Personalized Analysis
Enter your operation’s numbers below. We’ll show you the labor math, the productivity gap, and a personalized payback estimate — no price tag attached until the model is built around your reality.
All fields affect your model. Use your best estimates — you can adjust later.
Include payroll taxes, workers’ comp, insurance. Typically 1.3–1.5x base wage. BLS 2024 median for forestry/pruning workers: ~$21–22/hr base × 1.35 burden ≈ $29–30/hr. Adjust up for experienced crews or high-cost regions.
Research benchmark: Skovsgaard et al. (Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research, 2018) found polesaw pruning to 6.5m takes several minutes per tree depending on branch count and species. Scaled to 12–15m, 3–8 trees/hr per worker is realistic. FAO logging data shows ~4 trees/hr for combined delimbing and felling operations.
Exclude weather downtime and dormancy restrictions for your species/region.
Estimated commercial rate for production-scale high pruning. No published market benchmark exists — verify rates with forestry contractors in your region. At 5 trees/hr with a 3-person crew at $32/hr burdened, labor alone costs ~$19/tree, suggesting $15 is tight for a manual crew. The PATAS changes this math significantly.
Maine Forestry / Harvard Forest data: pruning increases stumpage value 20–25%. Actual per-tree dollar uplift depends heavily on species, stand density, and local timber prices — highly region-dependent. Use a conservative figure and verify with your forester or timber buyer.
Manufacturer spec: 30–50 trees/hr in forest; 80–100+ in plantation. Use a conservative number until you have field data.