What to Do When a Neighbor’s Tree Damages Your Property

A tree fallen onto a house causing property damage

A neighbor’s tree caused damage — to your roof, fence, car, driveway, or foundation. Who pays depends on one key question: was the tree a known hazard the neighbor ignored, or did it fail without warning?

If a neighbor’s healthy tree damages your property in a storm, your own insurance generally covers it (an “act of God”). If the tree was dead, diseased, or obviously hazardous and the neighbor ignored it, the neighbor can be liable for the damage — including your deductible. Negligence is the dividing line, and documented prior notice is your strongest tool.

The core rule: act of God vs. negligence

Situation Who typically pays
Healthy tree fails in a storm Your own insurance (act of God)
Dead/hazardous tree the neighbor ignored The neighbor (negligence)
Neighbor or crew caused it (cutting, etc.) The neighbor / the company

This same framework runs through every specific scenario below.

By type of damage

Why prior notice changes everything

If you can show the neighbor knew the tree was dangerous (you warned them in writing, the city or an arborist flagged it) and they did nothing, a storm failure stops being an “act of God” and becomes negligence — shifting liability and your deductible to them. This is why putting a hazardous tree on notice before it falls is so valuable; see forcing a neighbor to remove a dangerous tree.

Steps after damage

  1. Safety first — avoid downed lines and unstable structures.
  2. Document the damage and the tree’s condition (rot, dead limbs, lean) before cleanup.
  3. File with your insurer — see filing a tree damage claim and what homeowners insurance covers.
  4. If it was a known hazard, notify the neighbor in writing and pursue their liability (a demand letter; small claims for the deductible).
  5. Mind the deadlinestatute of limitations by state.

Frequently asked questions

The tree was healthy and fell in a storm. Can I make my neighbor pay?

Usually not — that’s an act of God handled by your own insurer. Negligence (a known hazard) is what shifts liability.

I warned my neighbor the tree was dead and it fell anyway.

Your documented warning is strong evidence of negligence — pursue the neighbor for the damage and your deductible.

Will filing a claim raise my rates?

It can; weigh the claim against your deductible. See whether a tree claim raises rates.

Who removes the fallen tree?

Generally whoever’s land it lands on, unless negligence shifts it — see removal responsibility.

Disclaimer: General legal information, not legal advice. Liability and insurance rules vary by state and policy. Consult your insurer or a licensed attorney.

Jack Turner researches and explains U.S. tree law in plain English for homeowners. With a background in tree care and neighbor tree-dispute mediation, he covers liability when trees fall, boundary and overhanging-branch rights, tree-damage claims, treble damages, and how the rules differ from state to state. His goal at TreeLaws is to make confusing tree-law questions clear and actionable — so readers understand their rights and options before a dispute escalates. For tree costs, hiring, and DIY work, see NeighborCutMyTree.com.