Tree lines street in Vancouver with cars parked on either side.

Vancouver's urban forest

Vancouver’s urban forest includes every tree in the city, from the 150,000 street trees and 36,000 specimen trees in our golf courses and urban parks to the more than 1 million trees across 444 hectares of public forests and woodlands managed by City and Park Board staff. There are also many other trees and forests on private property.

Each tree plays an important environmental and social role in Vancouver, including: 

  • Cleaning the air
  • Capturing carbon
  • Absorbing rainwater
  • Providing habitat
  • Improving our health and well-being
  • Protect our city from storms, extreme heat, and the impacts of climate change

Our vision is to guide the management, protection, and expansion of a diverse, resilient, and beautiful urban forest in the City of Vancouver.

Benefits of the urban forest

Vancouver will experience hotter, drier summers, more frequent and intense rainfall events, and rising sea levels because of climate change. The urban forest plays an increasingly important role as we experience the effects of climate change. 

Caring for the urban forest

Urban Forestry related projects 

Adopt a tree

Volunteer for Adopt a tree, a program for people looking to help young trees in their neighbourhood by watering them in the summer months.

Stanley Park forest management

Stanley Park is experiencing a hemlock looper infestation which has caused widespread damage to trees within the park.

Street tree canopy expansion

Trees are being planted in specially excavated pits in paved areas to reduce extreme heat and create shared benefits for everyone.

The Urban Forest Strategy

There can sometimes be competing values and objectives in dealing with trees. This strategy provides a clear and balanced approach to managing, protecting, and expanding the urban forest in our city.

In May 2025, Board and Council unanimously adopted the 2025 Urban Forest Strategy.

Related initiatives and bylaws

Protection of Trees By-law

Preserves, protects, and strengthens our urban forest, while permitting property owners to remove trees for property maintenance and development.

Street Tree Bylaw

Regulates the Vancouver Park Board's care, condition, and management of trees on boulevards and medians of City-owned streets.