Spring in the DFW Metroplex brings warm breezes, blooming redbuds, and an almost irresistible urge to grab your pruning shears. But for many of Dallas’s most beloved trees, springtime pruning is the worst thing you can do — and in some cases, it can be deadly.
At Quality Tree Service DFW, our ISA-certified arborists respond to tree emergencies year-round — many of them caused by well-meaning homeowners who pruned at exactly the wrong time. This guide covers the eight trees most commonly found in Dallas-Fort Worth yards that you should put off pruning until the proper season.
Live Oak
The sprawling live oak is the defining tree of the Dallas landscape — and also the one most at risk from spring pruning. Oak wilt, caused by the fungus Bretziella fagacearum, is spread by small sap-feeding beetles that are most active from February through June in North Texas. Fresh pruning cuts act as open invitations for these beetles. According to the Texas A&M Forest Service, a live oak infected through a spring pruning wound can decline and die within 3 to 6 months.
Live oaks are especially vulnerable because their root systems often graft underground with neighboring oaks, allowing the fungus to jump from tree to tree silently. If emergency pruning is unavoidable during the high-risk window, paint every wound with latex paint or pruning sealant within 15 minutes of the cut.
Shumard Red Oak
Red oak species — including the Shumard oak common throughout Dallas neighborhoods — are even more susceptible to oak wilt than live oaks. Once a red oak is infected, it can die within four to six weeks with no effective treatment. Adding to the danger, infected red oaks develop spore mats under their bark that actively attract the beetles responsible for spreading the disease to healthy trees nearby.
The Texas Oak Wilt Partnership is unambiguous: never prune red oaks between February and June. If a storm-damaged limb must be removed during this period, seal the wound immediately and contact a certified arborist in Dallas for follow-up care.
Southern Magnolia
Southern magnolias bloom on old wood — meaning their spectacular white flowers develop from buds set during the previous growing season. Pruning in spring cuts off these buds before they ever open, robbing you of the display and stressing a tree already burning through energy reserves to push its blooms.
Beyond lost flowers, spring pruning wounds on magnolias heal slowly and can invite fungal problems in the warm, humid conditions that follow DFW winters. The University of Maryland Extension advises pruning magnolias from mid-summer to early winter, after flowering is complete. For Dallas homeowners, late July through October is an ideal window.
Eastern Redbud
Few sights in a Dallas spring are more striking than a redbud blanketed in magenta blossoms before its leaves emerge. Like other spring-flowering trees, redbuds bloom on old wood formed the previous season. Pruning in early spring destroys the flower buds you’ve been waiting all year to see.
There’s also a disease concern: redbuds are susceptible to Botryosphaeria canker, a fungal disease that exploits fresh wounds. Pruning should wait until after blooming has fully finished — usually by late April in Dallas. Light shaping can then continue through early summer, giving the tree the full growing season to set next year’s buds.
Cedar Elm
The cedar elm is among the most common street trees in Dallas, prized for its drought tolerance and adaptability to clay soils. But spring pruning opens the door to Dutch elm disease and elm yellows, two devastating conditions spread by elm bark beetles that become active in the warm months of spring and early summer.
The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension recommends keeping elm pruning to the winter dormant season. Avoid heavy cuts during wet spring conditions, which especially favor disease spread. If you notice signs of disease — branch dieback, yellowing, or early leaf drop — contact a tree service professional in Dallas promptly rather than attempting DIY pruning.
Silver Maple & Red Maple
Maples planted across the DFW area — including red maples and silver maples — are notorious “bleeders.” In early spring, as temperatures warm and sap pressure builds, pruning cuts release a heavy, sometimes alarming flow of sap from the wound. While the Iowa State University Extension confirms this sap loss doesn’t typically kill the tree, it does create stress and can attract insects and pathogens to the wound.
The solution is simple: wait. Schedule maple pruning in late fall after leaf drop or in the deep cold of December and January, when the tree is fully dormant and sap pressure is minimal. Never top a maple — it destroys structure and guarantees decades of problems.
Pecan
Pecans are both a beloved shade tree and a valued nut producer across the Dallas-Fort Worth area. But spring pruning is one of the most common mistakes DFW homeowners make with their pecans. Heavy pruning during active growth diverts energy away from nut production, causes excessive suckering, and can invite pecan scab and other fungal diseases that spread readily in warm, wet spring conditions.
Timing cuts wrong also risks zinc deficiency symptoms — a common pecan issue in North Texas’s alkaline clay soils — by disrupting the tree’s uptake during a critical period. Light structural pruning of pecans is best done in late winter before bud swell, while major corrective work should wait until late fall after harvest when the tree has finished its season’s work.
Texas Mountain Laurel & Mexican Plum
Both of these spring-blooming native ornamentals put on their show early in the season — often February through April — on old wood set the prior year. Pruning in spring removes all those grape-soda-scented laurel blossoms and delicate plum flowers before they ever open.
Mexican plum, in particular, should be treated like other stone fruits: avoid spring pruning, which can trigger bacterial canker and fire blight in warm, wet conditions. Shape and thin these trees after their bloom period ends, giving them the rest of the growing season to develop next spring’s flower buds. For structural issues in either species, consult a professional tree trimming service in Dallas.
Quick Reference: Dallas Tree Pruning Calendar
Use this at-a-glance guide for the most common DFW trees. When in doubt, a dormant-season prune is almost always the safest choice.
| Tree | Spring Pruning | Best Window |
|---|---|---|
| Live Oak | AVOID Feb–Jun | Nov – Jan |
| Shumard Red Oak | AVOID Feb–Jun | Nov – Jan |
| Southern Magnolia | Never before bloom | July – Oct |
| Eastern Redbud | Never before bloom | Late Apr – Jun |
| Cedar Elm | Avoid (disease risk) | Dec – Feb |
| Red/Silver Maple | Avoid (sap bleed) | Late fall – Jan |
| Pecan | Avoid heavy cuts | Late fall / late winter |
| TX Mountain Laurel / Mexican Plum | Never before bloom | Late spring after bloom |
| Post Oak / Bur Oak | Caution Feb–Jun | Nov – Jan (safest) |
| Crape Myrtle | OK in late spring | Late winter / early spring |
Not Sure When to Prune Your Trees?
Our ISA-certified arborists serve all of Dallas-Fort Worth, including Plano, Frisco, McKinney, Allen, and surrounding areas. We’ll assess your trees, recommend the right timing, and perform all work to ANSI A300 standards.
5 Rules for Safer Tree Pruning in Dallas
1. Paint oak wounds immediately. If you must prune an oak between February and June due to storm damage, seal the cut with any latex paint or pruning sealant within 15 minutes. The Texas Trees Foundation confirms any wound dressing works equally well when applied promptly.
2. Sanitize your tools between trees. Use a 10% bleach solution or Lysol spray on all cutting surfaces. This simple step prevents spreading fungal and bacterial diseases from one tree to another — especially critical during oak wilt season.
3. Never top your trees. Tree topping — cutting main branches back to stubs — destroys structure, creates weak regrowth, and opens trees to decades of problems. The International Society of Arboriculture classifies topping as an unacceptable practice. Always hire a certified arborist for major pruning work.
4. Know the difference between old-wood and new-wood bloomers. Old-wood bloomers (magnolias, redbuds, Mexican plum) set buds the prior year — prune them after they bloom. New-wood bloomers (crape myrtle, vitex) set buds on new growth — prune them in late winter before growth starts.
5. When in doubt, call a certified arborist. Dallas homeowners can find ISA-certified arborists through the ISA’s Find An Arborist tool. For same-day service across DFW, contact Quality Tree Service DFW directly.




