
April 22, 2026
The tree that gave you shade in five years might cost you $5,000 to remove in fifteen. That is the tradeoff most Jacksonville homeowners do not hear about when they pick fast-growing species from the nursery or inherit them from a previous owner. Fast growth sounds like a benefit. In many cases, it is the opposite. Trees that grow quickly almost always produce weaker wood, shallower root systems, and shorter lifespans. In Northeast Florida, where sandy soil, hurricanes, and prolonged summer rain already stress trees beyond what most regions deal with, fast-growing species fail earlier and more dramatically than they would elsewhere. This is not a warning against planting trees. Jacksonville needs its tree canopy. This is a guide to understanding which fast-growing species cause the most problems in our area, why they fail, and what you can plant instead to get shade, beauty, and structural reliability without the 15-year expiration date.
Key Takeaways
The biology behind this is straightforward. A tree that adds two to three feet of height per year is channeling most of its energy into rapid vertical and lateral extension. That growth comes at the expense of wood density. The cells in fast-growing wood are larger, thinner-walled, and contain more water than the tight, dense cells in slow-growing species. The International Society of Arboriculture describes this as the difference between structural wood and expendable wood. A live oak that grows 12 inches per year packs dense, interlocking fibers into every ring. A water oak that grows 30 inches per year produces wood that is softer, more porous, and significantly more vulnerable to decay fungi. This matters in Jacksonville for three specific reasons:
These are the species our certified arborists assess and remove most frequently across Duval, Clay, St. Johns, and Nassau counties.
Water oaks grow fast and provide shade quickly, but they start falling apart around year 15 to 20. The University of Florida classifies its lifespan at roughly 30 to 50 years, which is short for an oak. The real issue is how they decline. They develop heavy limbs with weak attachment points. The wood is softer than other oaks. Internal decay begins in the trunk and major branch unions well before external symptoms appear. In our sandy soil, water oaks develop notoriously shallow root systems. After three or four days of heavy rain, the saturated ground cannot hold the root plate, and the entire tree can lean or topple with minimal wind. This is the most common emergency removal we handle in Jacksonville. Trees planted near driveways or foundations have restricted root zones that make them even less stable.
Often confused with water oaks, laurel oaks share the same weaknesses but decline faster. Many begin showing serious structural problems around year 20 in Northeast Florida. They are extremely sensitive to root suffocation during soil saturation. Once root health declines, the canopy thins from the top down, large dead limbs appear, and the trunk becomes susceptible to Ganoderma and other wood-decay fungi. We see more laurel oak removals in Mandarin, Julington Creek, and Ponte Vedra than almost any other species.
Now widely recognized as one of the worst landscape tree choices available. The Clemson Cooperative Extension has documented the core problem: Bradford pears develop tight, V-shaped branch unions where multiple leaders compete. These unions are inherently weak and split catastrophically as the tree matures. In Jacksonville, they rarely make it past 20 years without major structural failure. The Florida Invasive Species Council lists the parent species (Callery pear) as a Category II invasive.
Attractive when young, camphor trees develop aggressive, shallow root systems that crack foundations, lift sidewalks, and invade sewer lines. In Jacksonville’s sandy soil, these roots spread even more aggressively. The canopy becomes extremely heavy, creating significant wind load during storms. Camphor trees are classified as a Category I invasive by the Florida Invasive Species Council, meaning they are actively altering native plant communities.
Also called popcorn tree, Chinese tallow is a prohibited species in Florida. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission lists it as illegal to plant, sell, or transport. Existing trees remain on many Jacksonville properties. The wood is brittle, the roots are shallow, and the tree produces chemicals that suppress native plant growth. If you have one, removal is recommended for both safety and ecological responsibility.
Both are planted for fast privacy screening. Both perform poorly long-term here. Arizona cypress is prone to fungal diseases in our humidity. Leyland cypress develops a narrow, top-heavy form that snaps, leans, and uproots in Jacksonville storms. Dense foliage catches wind rather than letting it pass, and the shallow root plate in sandy soil cannot handle the leverage. Both typically need removal within 15 to 20 years.
The goal is shade, beauty, and structural reliability over a 50 to 100-year lifespan.
| Species | Growth Rate | Lifespan | Storm Resistance | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southern Live Oak | Moderate | 200+ years | Excellent | Shade, property value, long-term canopy |
| Bald Cypress | Moderate | 200+ years | Excellent | Wet areas, flood-prone sites |
| Eastern Red Cedar | Moderate | 50 to 80 years | Very good | Coastal, salt-tolerant screening |
| Winged Elm | Moderate to fast | 50 to 80 years | Good | Smaller yards, quick canopy |
| Shumard Oak | Moderate | 100+ years | Very good | Fall color, large canopy |
| Dahoon Holly | Moderate | 40 to 60 years | Good | Understory, wet sites, wildlife |
| Sabal Palm | Slow to moderate | 75+ years | Excellent | High storm resistance, native landscape appeal |
