Stump Grinding in Utah
What it is, how it works, and how it stacks up against pulling the whole stump out of the ground.
The Short Answer
Stump grinding uses a rotating wheel with carbide teeth to chew a leftover tree stump down into wood chips, usually 6 to 12 inches below grade. It clears the visible stump and the trip hazard in well under an hour for most stumps. The roots stay in the ground and rot away on their own.
How it works
A stump grinder is a machine with a spinning steel wheel studded with carbide teeth. The operator swings the wheel back and forth across the stump, taking off a few inches at a time, working down past ground level and out along the surface roots.
What used to be a stump turns into a hole full of fine wood mulch. We backfill that mulch or haul it off, and you’re left with ground you can mow, plant, or build on. Most residential stumps take 15 to 45 minutes. A pasture full of fence-row stumps takes longer, but the per-stump time drops once the machine is already on site. For what that runs in this area, see our stump grinding cost guide.
Stump grinding vs. stump removal
People use the two terms like they mean the same thing. They don’t. Stump removal means pulling the entire stump and root ball out of the ground with an excavator or backhoe. It leaves a crater the size of a small car, tears up the surrounding yard, and costs a lot more. Stump grinding leaves the roots in place and only takes out the stump itself.
For almost every homeowner and landowner, grinding is the right call. It’s faster, it’s cheaper, and it doesn’t wreck the ground around the stump. Full removal only makes sense when you need the ground completely clear of roots, like for a foundation, a pool, or utility work.
Stump grinding
- Grinds the stump 6–12 inches below grade
- Leaves the roots to rot in place
- Minimal disturbance to the yard
- Done in minutes for most stumps
- Lower cost
Full stump removal
- Digs out the whole stump and root ball
- Leaves a large crater to backfill
- Tears up surrounding ground
- Needs heavy equipment
- Higher cost
Will it grow back?
Grinding the stump kills the tree. A stump with no canopy can’t feed itself, and once the trunk is gone the root system dies and breaks down over a few years. Some species common along the Wasatch Front — Siberian elm, Russian olive, cottonwood, and aspen — can throw up suckers from shallow roots after grinding. If that happens, a quick spot treatment takes care of it.
What’s left behind
A pile of wood chips and a soft spot of ground. The chips make decent mulch for beds, or we can grind extra deep and backfill with topsoil so you can lay sod. The leftover roots sit below grade and won’t bother anything as they decay. If you’re clearing more than a stump or two, grinding usually pairs with our stump grinding service and broader land clearing work.
When you need stump grinding
- After tree removal — the stump is the part nobody thinks about until they trip on it or catch it with the mower
- Pasture and fence-line reclamation — old stumps that stop a brush hog cold
- Lot clearing — site prep where the ground needs to be flat and usable
- Problem stumps — ones that are sprouting, drawing insects, or just sitting there looking bad
Grinding stumps along the Wasatch Front
We grind stumps across Salt Lake, Utah, and Tooele counties, from Herriman, Draper, Riverton, and Sandy out to Eagle Mountain, Lehi, the Tooele Valley, and home base in West Jordan.
The ground around here runs from valley loam to the rocky, cobbly soil of the benches, and that matters far more for full removal than for grinding. Digging a root ball out of hard bench ground in a dry August is brutal; a grinder works fine in our soil year-round. The one local wrinkle is rock and old fence wire hiding around pasture stumps, which dulls teeth fast, so we check a stump before we cut it. When you’re ready, you can get a free on-site estimate.
Common Questions
Got a stump? Get a flat quote.
Free on-site estimate across the Wasatch Front. We respond fast.
Serving Salt Lake County, northern Utah County, Tooele County, and the greater Wasatch Front