Above Header

Growth Management

GO BACK TO CONTACT US
Rebecca Dima
500 Words Remaining
The comments and opinions expressed herein are those of the author of this message and may not reflect the policies of the Martin County Board of County Commissioners. Under Florida Law, email addresses are public records. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.
GO BACK TO CONTACT US
Peter Walden
500 Words Remaining
The comments and opinions expressed herein are those of the author of this message and may not reflect the policies of the Martin County Board of County Commissioners. Under Florida Law, email addresses are public records. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.
GO BACK TO CONTACT US
Paul Schilling
500 Words Remaining
The comments and opinions expressed herein are those of the author of this message and may not reflect the policies of the Martin County Board of County Commissioners. Under Florida Law, email addresses are public records. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.
GO BACK TO CONTACT US
Maria Harrison
500 Words Remaining
The comments and opinions expressed herein are those of the author of this message and may not reflect the policies of the Martin County Board of County Commissioners. Under Florida Law, email addresses are public records. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.
GO BACK TO CONTACT US
Clyde Dulin
500 Words Remaining
The comments and opinions expressed herein are those of the author of this message and may not reflect the policies of the Martin County Board of County Commissioners. Under Florida Law, email addresses are public records. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.
GO BACK TO CONTACT US
Joan Seaman
500 Words Remaining
The comments and opinions expressed herein are those of the author of this message and may not reflect the policies of the Martin County Board of County Commissioners. Under Florida Law, email addresses are public records. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing.

Tree Requirements, Regulations, and FAQs

Trees along a road in a residential community

Overview

Trees provide significant levels of environmental, social and economic benefits to our community. Martin County’s landscape code emphasizes the use of Florida native species because they provide specific benefits to local wildlife and generally require less care and irrigation once established.

The following information is provided as general guidance information to address frequently asked questions. However, the omission of any requirement or procedure shall neither relieve the property owner from complying with the requirement or procedure nor constitute a waiver of the requirement or procedure.

Tree Requirements

Native trees required for the construction of new single-family or duplex homes will be identified on the conditions added to the building permit during review. Existing native trees can be counted toward this requirement if protected during development.

Required trees will be inspected for compliance prior to the issuance of a Certificate of Occupancy. See Landscaping Requirements for SFR and Duplexes for more information.

Landscape plans, as designed by a professional landscape architect, are required and approved with Development Orders (subdivisions, multi-family projects, commercial/industrial development) or with commercial building permits issued by the County. 

For residential developments, these plans can include street trees to be established in approved subdivisions, trees adjacent to townhomes and condominiums, or sometimes on residential lots in a development.

Martin County is not delegated to regulate mangroves and mangrove trimming per Florida Statutes (Mangrove Trimming & Preservation Act). Please report mangrove violations to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).

Please contact the local municipal government (Sewall’s Point, Stuart, Indiantown, Ocean Breeze, Jupiter Island) for their specific tree requirements. Martin County’s regulations apply to the unincorporated areas of the county, local municipal requirements will differ.

Tree Removal

Permission is not typically required for the removal of trees on single-family residential lots for detached homes. However, if your property is in a subdivision managed by a Homeowner’s Association, they may have additional restrictions.

Contact env@martin.fl.us if the tree is in a preservation area or easement on your property, or if the tree may be considered a street tree to be protected by a Homeowner’s Association.

The County encourages the removal of invasive vegetation as part of your routine yard maintenance, but does not require such removal on established single-family residential lots for detached homes, unless the trees are located in preservation areas.

The County does not remove trees from private properties. Trees in County-maintained rights-of-ways may be trimmed or removed subject to review by the Public Works Department: Request Tree Removal in Right-of-Ways

CONTACT YOUR HOA. Your HOA is responsible for the removal of trees on common-area properties owned by the HOA. A Tree Removal Consent Form will be required to be submitted by the HOA to the County to document the need for the removal of native trees located in required landscape areas for the subdivision.

CONTACT YOUR HOA. Your HOA is responsible for the removal of exotic trees in preservation area properties owned by the HOA. A Tree Removal Consent Form will be required to be submitted by the HOA to the County for the removal of native trees located in preserve areas where they are documented to pose a threat to permitted structures.

For trees in the County-maintained rights-of-ways, you may Request Tree Removal in Right-of-Ways.

Tree removal on established single-family residential lots is not regulated by Martin County unless such trees are located in preservation areas. Unpermitted land clearing on vacant undeveloped properties can be reported to env@martin.fl.us.

Generally, trees may be trimmed that are growing over or onto your property. It is advisable to speak with your neighbor first and take care to trim in a manner that does not harm the tree. Please refer to the University of Florida IFAS Extension Office's Handbook of Florida Fence and Property Law: Trees and Landowner Responsibility for more information.

Please refer to the University of Florida IFAS Extension Office or the International Society of Arboriculture for this information. See How to Hire a Tree Service.

Tree Care

The University of Florida IFAS Extension Office has publications on this and many other tree related topics: UF/IFAS Extension Martin County 

You may contact the County IFAS office at:

martin@ifas.ufl.edu
(772) 288-5654

2614 SE Dixie Hwy.
Stuart, FL 34996

Contact Us

For any additional questions or for more information, please contact the Martin County Environmental Division.

Evaluation and Appraisal Report (EAR)

Residents at a community workshop

Overview

Every 7 years the state requires that all municipalities and local governments update their comprehensive plans to, at a minimum, reflect recent legislative changes. In addition, the EAR process is also an opportunity to address community concerns and desires within the comprehensive plan.

Objectives

  • Review changes to state statutes over the last 7 years
  • Compare Florida statute changes with the 19 chapters of the Comprehensive Plan
  • Identify areas within the Comprehensive Plan where updates might be needed (I.e. references to Indiantown)
  • Notify the State of Florida of the County’s intent to develop EAR and potential changes

Process

  • Growth Management Department reviews required Florida Statute changes to Martin County Comprehensive Plan
  • Comprehensively evaluate and, as necessary, update comprehensive plans to reflect changes in local conditions
    • Items discussed and identified in the EAR process may or may not result in changes to the Comprehensive Plan
    • If there are recommended / required changes to the Comprehensive Plan, those will have their own required public hearings
  • Conduct public outreach 
    • Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council (TCRPC) conducted 29 individual interviews
    • August 29, 2023: TCRPC & Martin County host EAR Workshop
    • September 1, 2023: TCRPC & Martin County launch Community Survey
    • December 31, 2023: Survey closes
    • January 18, 2024: TCRPC & Martin County host EAR Workshop
Subscribe to Growth Management