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Italian Cypress Tree Price Guide and Cost – Adnan Painting and Remodeling
Published: 2026-06-30T08:07:19+00:00 • 3 min read

Homeowners typically pay a range for Italian cypress trees based on size, container type, and delivery. The cost factors include plant size, nursery quality, regional availability, planting labor, and any irrigation or soil amendments required. This article provides clear cost ranges and practical budgeting guidance for U.S. buyers, with precise price examples and per-unit estimates.

Item Low Average High Notes
Small 4–6 ft tree $60 $90 $150 Container-grown, good for edging
Medium 8–12 ft tree $150 $250 $350 Bareroot or container; taller option
Large 12–20 ft tree $500 $700 $900 Established specimen; may require heavy equipment
Delivery $25 $75 $150 Distance-based
Planting Labor (per tree) $50 $100 $150 Includes soil prep

Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.

Overview Of Costs

Cost scope: The total project usually ranges from a few hundred dollars for a single small tree to several thousand for multiple large specimens. For budgeting, consider purchase price, delivery, installation, soil amendments, and future maintenance. data-formula=”labor_hours × hourly_rate”>

Cost Breakdown

Key components and typical ranges help quantify a planting project. The table below mixes total and per-unit pricing to show how costs accumulate.

Materials Labor Equipment Permits Delivery/Disposal Warranty Overhead Taxes Contingency
$60–$900 per tree $50–$150 per tree $0–$50 $0–$100 $25–$150 $0–$100 $0–$100 Varies by state 5–10%

Assumptions: single-site planting, standard soil, typical irrigation not included.

What Drives Price

Size, quality, and access are the main pricing levers. Taller trees command higher per-tree prices due to increased nursery care and longer growth times. Availability, regional demand, and shipping distance also shift costs. For example, in dense urban markets, delivery and access can raise total costs by 10–25% compared to rural areas.

Ways To Save

Budget strategies include selecting smaller or fewer trees, choosing local nurseries, and bundling delivery with other landscape purchases. Off-season ordering can reduce costs, and requesting bare-root options may lower price for certain sizes. Plan for soil amendment only if needed after a site evaluation.

Regional Price Differences

Differing regional patterns show how geography influences price. Three representative markets illustrate typical deltas:

  • West Coast urban: +5–15% compared to national average due to higher delivery and permit costs.
  • Midwest suburban: near baseline with occasional 0–8% adjustments for local suppliers.
  • South rural: 0–10% discount driven by lower delivery costs and greater availability.

Labor, Hours & Rates

Install time varies with site complexity and tree size. A small installation may take 1–2 hours per tree; large trees often require 3–6 hours, plus equipment access. Typical labor rates in many markets range from $50–$120 per hour for landscape crews.

Additional & Hidden Costs

Hidden charges can appear as site evaluation fees, soil tests, irrigation integration, or mulch and staking materials. Some suppliers include warranties; others charge a separate fee. Consider long-term irrigation maintenance when budgeting for mature trees.

Real-World Pricing Examples

Three scenario cards illustrate common setups. Each shows specs, labor hours, per-unit prices, and totals; parts lists vary to reflect realistic choices.

Basic

Spec: 1 tree, 6 ft, container-grown; standard delivery; no irrigation. Labor 1 hour; no permits. data-formula=”1 × 60″> Total: $120–$260

Mid-Range

Spec: 2 trees, 8–12 ft, container-grown; delivery; planting with soil amendment; basic staking. Labor 2.5 hours; minor mulch. Total: $500–$900

Premium

Spec: 3 trees, 12–20 ft; delivery to hard-to-reach site; professional planting with deep soil prep; irrigation tie-in; warranty. Labor 6 hours; equipment. Total: $2,000–$3,500