By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Stump Grinding Intake Forms: What to Capture Before You Start the Grinder

A stump grinding job looks simple from the outside. A machine goes in, the stump goes away, the customer gets a flat yard. What the customer does not see is the irrigation line buried six inches from the root flare, the hardwood species that will take three times longer to grind than the softwood they quoted over the phone, or the gate that is four inches too narrow for the self-propelled grinder. Every one of those surprises costs time, money, or a damaged underground utility — and every one of them is preventable with a proper intake form.

Most stump grinding companies collect a name, address, and "how many stumps." That is a phone message, not an intake. A real stump grinding intake form captures the stump inventory, site conditions, access constraints, utility exposure, equipment requirements, debris plan, and pricing terms before anyone loads a grinder onto a trailer. Here is what that form needs to include and why each field matters.

Service type: grinding is not the same as removal

Customers use "stump grinding" and "stump removal" interchangeably. They are not the same service, they require different equipment, and they produce different results. Your intake form should present clear service categories so the customer selects what they actually need — and so your crew shows up with the right machine:

This service classification overlaps with what tree service companies capture at intake. Many stump grinding jobs originate as add-ons to tree removal — the tree crew takes the tree down and the stump grinder comes in afterward. If you offer both services, your intake should link the two jobs so the stump grinder knows what species was removed, how recently it was cut, and whether the tree crew left the stump high or cut it flush.

Stump inventory: the data that drives the quote

Every stump is a separate line item, and every line item needs its own measurements. A single "number of stumps" field is not enough. Your intake form should capture the following for each stump on the property:

Site assessment: what surrounds the stump matters as much as the stump itself

Stump grinding is destructive work performed inches from things the customer does not want destroyed. Every stump exists in a context — near a fence, above a septic line, on a slope, behind a gate — and that context dictates equipment selection, safety precautions, and price. Your intake needs to capture the full picture:

Much of this site assessment overlaps with what landscaping companies capture at a first visit — access paths, gate widths, underground irrigation, slope. The difference is that a landscaper is planting and grading; a stump grinder is running a machine with carbide-tipped teeth 12 inches underground. The consequences of missing an underground obstacle are more immediate and more expensive.

Equipment selection: access dictates the machine

Your intake form does not need the customer to select a grinder. But the site data you collect at intake determines what equipment your crew brings, and getting that wrong means a wasted trip. The equipment decision flows directly from the intake fields above:

The intake form captures the access constraints; your estimator matches those constraints to the equipment. If you document the gate width, slope, and obstacles at intake, the estimator never has to guess.

Underground utilities: the 811 call and what it does not cover

Underground utility damage is the single highest-liability event in stump grinding. A grinder cutting 12 inches below grade can sever a gas line, a fiber optic cable, or a water main. Your intake form should address utilities as a distinct section, not a checkbox buried in site notes:

Debris and cleanup: grindings volume surprises every customer

Customers consistently underestimate how much debris stump grinding produces. A stump that occupied a 24-inch circle at ground level produces a mound of wood chips that covers an area 6 feet in diameter and 18 inches high. The rule of thumb is 3 to 5 times the stump volume in grindings. Your intake needs to set expectations and capture the customer's cleanup preference:

Pricing: per-inch, minimums, and surcharges

Stump grinding pricing is more variable than most service trades because every stump is a different size, species, and access situation. Your intake form should establish the pricing framework so the customer understands how the quote is built:

Insurance and liability: what goes wrong and who pays

Stump grinding has a specific liability profile that is different from other service trades. The most common claims are underground utility damage, property damage from equipment access, and disputes about re-sprouting. Your intake should address each one:

Building the quote from the intake, not from the phone call

A stump grinding quote built from a phone call is a guess. A quote built from a complete intake form — with diameter measurements, species identification, site access details, utility locates, depth requirements, and cleanup preferences — is an estimate the customer can trust and your crew can execute without surprises. The intake form is also your liability shield: it documents what the customer disclosed, what you agreed to do, and what was excluded.

The difference between a stump grinding company that handles three callbacks a week and one that handles three a month is almost never the quality of the grinding. It is the quality of the intake. The company that captured the gate width, identified the irrigation line, noted the hardwood species, and discussed the re-sprout risk at intake does not get the phone call that starts with "nobody told me."

If you operate across multiple outdoor service lines, the Trade Services Bundle includes stump grinding alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields designed for the way that particular trade actually works.

Stump grinding intake forms — $12.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Stump inventory, diameter and species, site access, utility locates, equipment notes, depth of grind, debris plan, pricing structure, and liability terms. Built for stump grinding and removal companies.

View Stump Grinding Forms

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