"Should I call an arborist or just get a tree lopper?" We hear this all the time. The answer matters more than you'd think — here's why.
What Makes Someone an Arborist?
An arborist isn't just someone who's handy with a chainsaw. It's a qualified professional who's studied how trees grow, how they fail, and how to work on them safely.
The minimum qualification in Australia is an AQF Level 3 Certificate in Arboriculture. Consulting arborists hold a Level 5 Diploma or higher — these are the people who write reports for council, for court, and for development applications.
What does that training actually cover? Tree biology, how wood and root systems handle forces, soil science, pest and disease identification, and the Australian Standards for pruning and risk assessment. A qualified arborist in Orange will carry public liability insurance (usually $10 million plus) and WorkCover for every worker.
The short version: arborists understand trees. When you hire one, you're getting science-based decisions, not guesswork.
What About "Tree Removal Services"?
Here's the thing — "tree removal service" or "tree lopper" isn't a protected title. Anyone can call themselves that. Some tree removal businesses are run by fully qualified arborists doing excellent work. Others are blokes with a ute, a chainsaw, and no insurance.
The risk of hiring someone unqualified is real. Bad pruning — topping, lion-tailing — permanently damages trees and creates future hazards. Removals done without proper rigging can take out your fence, your pool equipment, your neighbour's shed. And if an uninsured worker gets hurt on your property, guess who's liable? You.
Around Orange and the Central Tablelands region, there's no shortage of cheap operators popping up on Facebook Marketplace. The old rule applies: if the price seems too good to be true, it probably is.
When You Definitely Need an Arborist Report
There are specific situations in Orange where only a qualified consulting arborist will do. If your local council requires a tree assessment for a development application, the report must come from someone with at least an AQF Level 5 Diploma. A tree lopper's opinion won't cut it.
Other situations that call for a formal arborist report include: trees subject to Tree Preservation Orders that you want to prune or remove, insurance claims where the cause of tree failure is disputed, neighbour disputes over overhanging branches or root damage, and pre-purchase property inspections where large trees are present near buildings.
In the Central Tablelands region, council requirements vary, but they all want properly qualified professionals doing the assessment. We've prepared hundreds of arborist reports for properties across Bloomfield, Calare, Glenroi, Lucknow and know exactly what each council expects to see in terms of methodology, risk ratings, and management recommendations.
So Who Do You Actually Need?
For anything involving real risk — big trees, trees near buildings, trees near power lines, trees with visible defects — hire a qualified, insured arborist. Full stop. Same goes if you need a formal report for council, a DA, or a legal dispute.
For genuinely simple stuff — trimming a small hedge, pulling out a self-sown sapling, chipping some garden prunings — a garden maintenance person is fine.
Most properties across Bloomfield, Calare, Glenroi, Lucknow have established trees that need proper arborist-level care. Before anyone starts work on your trees, ask for their qualifications and insurance certificates. Actually check them. A verbal "yeah, we're insured" means nothing.
Here's a quick checklist before you hire anyone: ask for their arborist qualification certificate number, request a copy of their current public liability insurance, confirm they have WorkCover for all workers on site, and get a written quote that clearly details the scope of work. Any reputable operator in Orange will have all of this ready to show you without hesitation.