Multiple stumps · Brevard County, FL
Multiple stump grinding in Brevard County — one visit, falling per-stump prices
Two stumps, ten stumps, a cleared lot's worth: the second stump never costs what the first one did, because the machine is already in your yard. Multi-stump and whole-lot grinding across Brevard — one mobilization, a planned route, one cleanup, and per-stump prices that reward doing it all at once.
Ballpark a whole list
Rough count and rough sizes — “seven stumps, mostly 12–18 inches, one big oak” — plus your city. Lists ballpark as easily as singles.
Where multiples come from
The usual Brevard versions of this job
After clearing, the stumps are what stand between you and a usable lot. Grinding finishes the clearing for a fraction of excavation — unless building plans say otherwise.
Read more →Hurricane seasons leave stumps in batches — yours and the two the tree crew left next door. Post-storm multiples are their own page.
Read more →Older Melbourne and Palm Bay yards retiring a generation of plantings at once — mixed species, mixed sizes, one visit.
Read more →Planning note that saves money: walk the yard once and count everything — the half-rotted ornamental behind the shed included. Adding a stump while the machine is on site is cheap; a return trip for the one you forgot is a whole new mobilization.
Multi-stump questions
Multiple stump questions
How much cheaper is per-stump pricing on multiples?
Meaningfully — mobilization, setup, and cleanup get paid once instead of per visit, so each additional stump prices mostly on its own grinding time. The exact curve depends on sizes and spread across the property; the ballpark call handles a stump list as easily as a single.
We just cleared a lot. Can all the stumps go in one pass?
That's the ideal version of this job — one mobilization, a planned route across the lot, and chips managed in one cleanup. A stump count plus rough sizes (even “mostly around 15 inches, two big ones”) sets up a realistic lot price.
Do all the stumps need to be the same to qualify?
No — mixed jobs are normal: an oak in front, three palms along the fence, ornamentals out back. Each prices by its own width and species; they share the visit. The form's message box fits a whole list.
Got a list?
Count them all — even the embarrassing one behind the shed — and send it. One visit, one cleanup.