, expansive clay

Mature trees in Mansfield's established areas

Closer to the historic center and around Walnut Creek Country Club, the job is usually managing big, old post oaks and pecans: deadwood removal, weight reduction on overextended limbs, and careful clearing away from rooflines and Oncor service lines. We keep oak wilt in mind and avoid pruning oaks February through June, leaning on late-summer and winter work for these heritage-size trees whenever the situation is not an active hazard.

Walnut Creek, Floodplains, and Storm Risk: Mansfield's Tree Hazards

Mansfield's geography shapes where trees fail and which ones become a problem. Walnut Creek runs west to east through the heart of town, and the Walnut Creek Linear Trail threads along its banks connecting six parks and several neighborhoods. The wooded riparian corridor that makes that greenbelt beautiful also concentrates fast-growing, storm-prone trees right behind a lot of Mansfield backyards and fence lines.

Creek-side and floodplain trees

Along Walnut Creek and its tributaries such as Bowman Branch, Hogpen Branch, and Low Branch, soils stay wetter and trees like hackberry, cedar elm, and willow grow quickly but hold weak, brittle wood. When creek levels rise and saturate the ground, shallow-rooted trees lean, lift, and uproot toward homes and fences. We assess these creek-adjacent and floodplain properties for leaning trunks, root-plate movement, and limbs overhanging the house before the next big rain does the deciding.

  • Hazard evaluation for trees backing onto Walnut Creek and the Linear Trail greenbelt
  • Removal of storm-weakened hackberries and elms leaning toward structures in low-lying yards
  • Clearing split leaders and hanging limbs after spring hail, wind, and derecho events
  • Priority response when low crossings along Walnut Creek Road, Retta Road, and Magnolia Road flood and drop limbs

Working within Mansfield's tree-preservation rules

Because Mansfield protects larger trees under its Chapter 99 rules and its Tree Board, creek-corridor and heritage-size trees can carry extra review and replacement requirements before removal. We help homeowners sort genuine hazards that need to come down from healthy protected trees that simply need pruning, and we keep our cleanup immaculate so your Mansfield yard, alley, or creek frontage looks untouched when we leave.

Serving the Area

Proudly Serving Mansfield & Nearby Cities

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Reviews

What Mansfield-Area Homeowners Say

4.9from 146 Google reviews
Sion Tree Service did an outstanding job trimming the trees at my home. The crew of 6 came in and quickly removed all the dead limbs and trees that needed to come out. Their cleanup was amazing! Highly recommend them!
LLawonna DawsonTree Trimming · Google Review
Very fast work, arrived right on time, workers very professional and cleaned up before leaving. The price was what was quoted. I'd recommend them to anyone needing tree trimming. I'll be using them again!
DDan HinkleTree Trimming · Google Review
Great communication and super responsive. Squeezed me in the next day and did an awesome job removing and grinding a large tree that had fallen in a storm. Have used them twice with great service both times.
AAustin SmithStump Grinding · Google Review
Questions

Mansfield Tree Service FAQs

Yes. We provide free, no-obligation estimates anywhere in Mansfield, from Walnut Creek to South Pointe and the newer neighborhoods off Matlock and Lone Star Road. Call (208) 635-2100 and we'll often get out to you the same or next day.

For the live oaks and red oaks common around Mansfield, we avoid pruning February through June to reduce the risk of oak wilt, which spreads more easily during that window. Late summer through winter is generally the safer time, and for storm-damaged or hazardous limbs we'll advise on the safest approach right away.

It depends on the tree. The City of Mansfield protects certain larger and heritage-size trees, so some removals may require review or a permit while many routine jobs do not. We'll help you understand what applies to your specific tree before we start.

The City of Mansfield regulates protected trees under its Chapter 99 natural resources rules, which are administered through the city's Tree Board and Landscape Administrator, so removing a qualifying larger tree can trigger a review, a tree removal permit, and even replacement requirements. Whether your specific tree is protected depends on its size, species, and your lot, so we encourage Mansfield homeowners to confirm with the city before work begins rather than assuming. We are glad to walk your property, point out which trees are likely protected versus routine, and help you understand the process before we ever start cutting.

Because we run a local owner-operated crew and we are open daily from 6 AM to 7 PM, we can usually get out to Mansfield the same day or next day, whether you are off Broad Street near Walnut Creek Country Club or out in newer builds like South Pointe and M3 Ranch on the south and east sides. After spring hail and straight-line wind events that close low spots along Walnut Creek Road, Retta Road, and Magnolia Road, hanging limbs and split leaders are the calls we prioritize. Call (208) 635-2100 and we will give you a free estimate and a clear plan for safely clearing the hazard.

In Mansfield's older established areas near Walnut Creek Country Club and Katherine Rose Memorial Park, we do a lot of deadwooding and structural pruning on mature post oaks, cedar elms, and pecans that have outgrown their space over decades. In newer master-planned communities like South Pointe, M3 Ranch, and Somerset, the work skews toward shaping young live oaks and red oaks, correcting builder-stake and nursery-tie damage, and clearing trees too close to new foundations on tight clay lots. Creek-adjacent properties along the Walnut Creek corridor also call us for removing storm-weakened hackberries and elms leaning toward homes and fences.

Need a Tree Service in Mansfield, TX?

Call Sion Tree Service for tree removal, trimming, stump grinding, and cleanup in Mansfield — open daily with free estimates.

Open daily 6 AM–7 PM · Serving Fort Worth & the DFW metroplex

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