A Southern live oak grows roughly 12 to 24 inches per year instead of the 30 to 48 inches a water oak produces. But by year 30, the live oak is a dense, storm-resistant anchor with a lifespan measured in centuries. The water oak, if it has made it that long, is likely a removal candidate. The University of Florida IFAS Extension maintains detailed species profiles, including soil requirements, mature size, and wind resistance ratings.
If you already have water oaks, laurel oaks, or other fast-growing species on your property, here is what to watch for:
Field Insight: The most common pattern we see in Jacksonville is a 25 to 30-year-old water oak that looks mostly fine from the street. The homeowner calls because one large limb dropped without warning. When our arborists assess the tree, they find extensive internal decay, multiple weak branch unions, and a root system compromised by years of soil saturation. The tree that “just lost a branch” actually needs removal. The limb failure was the symptom, not the problem.
Call immediately if you see:
Schedule an inspection if you notice:
Water oaks are not bad trees in a forest setting, where their short lifespan is part of a natural cycle. In a residential landscape where they grow over homes, driveways, and power lines, their weak wood, shallow roots, and 30 to 50 year lifespan make them a poor long-term investment. They are the single most commonly removed tree species in Jacksonville for a reason.
Live oaks grow roughly 12 to 24 inches per year. Water oaks grow 24 to 48 inches per year. The difference narrows as trees mature. By year 20, a well-maintained live oak has a substantial canopy, dense storm-resistant wood, and a root system built for the long haul. The water oak is typically beginning its decline phase.
Not necessarily. A water oak that is structurally sound, properly maintained, and not over a high-value target (home, vehicle parking, play area) can continue to provide shade for years. The key is having a certified arborist assess it periodically. Once signs of internal decay, major deadwood, or root compromise appear, plan for removal rather than waiting for failure.
Southern live oak is the clear winner for most residential properties. It is storm-resistant, long-lived, tolerates sandy soil and salt exposure, and develops one of the most beautiful canopy forms of any North American tree. For wet sites, bald cypress is equally reliable. For smaller yards, Shumard oak or winged elm offer good canopy coverage with a more manageable footprint.
It depends on how far the decline has progressed. If the issue is limited to a few dead branches and early canopy thinning, structural pruning and improved care (mulching, drainage correction, avoiding root zone damage) can extend the tree’s useful life by several years. If internal decay is advanced, fungal conks are present, or the root system is compromised, removal is usually the safer and more cost-effective option.
Jacksonville’s tree ordinance (Chapter 656) protects trees with a trunk diameter of 8 inches or more at chest height (4.5 feet). You generally need a permit to remove protected trees on your property. However, the city makes exceptions for trees that are dead, dying, diseased, or deemed hazardous by a certified arborist. A professional risk assessment can support your permit application.
Most of the expensive tree emergencies in Jacksonville are predictable. They involve fast-growing species that were planted for quick results and became structural liabilities within two decades. The best time to address this is before planting. The second-best time is now, before the next hurricane season puts your aging fast-grower to the test; it may not pass. If you have fast-growing trees on your property and are unsure about their condition, a professional assessment gives you a clear picture of what you are working with and what your options are.
Concerned About a Tree on Your Property? Bushor’s Tree Surgeons has served Jacksonville and Northeast Florida since 1962. Our ISA Certified Arborists can assess your trees, identify species-related risks, and recommend whether maintenance, monitoring, or removal is the right call. Call (904) 789-8884 or request a free estimate at bushortree.com
Reviewed by the ISA Certified Arborists at Bushor’s Tree Surgeons. Family-owned, serving Northeast Florida since 1962. Three generations of certified arborists with over 100 years of combined experience. Licensed, bonded, insured. BBB A+ rated. Serving Duval, Clay, St. Johns, and Nassau counties.
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Shannon R.
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“This is THE best tree company in Jacksonville. They were willing to work around my schedule, they were efficient, knowledgeable, and affordable ... Their work exceeded my expectations and I can easily say that they were worth every penny for the amazing job they did.”

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“Bushor's Tree Surgeons employs the best crew. We had the pleasure of seeing their work first hand. Additionally, the equipment used is first rate. There are 3 certified arborists on staff. Their knowledge is invaluable. Great company with equally great people.”

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“Our experience with Bushor's was excellent! From scheduling the estimate, competitive pricing to clean up. The whole staff was very professional and pleasant to work with ... Bushor's is a top-notch company!”

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“I highly recommend Bushor's Tree Surgeons. They take pride in the work they do and it shows. We used them to remove trees, trim trees and cable a tree. They did such great work. The team was professional and friendly. Such a pleasure to work with. Their pricing is fair and competitive.”

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“EXTREMELY professional and pleasant to work with. They showed up exactly when they said they would, protected as many things as possible, including the lawn, before they commenced work, and completely cleaned up when they were done ... I would highly recommend Bushor's Tree Surgeons to anyone!”
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