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Inland Empire Tree Pros

Murrieta · Temecula · Menifee · Wildomar · Lake Elsinore

Professional Tree Service Across Southwest Riverside County

Request help with tree removal, trimming, stump grinding, palm care, emergency tree service, and property cleanup — one request, a clear next step, no obligation.

Free estimates · Residential and commercial · Emergency requests are prioritized

A straightforward way to get tree work handled

No pressure tactics, no inflated claims — just a clear path from 'there's a problem with my tree' to a scoped, priced plan.

One request, a clear next step
Describe the work once — by form or phone — and get a straightforward path to an assessment and pricing. No runaround, no pressure.
Local to Southwest Riverside County
The focus is this valley: Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Wildomar, and Lake Elsinore. The work, the terrain, and the wind are familiar territory.
Honest scoping before any work
Every job starts with an assessment and a written scope, so you know what's being done and what it costs before anyone touches a tree.
Verify before you hire
You should always confirm licensing and insurance before tree work begins — and you'll be encouraged to do exactly that. Straight answers, in writing.

Why homeowners start here

Tree work is expensive, risky, and easy to get wrong. The point of this site is to make the first step simple and the process transparent.

  • One clear request instead of chasing multiple companies for callbacks
  • Photos and details up front, so quotes reflect the actual job
  • Written scope before work — what's included, what's hauled away
  • Guidance on what to verify (license, insurance) before hiring anyone
  • Emergency requests flagged and prioritized appropriately

Serving Southwest Riverside County

Requests are accepted across the valley:

Just outside these cities? Submit a request anyway — nearby jobs are often workable.

How estimates work

Three steps, no obligation at any point.

  1. Tell us about the property and the work needed

    Use the estimate form or call. Photos, the tree's surroundings, and access details (gates, slopes) make everything faster.

  2. Review the request and arrange an assessment

    Your request is reviewed, and an on-site look is scheduled when the job calls for it — most real quotes need eyes on the tree.

  3. Receive next-step and pricing information

    The service provider delivers a scope and pricing. You decide whether and when to proceed — no obligation either way.

Emergency requests are prioritized

Tree down? Limb hanging over the house?

Emergency and storm-damage requests are routed for the fastest available response. Response times depend on provider availability and conditions.

Frequently asked questions

How do estimates work?

Submit the estimate form with a description of the work and photos if you have them, or call. The request is reviewed, an on-site assessment is arranged when needed, and you receive pricing and next steps from the service provider before any work is scheduled.

Does an estimate cost anything?

No — requesting an estimate is free and doesn't commit you to anything. It's a description of the work and a price, and the decision stays yours.

What areas do you serve?

The current service area covers Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Wildomar, and Lake Elsinore in Southwest Riverside County. If you're just outside these cities, submit the request anyway — nearby jobs are often workable.

How should I prepare for an estimate visit?

Know what outcome you want (remove, trim, clean up), make the tree and its surroundings accessible for a look, and mention anything hidden — irrigation lines, septic systems, buried utilities, or gate widths. Photos in advance always help.

What should I ask a tree-service provider before hiring?

Ask for proof of an active contractor license and insurance (both liability and workers' comp), who exactly will be on site, whether debris hauling is included, and how they'll protect your property. A written scope of work in the quote protects both sides.

Is tree work something I can do myself?

Ground-level work like watering, mulching, and picking up small debris — sure. Anything involving climbing, ladders plus chainsaws, limbs under tension, or trees near structures and power lines is genuinely dangerous and is what professional crews, rigging, and insurance exist for.

Ready to get a number on that tree project?

Describe the work, attach photos if you have them, and get a clear next step — with no obligation.

Call NowFree Estimate