Storm damage tree cleanup is the removal of fallen trees, broken limbs, and storm-damaged wood from a property, plus documentation for insurance claims. In Bellevue and the Eastside, winter windstorms regularly bring down douglas fir, western hemlock, bigleaf maple, and cottonwood. Our crews handle both emergency response (active hazard, 24/7 dispatch) and scheduled post-storm cleanup (down trees, no active threat). Every job includes photo documentation, itemized invoices, and arborist-written cause statements when needed for insurance claims.
Pacific Northwest windstorm context
Bellevue sits in a windstorm corridor. Pacific storm systems move in from the southwest, and the Eastside catches them as they funnel up the I-405 corridor and over Somerset, Newport, and the Sammamish Plateau. Sustained winds of 30 to 45 mph with gusts of 50 to 70 mph happen multiple times a winter. Major events (the 2006 Hanukkah Eve storm, the 1993 Inauguration Day storm) push 80 to 100 mph gusts and drop thousands of trees across King County.
The classic failure pattern: days of heavy rain saturate soil, root systems lose anchorage, then a fast-moving low-pressure system hits. Conifers with shallow roots (western hemlock especially) uproot wholesale. Trees with pre-existing decay (Armillaria, Ganoderma, Phaeolus) shear along the compromised zone. Healthy trees with exposed crowns lose branches but usually stay standing.
Emergency versus scheduled cleanup
Emergency storm response
Call anytime if any of the following apply:
- A tree is on an occupied structure (home, garage, outbuilding, vehicle)
- A tree is blocking a driveway, road, or emergency access
- A tree is touching a power line (also call 911 and PSE)
- A partially uprooted tree has not yet fully fallen
- A large limb is hanging over an active walkway or patio
Emergency response is 24/7. Normal dispatch is 1 to 3 hours. Major storm dispatch is 12 to 48 hours based on hazard triage. See our full emergency tree service page for detail on response protocol and what to do before the crew arrives.
Scheduled storm cleanup
Scheduled cleanup is the right path when:
- Trees are already fully down and no active threat remains
- Minor debris (small limbs, leaves, branches) needs hauling
- Secondary cleanup is needed after the initial emergency work
- Multiple yard trees need removal over a planned schedule
Scheduled work runs on standard labor rates, not emergency premium. Typical residential scheduled cleanup runs $400 to $2,500 depending on scope. Multi-tree or large-tree jobs run higher.
What storm damage cleanup typically includes
- Safety assessment. Lead arborist walks the property, identifies all hazards (standing and fallen), and confirms no utility involvement.
- Written scope. Fixed or time-and-materials pricing, itemized for your insurance file.
- Cutting and sectioning. Fallen trunks cut into manageable pieces with attention to stored stress in bent limbs and loaded trunks.
- Rigging where needed. Portions of trees suspended on structures or fences are rigged off rather than dropped, minimizing secondary damage.
- Chipping. Branches and limbs chipped on-site, chips hauled or left on property per your preference.
- Trunk hauling. Large trunk wood hauled to a disposal or milling facility.
- Stump. Stump grinding quoted separately. Some clients leave stumps after storms, some grind them out during cleanup.
- Site restoration. Raking, final sweep, and photo documentation of finished condition.
Insurance documentation for storm claims
Most Washington homeowners policies cover tree damage when a tree or limb falls on a covered structure. Typical coverage structure:
- Dwelling coverage. Pays for structural repair to the house, garage, or outbuilding damaged by the tree.
- Tree removal sublimit. Pays for removing the tree, typically capped at $500 to $1,000 per incident. Some policies go higher.
- Personal property coverage. Pays for contents damaged inside the structure.
- Other structures coverage. Covers fences, detached garages, sheds.
What is usually not covered: trees that fell in the yard without hitting any structure. The tree itself is considered landscape, not insured property. Also usually excluded: damage from trees that were visibly dead or declining before the storm (insurers may argue the loss was preventable).
What we provide for claims
- Time-stamped photos from the crew on arrival, during work, and at completion
- Itemized written invoice specifying labor, equipment, disposal, and any permit fees
- Certificate of insurance for your file
- Arborist cause statement in writing when the insurer needs one
- Full arborist report if the insurer contests the claim
What to do after a storm
- Get safe. Stay inside until wind subsides. Avoid standing near damaged trees. Treat every downed line as live.
- Document from a safe distance. Photograph damage widely before any cleanup begins.
- Call your insurance carrier. Open the claim, get a claim number. Do not cleanup before the carrier has seen the damage (either in person or through photos).
- Call us. Describe the damage, urgency, and whether power lines are involved.
- Do not cut yourself. Homeowner cuts on storm-damaged trees are how the ER stays busy after a windstorm. Stored energy in bent limbs is dangerous.
Common Bellevue storm failures
Ten-plus years working Eastside storm calls, the patterns repeat:
- Whole-tree uprooting. Douglas fir and western hemlock in saturated soil.
- Mid-trunk shearing. Doug fir at old branch stubs or decay zones.
- Top breakage. Western red cedar with dead tops.
- Lateral limb failure. Bigleaf maple, often with Ganoderma or Laetiporus decay.
- Brittle-wood failure. Cottonwood dropping large limbs in moderate wind.
- Ornamental failure. Plum and cherry splitting at co-dominant unions.
Preventive work before storm season
Most storm damage on the Eastside is preventable. Hazard trees rarely fail without prior warning signs: dead tops, conks at the base, new leans, root plate lift, or decline in canopy density. An annual or bi-annual walk by an ISA-certified arborist catches these before the windstorm does.
Learn the warning signs on our mushrooms and dead trees page, request a free hazard assessment, or see our commercial tree services for property-wide inventory and maintenance planning.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, when the tree damaged a covered structure. Most Washington homeowners policies cover dwelling damage plus a capped amount ($500 to $1,000 is typical) for tree removal. Trees that fell without hitting structures are usually not covered. Keep photos and our itemized invoice for the claim.
Emergency storm response means active hazard: tree on a house, blocked egress, or power line contact. We dispatch immediately. Scheduled cleanup is for trees already down in the yard, minor debris, or secondary cleanup after the initial hazard was removed. Scheduled work is priced lower because it runs on standard labor, not emergency rates.
A single fallen tree in a typical Bellevue yard takes 2 to 6 hours for complete removal, chipping, and cleanup. Large or complex jobs, or properties with multiple failures, extend to full or multi-day scopes. Commercial and multi-tree residential jobs get detailed daily updates from the crew foreman.
Depends on the tree's remaining structural integrity. A tree that broke cleanly at 40 feet may retain a sound lower trunk. Often we remove the entire tree because partially failed trees rarely recover and typically fail again in the next storm. Your insurer will usually cover full removal of a storm-compromised tree.