Lateral Crown Reduction
Shorten side branches to pull the canopy back from a boundary or building.
Overview
What width reduction actually involves
A lateral (or width) reduction targets the spread of the crown rather than its height. We shorten the side branches on one or more aspects of the tree, typically to clear a building, pull foliage back from a neighbour's garden, or let more light into the surrounding area.
Side limbs are shortened back to suitable growth points to reduce the canopy's lateral spread. The leader and overall height are left intact, so the tree retains its natural silhouette from a distance.
Typical reduction
1–3 m off the spread
Results last
3–4 years
Impact on tree
Low
Best for
- Branches overhanging roofs, conservatories or garages
- Boundary disputes (pulling a canopy back to your line)
- Increasing daylight to a garden, lawn or solar panels
- Asymmetric trees that need rebalancing on one side
Not ideal for
- Cases where overall height is the real issue
- Single-stem conifers with no suitable lateral cut points
Pros & cons
- Targeted. Leaves height and most of the crown untouched
- Quick visible improvement in light and clearance
- Lower impact on the tree than a total reduction
- Often resolves neighbour and insurer concerns
- Can leave the tree visually one-sided if overdone
- Repeat work needed as side growth returns
How it compares
Width Reduction vs other reductions
| Reduction type | Best for | Typical reduction | Results last | Impact on tree |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Reduction | Large trees encroaching on buildings or power lines | 10–30% of canopy | 3–5 years | Medium |
| Width Reduction This page | Branches overhanging roofs, conservatories or garages | 1–3 m off the spread | 3–4 years | Low |
| Height Reduction | Trees taller than their setting can sustain | 2–4 m off the height | 4–6 years | Medium |
| Selective Reduction | Storm-damaged or split limbs | 1–4 limbs treated | Permanent for removed limbs | Low |
All four reduction types we carry out, with the page you're on highlighted.
How we do it
On-site process
- 1. Walk-around survey to mark the target clearance line.
- 2. Climber accesses and assesses each lateral.
- 3. Side branches shortened to suitable secondary laterals.
- 4. Crown rebalanced visually from the ground.
- 5. Site cleared, brash chipped, logs stacked or removed.
Still not sure?
Lateral Crown Reduction FAQs
Can you reduce just one side of the tree?
Yes. Single-aspect reductions are common where a tree overhangs a single boundary or structure. We balance what we take so the tree remains visually and structurally sound.
Will it stop the branches growing back over the boundary?
It buys three to four years on most species. We can plan a recurring schedule so the canopy never reaches the line again.
Related
Other reduction types
Tree outgrown its setting? Let's reduce it properly.
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