What to Do After Tree Removal in Melbourne: 6 Smart Next Steps

Tree just come down? The empty space is an opportunity — but only if you handle the next steps right. Here’s what most Melbourne homeowners do (and miss) after a removal.

Numbers Worth Knowing
2-3 m³
Mulch from a 10m tree
$150-$600
Stump grind range
12-18 mo
Wait before replant
$200-$400
Disposal saved with mulch
Illustration of the 6-step tree removal process by Precision Arbor Care in Melbourne.

1. Decide on the Stump

If we ground the stump out during the job, the chips fill the cavity and the area is ready for soil. If we left the stump, it’ll naturally decay over 5-10 years — but it’ll also keep sending up shoots in the meantime if it’s a stump-coppicing species like Plane Tree or some Eucalypts. Decide now: grind it ($150-$600 added to the bill) or live with shoots for a year or two.

Mulch uses after tree removal — garden beds, around trees, path building, chook runs, compost

2. Use the Mulch — Don’t Truck It Out

A chipped 10m tree produces about 2-3m³ of mulch. We can leave it in a pile on your driveway for free (saves you the $200-$400 disposal fee and gives you garden mulch for the next year). Spread it 5-8cm thick around existing garden beds — it suppresses weeds, holds moisture, and slowly feeds the soil as it breaks down.

3. Wait Before Replanting

The root mass below the stump (even after grinding) takes 12-18 months to fully decompose. Planting another tree directly in the same spot during that window often fails because of nitrogen drawdown as the old roots decay. Wait a year, or plant something annual / short-lived in the gap first.

4. Treat the Soil

Where a large tree stood, the soil is often compacted from years of root competition and may be acidic if the tree was a Eucalypt. Add gypsum to break up clay compaction, add lime to neutralise pH, and turn through some compost. Cheap, makes a big difference for whatever you plant next.

5. Consider What the Tree Was Doing for You

Before you replace it like-for-like, think about what the tree was actually doing: shade, screening, privacy, or just "tree." Maybe a hedge solves the screening problem better. Maybe a shade sail is cheaper and quicker than waiting 8 years for a new tree to mature. Maybe a row of three smaller trees works better than one big one.

6. Replace If You Can

Melbourne canopy cover is declining year on year. If you do replant, pick a species suited to the spot — not the same species that grew too big the first time. Council websites usually have lists of recommended species by region. Native indigenous species generally win on water use, biodiversity, and bushfire resilience.

Replanting Timeline by Tree Species

The right time to replant depends heavily on what was removed and what you’re replacing it with. From our 12 months of post-removal follow-ups across Melbourne:

Replanting Wait Times by Removed Species
✓ Plant sooner (6-12 months)
  • After Cordyline removal (shallow root mass)
  • After Cypress removal (decayed within 2-3 yr)
  • After fruit tree removal (short residual mass)
  • After small ornamental removal (under 5m)
  • After hedge removal (continuous shallow root)
✗ Wait longer (18-24+ months)
  • After mature Eucalypt removal
  • After Liquidambar removal
  • After Plane Tree removal
  • After Lemon Scented Gum removal
  • After any 20+ year tree

The reason for the wait: nitrogen drawdown during root decay. The microbes breaking down old roots consume soil nitrogen as part of the process, leaving little for new plants. Plant too early and the new tree struggles or fails in the first year [1].

Soil Rehabilitation: What Works, What’s Snake Oil

The garden centre will sell you various "tree removal recovery" products. Some help, most don’t. Here’s what we’ve actually seen work:

  • Gypsum (40-60kg / m²). Works for clay compaction. Cheap. Breaks up compacted Melbourne clay over 3-6 months. Worth it [2].
  • Lime (4-6kg / m²). Works to neutralise pH after Eucalypt removal. Cheap. One application is usually enough.
  • Compost / well-rotted manure. Always works. Build it into the planting area generously. The single best thing you can do for soil recovery.
  • "Tree removal recovery formulas" with mycorrhizal additives. Mixed results. Sometimes helpful for specific replanting species, often no different from compost alone. Not worth the premium for most cases.
  • Liquid kelp / fish emulsion. Useful for new plantings (gentle nitrogen) but doesn’t help recover bare soil from a removal.

