Arborist wood chips are one of the most effective and affordable mulching materials available, yet most homeowners drive right past the tree crew trucks that produce them every day. This guide explains exactly what arborist wood chips are, how they differ from the bagged mulch at your garden center, and step-by-step instructions for using them to suppress weeds, improve soil health, and protect your landscape. You’ll also learn how to avoid the few common mistakes that trip people up.
Arborist wood chips are the raw material produced when tree care professionals feed branches, bark, leaves, and small-diameter wood through a commercial chipper. The result is a heterogeneous mix of wood fiber, bark, cambium layer, and leaf fragments in varying sizes—typically ranging from small slivers to chunks a few inches across. In academic literature, you’ll sometimes see them called “ramial wood chips,” a term that specifically refers to chips made from small-diameter branch wood.
That variety is a feature, not a flaw. Unlike store-bought bagged mulch—which is processed to a uniform size, often dyed, and frequently made from recycled pallets or construction waste—arborist chips come straight from living trees. The mix of materials mimics what happens naturally on a forest floor, where decomposing wood, bark, and leaf litter create a layered, biologically active environment that feeds the soil over time.
Bagged decorative mulch has its uses, but it’s a different product. It’s designed to look consistent, not to feed soil biology. Arborist chips are designed by no one—they’re a byproduct of tree work, which is exactly what makes them so valuable. For a closer comparison, see our breakdown of the difference between mulch and wood chips.
The short case for arborist chips: they do more for your soil than almost any other mulch type, they’re available locally, and they’re far cheaper than bagged alternatives. Here’s what the research actually shows.
This is the headline benefit, and the data backs it up. A 2–4 inch layer of wood chips deprives weed seeds of the light they need to germinate and creates a physical barrier that established weeds struggle to push through. Studies reviewed by WSU Extension researcher Dr. Linda Chalker-Scott show wood chip mulch can reduce weed emergence by up to 90% compared to bare soil. That’s not “helps with weeds”—that’s near-elimination for most annual weed species.
Mulched soil loses moisture significantly more slowly than bare soil. During the dry stretches that hit Massachusetts gardens in July and August, that difference shows up fast. A proper layer of chips can cut watering needs by half or more, protecting plant roots from stress and reducing the time you spend dragging a hose around.
Wood chips act as insulation in both directions. In summer, they keep soil cooler during heat waves—critical for shallow-rooted plants and newly installed perennials. In winter, they buffer against hard freezes and reduce the frost heave that can damage root systems and push plants out of the ground.
This is where arborist chips pull ahead of almost every other mulch type. As they decompose—slowly, over months and years—they feed the soil food web: bacteria, fungi, earthworms, and the full community of organisms that make healthy soil productive. Beneficial mycorrhizal fungi in particular thrive in decomposing wood, forming networks that extend plant root reach and improve nutrient uptake. Bagged mulch decomposes too, but the biological activity it supports is a fraction of what fresh arborist chips deliver.
On sloped ground or newly disturbed soil, chips absorb the impact of rain, slow surface runoff, and hold soil in place while plants establish. This is especially relevant for suburban Massachusetts yards where spring snowmelt and heavy April rain can strip bare soil quickly.
For a deeper look at chip types and what works best in different situations, see our guide to the best type of wood chip mulch.
Applying wood chips isn’t complicated, but a few specific details—depth, placement, and timing—make the difference between chips that work and chips that cause problems. Here’s how to do it right.
A few persistent misconceptions keep homeowners from using arborist chips. Here’s what the research actually shows on each one.
This is the most common concern, and it’s based on a real phenomenon that’s being applied too broadly. When wood chips decompose, soil microbes consume nitrogen to fuel the process—temporarily tying it up at the soil surface where chips contact the ground. This is true. What’s not true is that it affects your plants.
The nitrogen tie-up occurs in the top inch or so of soil. For established trees, shrubs, and perennials whose roots extend well below that zone, it’s simply not relevant. Research consistently shows no measurable nitrogen deficiency in plants mulched with arborist chips. The exception is annual vegetables planted directly into fresh chip-amended soil—in that specific case, the concern has merit. As a surface mulch around established plants, it doesn’t.
The evidence doesn’t support this. Studies show that mulch doesn’t increase termite colonization when it’s kept a few inches away from the foundation of your house. Termites are attracted to wood-to-soil contact at or below grade, not to mulch sitting on the surface several feet from a structure. Maintain a chip-free zone within 6–12 inches of your foundation and the termite risk is no different than bare soil.
Arborists do chip diseased wood—that’s part of their job. The concern that those chips will then spread disease through your garden is understandable but largely unfounded. The decomposition process that begins in a chip pile generates heat and intense microbial competition that neutralizes most pathogens before they have any opportunity to affect nearby plants. Surface-applied chips also don’t introduce pathogens to root zones the way infected soil or contaminated tools would. The practical exception is chips from trees with certain systemic diseases—oak wilt, for instance—where extra caution is reasonable. For general tree pruning debris, the risk is negligible.
