Professional diagnosis and safe root removal before small problems destroy your driveway, foundation, or sewer lines.
Root problems rarely announce themselves. By the time most homeowners notice the lifted slab of walkway or the hairline crack creeping across a foundation wall, the tree responsible has usually been at it quietly for years. What looks like a sudden problem is almost always a slow one that finally became visible.
That delay is the dangerous part. A root that has reached a driveway has often already reached a sewer lateral, a footing, or the soil that keeps the tree itself standing upright. Cutting blindly into it can solve one problem and create three. The Woodsman Tree Service exists for exactly this gap — the point where a tree stops being only a landscaping question and becomes a structural one. Across University Of Virginia, VA, we handle root removal and root damage repair the way it should be handled: by figuring out what the roots are doing before anyone decides what to cut.
Roots don't damage property out of malice. They follow moisture, oxygen, and the path of least resistance.
Driveways, walkways, and patio slabs heave upward as roots thicken underneath them. Once a slab cracks, water gets in, and freeze cycles or settling finish the job.
Roots pressing against a footing or basement wall transfer real force. They rarely "punch through" concrete, but they exploit and widen what's already weak.
Roots are drawn to the moisture and nutrients inside a cracked lateral. Once inside, they keep growing, and a slow drain becomes a full backup.
Roots running just under the lawn make mowing miserable, create trip hazards, and signal that the tree is searching hard for resources.
A destabilized tree. This is the one homeowners forget. The same roots holding your tree up are the ones near your slab. Remove the wrong ones and you trade a cracked path for a leaning trunk.
We treat root work as diagnosis first, cutting second.
When a root has pushed up a slab, the question is never just "can we cut it." It's whether that root is structural to the tree, how deep it runs, and whether removing it buys you a repaired driveway or a future failure. We expose the root, trace it back toward the trunk, and make the cut at the point that protects both your hardscape and the tree's stability. Where the root is too important to remove, we'll tell you that plainly and talk through alternatives.
Root contact with a foundation is a coordination job. We identify which roots are in play, relieve the pressure where it's safe to do so, and install separation between the root zone and the structure so the problem doesn't simply return. We're not a concrete contractor — but we work cleanly alongside one, and we make sure the tree side of the repair is handled correctly so their work lasts.
Some yards have lost the fight — surface roots everywhere, lawn that won't establish, beds that can't be planted. We map the spread, identify the source trees, and cut back the invasive runners to restore usable ground, without taking so much that the tree's health collapses. There's a real line between "managed" and "killed," and staying on the right side of it is the whole skill.
Removal without prevention is a temporary fix. A root barrier — installed at the right depth, in the right place — redirects future growth away from the slab, line, or foundation you're protecting. For homeowners in University Of Virginia who don't want to revisit the same repair in five years, this is usually the most cost-effective part of the whole job.
If you've noticed something small — a slight lift, a recurring slow drain, a new crack — an inspection is the cheapest move you can make. Our arborist locates the roots, identifies what they're affecting, and gives you a written read on what's urgent, what can wait, and what it will take to address it. No pressure to book work on the spot.
When roots are in a sewer lateral, clearing the line is only half the answer; the tree will send roots straight back to the same crack. We coordinate the tree-side work — identifying the responsible roots and installing barriers — so that the plumbing repair actually holds. Homeowners across University Of Virginia, VA call us in exactly when the drain company says "you've got roots in the line."
Our process is built to remove guesswork, because guesswork is what makes root jobs go wrong.
Speak With an ArboristUsing physical exposure at key points and tracing along the suspected runs, we establish where the roots actually go — not where they appear to go.
Which roots touch hardscape, which touch utilities, and which the tree depends on to stay upright.
Into what's urgent, what's monitorable, and what's optional.
In writing with the reasoning behind it, so the decision is yours and it's an informed one.
Root pricing depends on access, depth, what the roots are tangled with, and how much exposure is needed to work safely. A single accessible root lifting a walkway sits at the low end. A foundation-adjacent job with barrier installation, careful hand-digging, and coordination around utilities sits much higher — because the labor and the caution are the cost, not the cutting itself.
Here's the honest framing we give every University Of Virginia homeowner: a small, clean root removal is an afternoon. A foundation or sewer-related job is a planned project with a real estimate after inspection. We don't quote root work sight-unseen, because anyone who does is guessing — and guessing is how trees end up leaning and budgets end up doubled. Your inspection produces a fixed-scope estimate before any work is scheduled.
We'd rather lose a job than sell you one you don't need.
It's a tempting weekend project. You can see the root, you have a saw, and the driveway is right there. But homeowner root-cutting is one of the most common ways a manageable problem becomes an expensive one — and it's worth understanding why before you start.
The first issue is that you can only see a fraction of the root system. The root lifting your slab almost always connects to a larger structural root closer to the trunk. Cut it in the wrong place and you haven't just removed a nuisance — you've removed part of what anchors the tree. In University Of Virginia, we've been called to trees that started leaning within a season of a well-intentioned cut, turning a concrete repair into a removal.
The second issue is the wound itself. A clean, correctly placed cut lets a tree compartmentalize and recover. A torn or poorly located cut becomes an entry point for decay and pests, and that decay travels back toward the trunk over the following years. You don't see the cost immediately, which is exactly why it's easy to underestimate.
The third issue is everything you can't see around the root: irrigation lines, low-voltage wiring, gas service, and sewer laterals all share that same shallow band of soil. Hitting one turns a free afternoon into a contractor call.
None of this means roots can't be cut — they can, all the time, safely. It means the cut should be made by someone who has traced where the root goes and what it's holding up. The saw is the easy part. Knowing where to stop is the job.
It can, if the wrong roots come out — which is why we trace and classify before we cut. Done correctly, targeted root removal in University Of Virginia is something mature trees recover from routinely. We'll always tell you upfront if a root is too structural to remove safely.
We handle the tree side — removing or redirecting the roots and installing barriers — and we work cleanly alongside your concrete contractor in University Of Virginia. Splitting it this way means each part is done by the right specialist and the repair actually lasts.
Recurring slow drains or backups, especially with mature trees nearby, are the classic sign. If a drain company in University Of Virginia, VA has already told you there are roots in the line, that's your confirmation — and the point where tree-side work needs to happen so it doesn't recur.
For anything near a foundation or utility, yes. A root estimate without an inspection is a guess. The inspection in University Of Virginia is inexpensive, and it converts into a fixed-scope estimate so you know exactly what you're agreeing to.
It involves some hand-digging to expose roots, so there's temporary disturbance to a defined area. We keep it contained, and most yards in University Of Virginia recover quickly with basic restoration once the work is done.
You don't have to commit to anything to find out what's going on under your property. Start with an inspection — our arborist will trace the roots, tell you what's urgent and what isn't, and put it in writing so the decision stays yours.
Click Here to Call (833) 435-4424If University Of Virginia homeowners take one thing from this page, let it be this: understand the problem before you cut it. Reach out to The Woodsman Tree Service and let's get you that clarity first.