On constrained sites, a tree’s estimated weight supports method statements, pick sequencing, and transport planning. Record units, measurement method, and assumptions so the same inputs can be reviewed during permit checks, toolbox talks, and lifting approvals. This supports consistent sign-off across teams.
Why Tree Weight Matters on Site
Tree removal near structures often becomes a lifting and logistics problem, not just a cutting task. Knowing an estimated green mass helps you select an access route, choose a crane class, and verify that mats, outriggers, and exclusion zones match the expected load path.
Inputs That Drive the Estimate
This calculator uses trunk geometry (cylinder, frustum, or segmented), height, and average diameter to estimate trunk volume. It then multiplies volume by wood density to obtain trunk mass, and optionally adds branch and foliage percentage to represent the crown.
Density, Moisture, and Species Differences
Wood density is the biggest variable. Freshly cut “green” timber carries free water, so the same trunk can weigh far more than a seasoned log. If you do not know the species, start with a conservative mid-range density and increase it when the tree appears wet, heavy, or resinous.
Benchmarks, Limits, and Safe Working Use
For rough planning, many softwoods fall around 350–550 kg/m³ green, while many hardwoods fall around 550–900 kg/m³ green. A 40 cm diameter trunk that is 6 m long can exceed 400 kg before crown and rigging effects. Real trees are not perfect solids: hollows, taper changes, heavy limbs, and uneven moisture introduce error. Treat the output as an estimate, apply an appropriate safety factor, and consider dynamic effects (sling angles, swing, wind, shock loading). The displayed kN value uses 9.81 m/s² and helps compare against rated capacities. Where required, follow the project lifting plan and verify final loads with qualified personnel.