Permits & rules · Brevard County, FL
Stump removal permits in Brevard County — the honest version
Short version: permits in Brevard attach to removing living trees, not to grinding the stumps they leave behind — grinding an existing stump is generally the uncomplicated part. Longer version below, because “generally” is doing real work in that sentence: each city writes its own tree rules, protected species exist, and the right answer to a wrinkle is your city's planning desk, not a website's promise.
Stump already down? Ballpark it
If the tree is gone and only the stump remains, the permit chapter is usually already closed — width, count, city.
The landscape
Three rules of thumb that hold across Brevard
Permits follow living trees
Removal thresholds (often by trunk size), protected-species rules, and canopy ordinances govern taking trees down. Once a tree is legitimately gone, its stump is yard debris with roots.
Every city writes its own
Melbourne, Palm Bay, Titusville, the beachside towns, and unincorporated Brevard each keep their own ordinance. Anything on the standing-tree side of the line is worth one quick call to your planning desk — minutes, free, settled.
811 is the other call
The pre-dig locate marks public utilities and it's free — relevant for deep grinds near service lines. What it never marks: your sprinklers, lighting, and pool runs. Your memory of the yard is the locate for those.
Plain-dealing note: nothing on this page is legal advice, and rules change — it's the honest map, not the law itself. For the grinding side, the rule is simpler: tree gone, stump grinds.
Permit questions
Permit and rules questions
So do I need a permit to grind my stump or not?
For grinding a stump whose tree is already gone: generally no across Brevard jurisdictions — permit requirements attach to removing the living tree. The careful phrasing is deliberate: rules differ by city (Melbourne, Palm Bay, Titusville, and the county each write their own), and they change. When the situation has any wrinkle, a quick call to your city's planning desk settles it in minutes.
The tree is still standing. Who handles the removal permit?
Typically the property owner or the tree company doing the removal — and reputable tree crews know their city's thresholds cold. This site's lane starts after the tree is down; if your project is still at the standing-tree stage, sort the removal permit with the removal crew first.
What about protected trees, like big live oaks?
Several Brevard jurisdictions protect specimen and historic trees — that protection governs removing the living tree, with real penalties for skipping it. A stump from a legally removed tree grinds without drama. A stump from a tree that 'fell over by itself' right after a fence dispute is a story for your city, not for a grinder.
Tree gone, stump waiting?
Then the paperwork chapter is likely behind you — width, count, city starts the easy part.