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Government contracts for tree & arborist services in Arkansas
A snapshot of open federal, state, and local opportunities in Arkansas, updated daily. To search them and get daily matches for your business, sign up free.
About tree & arborist services contracts in Arkansas
Tree & arborist services contracts in Arkansas typically cover hazardous and dead-tree removal at federal facilities, scheduled tree trimming and crown pruning around courthouses and base housing, stump grinding, right-of-way and utility line-clearance vegetation management, storm-debris cleanup, and recurring brush-clearing IDIQs. Federal posts in this category fall under NAICS 561730 (Landscaping Services), the classification that also covers arborist and tree-care work, and the bulk of the work flows to DoD installations, the U.S. Forest Service, the National Park Service, the VA, and state Departments of Transportation. Tree and vegetation contracts are commonly reserved for 8(a), HUBZone, and SDVOSB small businesses, and frequently require ISA-certified arborists and proof of liability coverage given the overhead-hazard work.
There are no open tree & arborist services contracts visible in Arkansas right now, but new postings land daily — historically this category sees several postings per month statewide. Setting up a saved search now means catching the next Arkansas post the moment it hits SAM.gov or the state procurement portal, often several days before vendors who only check manually each week. Buyers span a mix of federal civilian agencies, DoD installations, and state and local governments active in Arkansas.
Beyond federal opportunities, much of the tree & arborist services work in Arkansas is posted through the Arkansas Office of State Procurement (OSP) bid system, with recurring buyers including the Arkansas Department of Transportation and the University of Arkansas System. The state's Procurement Law (Title 19) consolidates most goods-and-services buying through OSP rather than individual agencies. ContractRadar pulls federal postings from SAM.gov alongside state and local feeds so a tree-service and arborist contractor doesn't have to monitor each portal manually.