Tree Spacing Calculator - Trees per Acre and Planting Density | LazyTools

Tree Spacing Calculator

Calculate how many trees fit per acre from spacing distance, or find the spacing needed for a target tree count. Supports square, triangular and row planting. Species guide included.

Trees per acreSpacing from count3 planting patternsSpecies spacing guide

Tree Spacing Calculator Tool

Spacing calculator
Reset
Formula: Trees/acre = 43,560 / (tree spacing x row spacing). Triangular factor: x 0.866.
Enter values and click Calculate
Trees per acre
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Total tree count
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for given area
Spacing used
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tree x row (ft)
Planting pattern
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Area required
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acres
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★ Key features

Why use this free tree spacing calculator?

Built with the features most competitors miss — from benchmark comparisons to multi-method inputs and actionable guidance.

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Three calculation modes
Trees per acre from spacing, spacing from count plus area, or area needed from count plus spacing — all three modes in one tool.
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Square and triangular patterns
Triangular (quincunx) planting fits 15% more trees and the calculator accounts for the 0.866 factor automatically.
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Separate tree and row spacing
Enter different within-row and between-row spacing for rectangular arrangements common in orchards and timber plantations.
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Total count and area output
Shows trees per acre, total count for your area, and required area for your target count simultaneously.
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Species spacing guide in reference table
Recommended spacing ranges by planting purpose in the reference table below.
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Free, browser-based
No registration, no download. Works on any device.
📄 How to use

How to use this tree spacing calculator

1
Select calculation mode
Choose trees per acre from spacing, required spacing from a target count, or area needed from count and spacing.
2
Enter spacing values
Enter tree spacing (distance between trees in a row). Row spacing is the distance between rows; leave blank for equal square spacing.
3
Choose planting pattern
Square grid is standard. Triangular (quincunx) fits 15% more trees per acre.
4
Read your results
Trees per acre, total count, spacing used, pattern, and area required are all shown simultaneously.
📚 Reference

Trees per acre by spacing (square pattern)

SpacingTrees per acreTypical use
4 x 4 ft2,722Intensive restoration, nursery row
6 x 6 ft1,210Windbreak, high-density restoration
8 x 8 ft681Initial timber planting density
10 x 10 ft436Standard timber spacing
12 x 12 ft302Wider timber, semi-dwarf orchard
15 x 15 ft194Standard orchard spacing
20 x 20 ft109Standard orchard, mature hardwoods
30 x 30 ft48Landscape / shade tree spacing
📈 vs the competition

How this calculator compares

LazyTools fills the gaps most competing tools leave open — deeper analysis, benchmark context, and actionable guidance alongside the core calculation.

FeatureLazyToolsOmniCalculatorPlantAddictsCSGNetwork
Trees per acre from spacing✓ Yes
Spacing from target tree count✓ Yes
Area needed from count + spacing✓ Yes
Square vs triangular pattern✓ Yes
Different tree and row spacing✓ Yes
Purpose-based spacing guide✓ Yes
📖 Complete guide

Tree Spacing Calculator: Complete Guide

Getting tree spacing right is one of the most important decisions in any planting project. Plant too densely and trees compete for light and water. Plant too widely and you waste productive land and delay canopy closure.

The 43,560 rule: trees per acre formula

One acre = 43,560 square feet. For square grid planting with spacing S feet: Trees per acre = 43,560 / S squared. For rectangular planting with tree spacing T and row spacing R: Trees per acre = 43,560 / (T x R). For triangular planting: Trees per acre = 43,560 / (T x R x 0.866). The factor 0.866 accounts for the additional land efficiency of offset rows.

Tree spacing by planting purpose

Timber production hardwoods are typically planted at 8x8 to 12x12 ft (303 to 680 trees/acre) with planned thinning to a final 50 to 80 trees/acre. Orchards depend on rootstock vigour: high-density apple on dwarfing rootstock at 2x10 to 3x12 ft (1,200 to 2,000 trees/acre); standard vigorous rootstocks at 20x20 to 25x25 ft. Windbreaks use 6 to 10 ft within-row spacing; multi-row shelterbelts 10 to 12 ft within rows and 12 to 16 ft between rows. Restoration plantings use 4x4 to 6x6 ft for rapid canopy closure.

Triangular vs square planting patterns

Triangular (quincunx) planting fits approximately 15% more trees per acre at the same between-tree distance. The formula adjustment factor is 0.866 (the sine of 60 degrees in the equilateral triangle formed by three adjacent trees). The trade-off is that triangular planting is slightly harder to manage mechanically since rows don't align in two perpendicular directions simultaneously.

Planning for thinning in timber plantations

Commercial timber plantations account for thinning in their initial spacing design. Higher initial density creates competition driving height growth and stem form, then periodic thinning removes inferior trees concentrating growth on the best stems. A typical rotation: plant at 400 trees/acre (10x10 ft), thin to 200 trees/acre at 8 to 10 years, thin to 80 trees/acre at 20 to 25 years, harvest at 50 years with 50 to 80 trees/acre remaining.

Accounting for non-plantable areas

Before calculating tree count, determine net plantable area by subtracting access roads, turning headlands, wet areas, existing vegetation, and buffer strips from total area. Typically 5 to 15% of a plantation area is non-plantable. Use the net plantable area in the calculator to get an accurate tree count for procurement and cost budgeting.

Frequently asked questions

At 6x6 ft: approximately 1,210 trees/acre. At 10x10 ft: approximately 436 trees/acre. At 20x20 ft: approximately 109 trees/acre. Triangular planting adds about 15% more trees at the same spacing.
Square: Trees/acre = 43,560 / (tree spacing x row spacing). Triangular: Trees/acre = 43,560 / (spacing x row spacing x 0.866). Example: 12x12 ft square = 43,560 / 144 = 302 trees/acre.
Most hardwood timber (oak, walnut, ash): initial planting at 8x8 to 10x10 ft (435 to 680 trees/acre) with planned thinning to 50 to 80 trees/acre at maturity.
Dwarf rootstock: 8 to 10 ft. Semi-dwarf: 12 to 16 ft. Standard/vigorous: 18 to 25 ft. Tractor-access row spacing: minimum 18 to 22 ft.
Single-row windbreaks: 8 to 12 ft within row. Multi-row shelterbelts: 10 to 14 ft within rows, 12 to 18 ft between rows. Allow 50 to 100 ft setback from field crops.
Square (grid) places trees at equal distances in both directions. Triangular (quincunx) offsets alternate rows by half the spacing, fitting about 15% more trees per acre at the same between-tree distance.
At 10x10 ft: 1,000 / 436 = 2.3 acres. At 15x15 ft: 1,000 / 194 = 5.2 acres. At 20x20 ft: 1,000 / 109 = 9.2 acres.
Timber: plant at 8x8 to 12x12 ft, thin over time to 50 to 80 trees/acre. Landscape: space at least 30 to 40 ft apart for full canopy development.
Subtract access roads, turning headlands, wet areas and buffer strips from total area. Typically 5 to 15% of a plantation area is non-plantable.
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