03/16/2026
Tree topping is the most destructive routine practice in American tree care — and the most requested. Homeowners ask for it because a tree grew taller than they expected and they want it shorter. Tree service companies do it because it is fast, requires no skill, and the customer pays the same rate as proper pruning. The tree pays the actual cost.
Topping means cutting main branches back to stubs with no regard for where the cuts land relative to lateral branches or branch collars. The tree loses fifty to one hundred percent of its leaf-bearing canopy in a single afternoon. What follows is not the controlled smaller tree the homeowner imagined — it is a biological emergency response that produces the exact opposite result.
A topped tree does not grow smaller. It grows back faster, denser, and structurally weaker than it was before the cuts. The stubs that remain after topping trigger dozens of dormant buds to activate simultaneously, producing clusters of fast-growing water sprouts — thin vertical shoots that race upward at three to five times the normal growth rate because the tree is desperate to rebuild its photosynthetic canopy before it starves.
Within two to three years a topped tree has regained its original height or exceeded it. But the new growth is attached to the decaying stubs at the weakest possible connection point. A naturally grown branch develops a strong attachment over years of incremental growth. A water sprout grows from the outer ring of a dead stub with no structural integration into the heartwood — it is glued to the surface rather than woven into the wood.
This is why topped trees are more dangerous in storms than unpruned trees. The dense canopy of water sprouts catches more wind than the original open canopy, and the weak attachments mean large sections shear off under loads that the original branches would have handled. Insurance adjusters and municipal arborists report that topped trees account for a disproportionate share of storm damage failures.
The stubs left by topping also cannot compartmentalize properly. A clean pruning cut made just outside the branch collar allows the tree to seal the wound with callus tissue using the CODIT process. A stub cut in the middle of a branch has no collar, no chemical defense zone, and no ability to seal. Decay enters the stub and travels down into the trunk — the same trunk the homeowner was trying to protect by making the tree shorter.
The alternative to topping is crown reduction pruning — a technique where branches are shortened by cutting back to a lateral branch that is at least one-third the diameter of the branch being removed. This reduces height while maintaining the tree's natural shape, preserving strong attachment points, and allowing the tree to compartmentalize every cut. Crown reduction takes more time, more skill, and more individual decisions per cut — which is why tree services that top trees rarely offer it.
If your tree has already been topped, the damage cannot be undone, but it can be managed. Select two to three of the strongest, best-positioned water sprouts on each stub and remove the rest. Over several years of selective thinning, the remaining sprouts develop into replacement branches with progressively stronger attachments. It takes five to ten years to restore a reasonable structure — compared to the five minutes it took to destroy it.
A shorter tree and a safer tree are not the same thing. Topping delivers neither