Grant tree removal rules
Everything you need to know before removing or pruning a tree in the Grant area — which trees are protected, the main exemptions, and how to apply for approval. This is the authoritative summary we keep for this council; always confirm against the official source linked below.
Legal basis: Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act 2016 + Planning and Design Code — Regulated and Significant Trees.
Which trees are protected in Grant?
In SA, a 'regulated tree' (trunk circumference 1m+ / about 32cm diameter at 1m height) generally needs development approval to remove — with exemptions for small trees, certain species, and trees within 3m of a dwelling.
When you may not need approval
- Trees with a trunk circumference under 1 metre (about 32cm diameter at 1m height).
- Within 3 metres of an existing dwelling or in-ground pool on the same allotment — except Willow Myrtle, Angophora, Corymbia or Eucalyptus.
- One of the ~24 exotic species exempted by the Minister (e.g. some pines, willows).
- Dead trees, and trees that are an imminent risk to life or property.
Other rules that can override the above
- Significant trees (2m+ circumference) are protected even where a regulated tree might be exempt.
- Tree-damaging activity near a regulated/significant tree (e.g. building close to it) can also need approval.
- Federal EPBC Act for nationally listed species/communities.
Do I need a permit in Grant?
Fill in the tree details and we'll estimate whether you likely need council approval.
Suburbs in Grant
- Allendale East
- Blackfellows Caves
- Burrungule
- Canunda
- Cape Douglas
- Caroline
- Carpenter Rocks
- Caveton
- Compton
- Dismal Swamp
- Donovans
- Eight Mile Creek
- German Creek
- Glenburnie
- Kongorong
- Mil-Lel
- Mingbool
- Moorak
- Mount Schank
- Nene Valley
- Ob Flat
- Pelican Point
- Pleasant Park
- Port Macdonnell
- Racecourse Bay
- Square Mile
- Suttontown
- Tantanoola
- Tarpeena
- Wandilo
- Wepar
- Worrolong
- Wye
- Yahl