Stump Grinding vs. Full Stump Removal
Grinding vs. full stump-and-root removal: cost, disruption, when roots must come out for construction or planting, and how each leaves your site.
The Short Version
- Grinding: cheaper, faster, less disruption, roots stay in the ground and decay over time
- Full removal: more expensive, larger disturbance, needed for construction and foundation work
For 90% of residential situations, grinding is the right choice.
When Grinding Is the Answer
Choose grinding when:
- You want to grow grass over the spot
- You’re replanting flowers, shrubs, or ornamentals (not a large tree)
- Foundation and hardscape are far enough away
- Budget is a factor
- Speed matters — grinding a stump takes 30–60 minutes; full removal takes hours
When Full Removal Is Required
Choose full removal when:
- New construction is planned on or near the spot
- A foundation, footing, or driveway is going in
- You’re replanting a new tree in the exact same spot with a shovel (grinding leaves roots that make hand-digging impossible)
- Lateral roots are already causing hardscape problems (lifting patios, cracking driveways)
- You want the ground truly clean of the old tree
Cost Difference
- Grinding: $100 to $600 per stump depending on diameter
- Full removal: $400 to $1,500+ per stump depending on size and access
For a typical 20” stump: grinding runs ~$150; full removal runs ~$700. That’s the ballpark difference.
Site Impact
Grinding:
- Compact machine (self-propelled grinder)
- Chip debris confined to the immediate area
- Backfilled with grindings as mulch
- Ready for grass restoration within days
Full removal:
- Larger excavator or backhoe on site
- Larger hole (root ball + surrounding soil)
- Requires backfill soil (often trucked in)
- Turf disturbance on the path in/out
- Longer restoration timeline
What About Regrowth?
Most trees won’t regrow from a ground stump — the growing tissue is above the cut. Exceptions: some species (aspen, sumac, tree of heaven) sucker aggressively from lateral roots and can send up new shoots even after grinding. For those species, we recommend deeper grinding and monitoring for a season.
Full removal eliminates regrowth entirely by pulling the root system.
Practical Recommendation
For homeowners: grinding almost always wins on cost, speed, and site impact.
For builders and property developers: full removal is often required.
For anyone replanting a tree in the same spot: grinding leaves roots that make the new hole impossible to hand-dig; either full removal or planting at a slightly different spot.
See our stump grinding service or, for larger clearing projects, land and lot clearing.
Related: stump grinding cost per stump, ground after stump grinding.