This one shows up frequently in gardening forums and has almost no support in research. The pH effect of wood chip mulch on underlying soil is minimal—typically less than half a point in either direction, which is within normal seasonal variation for most soils. If you’re growing acid-loving plants like blueberries, chips won’t meaningfully change your pH. If you’re concerned about soil pH for a specific application, a soil test is the right tool—not avoiding wood chips.
Arborist chips are versatile enough to work across most areas of a home landscape. Here are the applications that deliver the best results in suburban New England settings.
This is the highest-impact application. A 2–4 inch ring of chips extending to the drip line (or as far as practical) protects roots, retains moisture, moderates soil temperature, and suppresses competing vegetation. Mature shade trees with their roots fighting against compacted lawn are particularly good candidates. Keep chips off the trunk and you’ll see visibly healthier trees within a season or two.
Wood chips are ideal in perennial beds because the plants are established—they’re not going anywhere—and the chips can do their slow soil-building work undisturbed year after year. Native plant gardens and pollinator gardens benefit especially well from wood chip mulch: the biologically active chip layer mimics the woodland and meadow edges where many native perennials naturally thrive. It’s one of the most hands-off ways to maintain a low-maintenance garden.
Soft, affordable, and visually clean—wood chip paths are one of the best things you can do for a vegetable garden or a yard with multiple distinct zones. Four to six inches between raised beds or along garden borders handles foot traffic, keeps mud off vegetables, and looks intentional without requiring any construction. Top off once a year as chips compact and decompose.
In the vegetable garden, the rule is: chips on the paths, not directly in the annual planting beds. Fresh arborist chips as path material between beds delivers all the weed suppression and mud-prevention benefits without any of the nitrogen concerns. Keep them out of the active root zone for annuals and they’re an excellent tool.
New England yards with grade changes and spring melt are prime erosion candidates. A few inches of chips on bare or newly graded slopes absorbs rain impact, slows runoff, and holds soil in place while plants establish. Chips work well in this role even before a permanent groundcover fills in.
If you’re converting lawn to a garden bed, thick wood chips (6–8 inches) laid directly over mowed grass will smother the existing vegetation and build soil underneath over one to two seasons. This “no-dig” approach—related to the Back to Eden method—works well for establishing new perennial beds without the labor of removing sod. It’s most effective when started in fall, giving a full winter for decomposition to begin.
Bulk wood chips are a practical and affordable ground cover under swing sets and backyard play equipment. They provide impact absorption, drain quickly, and cost significantly less than rubber mulch or engineered wood fiber. Apply at least 9 inches deep under active play equipment for adequate impact attenuation, and top off as needed.
Woodchuck makes it easy to get fresh arborist chips delivered directly to your driveway—skip the hauling and get locally sourced wood chips delivered to your door. If you’re in the MetroWest area, wood chip delivery in the MetroWest area is available through Woodchuck.
This is where most guides on arborist chips drop the ball. They explain what the chips are and why they’re valuable, then leave you to figure out how to actually get some. Here’s the realistic picture.
Some Massachusetts towns offer free wood chips from municipal tree work. Supply is inconsistent and pickup is often self-serve at a town facility, which means you need a truck or trailer to move any useful quantity. It’s a good option if you’re flexible on timing and have the means to haul material yourself, but for most homeowners, it’s not a reliable plan.
You can call local tree companies and ask if they’ll drop a load when working in your area. Many will, especially if you’re close to an active job. The tradeoff: you have no control over timing (they drop the load when it’s convenient for them), no advance notice on quantity, and no consistency if you need chips regularly. It works, but requires patience and flexibility.
The cleaner option is a chip-matching service that coordinates between homeowners who want chips and local arborists who need a nearby drop point. See how Woodchuck connects you with local arborists: you schedule a delivery, and a local arborist drops fresh chips at your address when they’re working in your area. No hauling, no waiting for a random call, no driving to a municipal facility with a truck. The chips are fresh, locally sourced, and diverted from the landfill—aligned with our mission to keep wood chips out of landfills.
When chips arrive, here’s what you’re looking for. A good load of arborist chips should:
Chips from a mix of tree species are completely fine—variety in the source material actually supports a wider range of soil organisms during decomposition. Don’t worry about matching chip species to plant species; it’s not necessary.
Arborist wood chips are one of the most practical and underused tools in residential landscaping. They suppress weeds, feed your soil, cut watering time, and protect plants through New England winters—all from material that arborists need to get rid of anyway. The main thing standing between most homeowners and a healthier yard is simply knowing how to get a load delivered.
See how Woodchuck delivery works and get fresh arborist chips on your driveway thi