Using Stump Grindings vs Sending to Landfill

If you ground the stump, you’ll have 100-300L of fine woody grindings mixed with soil. Three things to do with them:

Stump Grinding Material — What To Do With It
Fill
Use in cavity (free)
Mulch
Spread on garden ($0)
Compost
Mix into bin ($0)
Landfill
$80-$150 (avoid)

Lawn Restoration After a Removal

If the work involved chipper-truck traffic on the lawn, expect 4-8 weeks of patchy recovery. Three steps that speed it up:

  1. Aerate within a week. A garden fork pushed in every 15cm to a 10cm depth breaks compaction. Takes 20 minutes for a typical residential lawn.
  2. Top-dress lightly. A 5mm layer of sandy loam over the affected area, raked in. Holds moisture and gives runners a smoother surface to repopulate.
  3. Water more than usual for 2 weeks. Compacted soil dries out faster on top. A daily light water for the first fortnight after the job pulls the lawn back.

When to Replant — And When to Leave the Space Open

Not every removal needs a replacement. Three scenarios where leaving the space open is the right call:

  • Removal was driven by structure interference. If the tree was too close to a foundation, another tree in the same spot has the same problem in 20 years.
  • You’re selling the property soon. Buyers value a mature tree more than a sapling. If a sale is within 5 years, the new owner can decide.
  • The site is too shaded for replanting. Some sites are now in dappled shade from surrounding canopy. A new young tree may not thrive [3].

Free post-removal soil consultation

We’ll do a free walk-through of the removal area on our final visit and give you a soil-rehabilitation plan tailored to what was removed and what you want to plant. Ask Rob on the day — we don’t charge extra for the advice.

Recent client feedback
★★★★★

“Rob’s tip about waiting 18 months before replanting saved us from a $400 mistake. Our friend tried to plant straight away in a similar spot and their tree died within a year.”

Charlie & Pip. — Brunswick
★★★★★

“Used the chipped mulch they left for all our garden beds for 6 months. Saved heaps on landscaping supplies and the garden has never looked better.”

Jasmine W. — Lalor

Want to talk through replanting options? Rob’s happy to chat — see the contact page. For other tree services, see tree pruning or hedge trimming.

Related reading

Stump Grinding in Melbourne

Related service

Stump Grinding in Melbourne

Most tree removals leave a stump. We grind it on the same visit so there’s no second call-out and no trip hazard. Adds $150-$600 depending on stump diameter and root spread.

See stump grinding service →

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I grind the stump or leave it?
Grind if the area is going under lawn, driveway, or anywhere foot traffic happens (trip hazard). Leave it if it’s going under decking, raised garden bed, or anywhere out of sight where natural decay is fine.
How long before I can plant a new tree in the same spot?
12-18 months minimum. Even after grinding, the residual root mass takes that long to decompose. Planting earlier often fails because of nitrogen drawdown as old roots decay.
Can I keep the mulch for my garden?
Yes — we leave it in a pile on your driveway for free. Spread 5-8cm thick around existing garden beds. Free garden mulch saves $200-$400 in disposal fees and gives you a year’s worth of mulch.
Why does my soil look bad where the tree was?
Compaction from years of root competition plus pH changes (Eucalypts make soil acidic). Add gypsum to break up clay, lime to neutralise pH, and turn through compost. Cheap fix, makes a big difference.
Should I plant the same species back?
Usually no — same species in the same spot often hits the same issues. Pick a species suited to the mature size of the space. Council lists usually have recommendations by region.

Ready when you are

Get a free, fixed tree removal quote — usually the same day

Rob calls back personally — usually the same day. We talk through the tree, book an on-site visit within 24-48 hours if it needs one, and give you a written, fixed-price quote with everything itemised. No surprises at the end.

Rob Tufuga — founder and lead arborist at Precision Arbor Care Melbourne

Written by

Rob Tufuga

Founder & Lead Arborist, Precision Arbor Care

Rob has been climbing, cutting and shaping trees across Melbourne for more than 15 years. He started Precision Arbor Care to do tree work the way he always wished he could when he worked for bigger crews — one job at a time, no upselling, and an honest number on the quote.

Call Rob on 0413 606 544 or request a quote online.

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