Tree Removal Permit Requirements in Pennington County, SD
Pennington County Planning & Zoning at 900 Concourse Drive Suite 160 in Rapid City (Director Brittney Hand AICP CFM MAS, Assistant Director Jason Theunissen AICP CFM ICC Building Inspector) issues all building permits for unincorporated Pennington County and small incorporated towns that do not operate separate building departments — including the City of Wall (population ~770, ZIP 57790, on I-90 near Badlands National Park, home of Wall Drug). The City of Wall (501 Main Street, Wall SD 57790, 605-279-2663, wallsd.us) handles only zoning and land-use within city limits; building permits route through Pennington County. Rapid City (population ~75K, separate building authority, ZIPs 57701-57709) is in Pennington County but operates its own building department; this database has Rapid City as a separate jurisdiction (id=737). Pennington County Ordinance 735 adopts the 'most current edition' of the International Residential Code; South Dakota Codified Law 11-10 sets 2021 IBC as the statewide default. IECC Climate Zone 5B (cold-dry semi-arid prairie), 42-inch frost depth typical for western SD. South Dakota has NO state contractor licensing for general construction; only electricians and plumbers are state-licensed (via SD Electrical Commission and SD Plumbing Commission). All contractors must hold a SD Contractor's Excise Tax License via the Department of Revenue regardless of trade. Owner-builders may build their own primary residence under SDCL 11-10-6 exemption (per SD DOR owner-occupied guide). Distinctive features: (1) High prairie wind / hail / tornado exposure (no terrain shielding at ~2,800 ft elevation); (2) Most rural 57790 parcels on private well + septic, county handles wastewater design review as part of permit; (3) Tourism economy (Wall Drug, Badlands NP visitors) drives seasonal RV park / hospitality construction; (4) Cheyenne River tributaries — verify FEMA flood zone for 57790 parcels via msc.fema.gov; (5) NOT on tribal land (Pine Ridge Reservation is ~80-100 mi south, Cheyenne River ~100 mi northwest).
By Joey, Founder · Last verified April 25, 2026 · How we research →
When you don’t need a Tree Removal permit in Pennington County
Tree removal on private property is not regulated by a general county tree-permit ordinance. The semi-arid prairie has limited tree cover; cottonwoods along creek bottoms and ponderosa pines in higher elevations are most common. Trees in road right-of-way or BLM grazing land follow separate state/federal rules.
Tree Removal Permit Costs: Pennington County vs. Nearby
| City | Estimated Fee |
|---|---|
| Pennington County | N/A |
| Sioux Falls | $25 – $500 |
| Rapid City | $25 – $500 |
| Aberdeen | $25 – $500 |
Fees shown are estimates based on local building code data. Actual fees may vary based on project scope and valuation. See all Pennington County permit costs →
Zoning & HOA Considerations
Many cities protect trees above a certain diameter at breast height (DBH), commonly 6", 12", 19", or 20", and some cities protect specific species (oak, sycamore) regardless of size. Portland, Atlanta, Austin, Seattle, and Los Angeles all have significant tree protection rules. Houston and most of Texas have none.
If you live in an HOA community: hOAs commonly regulate tree removal, particularly for front-yard trees and specimen trees. Even where city law permits removal, HOA approval may be required.
Estimated Project Timeline in Pennington County
Here's a typical timeline for a tree removal project in Pennington County, SD:
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Frequently Asked Questions
Contact Pennington County's building department for current Tree Removal permit fee information. Fees typically vary based on project scope and valuation.
It depends on the specifics of your project. Some smaller Tree Removal projects may be exempt from permit requirements, while larger ones typically require a permit. Use our free lookup tool to check your specific situation.
Working without a required permit in Pennington County can result in fines, stop-work orders, being required to remove completed work, and complications when selling your home. It's always best to check first.
Contact Pennington County's building department for current processing times. Timelines vary based on project complexity and whether plan review is required.
If you live in an HOA community, you may need architectural review approval in addition to a building permit. HOA rules and city building codes are separate, you may need to satisfy both. Review your CC&Rs and submit to your HOA's architectural review committee before starting work.
Learn More About Tree Removal Permits
Read our complete guide covering permit requirements, costs, common exemptions, and the application process.
Read Tree Removal Guide →