Date Palm vs Cocos Palm Removal: What’s the Difference?

If you have ever priced palm removal in Melbourne you have probably noticed something — a Date palm of the same height as a Cocos palm can cost more than double to remove. The reason is the trunk, the weight, the roots, and the climbing technique. This guide explains what makes Date palms and Canary Island palms harder to remove than the more common Cocos palm.

The Three Main Palm Species in Melbourne Gardens

Most palms we remove fall into three families:

  • Cocos / Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) — the most common palm in Melbourne, recognisable by its slender grey trunk and feathery green fronds. Considered an environmental weed in many areas.
  • Canary Island Date Palm (Phoenix canariensis) — the big, fat-trunked palm with the diamond-pattern bark and pineapple-shaped crown. Often found in older suburbs as a feature tree.
  • True Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera) — taller and more slender than the Canary Island, with longer fronds. Less common but found in some heritage plantings.
Date palm vs Cocos palm removal — trunk size, weight, spines, removal time comparison
Why Date palm removal costs more than Cocos palm — thicker trunks, heavier sections, and dangerous spines.

Why Date Palms Are Harder to Remove

Trunk Mass

A mature Canary Island Date palm trunk can weigh over 2,000kg by itself. The trunk is dense, fibrous, and saturated with water. A Cocos palm trunk of the same height usually weighs 200-400kg. That means every section we cut and lower from a Date palm is 5 to 10 times heavier.

Crown Weight

The crown of a Date palm is enormous — it can hold 80-120 fronds, each up to 4 metres long. The whole crown can weigh 500-800kg. Before we touch the trunk we have to remove every frond individually, lower it safely, and chip it. Cocos crowns are lighter and have fewer, shorter fronds.

Spines

This is the one nobody warns you about — Date palm fronds have sharp spines along the base, 5-10cm long, hardened, and arranged like nails. These spines have hospitalised arborists. Removing them requires full leather chaps, gauntlets, and a deliberate cutting sequence that exposes the climber to the spines as little as possible.

Cocos palms have no spines. Just gloves and a chainsaw.

Climbing Technique

Cocos palms can be climbed with spikes because their trunks are smooth and consistent. Date palms cannot — the diamond bark snaps off in chunks when spiked, and the bark itself is what gives a climber any friction at all. Date palms are climbed with a controlled descent rig or removed by EWP or crane.

Root Ball

A Cocos palm has a fibrous, basket-shaped root system about 50cm across at the base. A Canary Island Date palm has a similar fibrous mat but it can extend 2 metres around the trunk and 1.5 metres deep. Grinding it out takes 3-4 times longer.

Cost Comparison

For a 6-metre palm in a standard backyard with reasonable access:

  • Cocos Palm — typically $900 to $1,400 (removal, chipping, disposal)
  • Canary Island Date Palm — typically $1,800 to $2,800
  • True Date Palm — typically $1,500 to $2,400

For full cost ranges across palm sizes see our palm removal cost guide.

What About Smaller Palm Species?

Smaller palms — Kentia, Bangalow, Cordyline, Foxtail — are usually quick jobs. Most can be removed in under 90 minutes for $400-$800. The hard ones are always the Cocos at scale or anything in the Phoenix family.

What If You Just Want the Top Off?

People sometimes ask whether they can top a palm to make it smaller. The answer is no — palms grow from a single growing point at the top of the trunk. Cut that off and the palm dies. With trees you can prune; with palms you either remove them, remove the dead fronds, or leave them alone.

Permits Apply to Most Mature Palms

Whether you have a Cocos, Date, or Canary Island palm, mature specimens in inner Melbourne suburbs usually need a council permit before removal. See our guide to palm removal permits for the details.

Get a Free Palm Removal Quote

If you have a palm you want gone and you are not sure what species it is or what removal will cost, send Rob a photo. We can give an over-the-phone estimate from the photo alone for most palms. Call 0410 266 708 or learn more about our tree and palm removal services.

Comparison of Date Palm and Cocos Palm features for easy identification.

Identification at a Glance

Date Palm vs Cocos Palm
Date Palm (Phoenix species)
  • Spiky frond bases
  • Larger trunk diameter
  • Heavier frond load
  • Sharp spikes near trunk
  • Dates as small fruit clusters
Cocos Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana)
  • Smooth frond bases
  • Slimmer trunk
  • Lighter fronds
  • No sharp spikes
  • Yellow fruit clusters

Removal Difference

Why They Quote Differently
Date
Higher labour (spike risk)
Cocos
Standard removal
+15-25%
Date palm premium
PPE
Date palms need more

Which One Do You Have?

Three quick visual checks:

  • Look at the frond bases. Date Palms have spike-covered frond bases. Cocos are smooth.
  • Touch the trunk (carefully). Date Palms have sharp spike remnants. Cocos have smooth scarring.
  • Look at fruit clusters. Date Palms produce dates. Cocos produce yellow-orange round fruit [1].

Send Rob a photo

Not sure which palm you have? Send a photo of the trunk and fronds. We’ll identify it in under 24 hours and quote accordingly.

Ready when you are

Get a free, fixed tree-care quote — usually the same day

When you get in touch, here’s what happens: Rob calls you back personally, usually the same day. We talk through the job, book an on-site visit within 24-48 hours if it needs one, and give you a written, fixed-price quote with every line itemised. No pushy sales, no "we’ll see when we start" pricing, no surprise extras at the end.

Servicing Melbourne metropolitan and outer suburbs. Email: info@lc.boostable.au

Rob Tufuga — founder and lead arborist at Precision Arbor Care Melbourne

Written by

Rob Tufuga

Founder & Lead Arborist, Precision Arbor Care

Rob has been climbing, cutting and shaping trees across Melbourne for more than 15 years. He started Precision Arbor Care to do tree work the way he always wished he could when he worked for bigger crews — one job at a time, no upselling, and an honest number on the quote. He still personally inspects every job over $1,000 and answers the phone himself whenever he’s not up a tree.

Need a tree out, a hedge trimmed, or a stump ground? Call Rob on 0410 266 708 or request a quote online.

Similar Posts