Texas Tree Authority

Facebook | Wednesday, July 8, 2026

What Being Licensed, Bonded, and Insured Actually Protects You From in San Antonio

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Licensed, bonded, and insured gets said so often in this industry that it can start to sound like boilerplate. In practice, it's the difference between a homeowner being protected if something goes wrong on a job and a homeowner being personally liable for it.

If an uninsured crew damages a fence, a roof, or a power line during a removal, that cost typically falls on the property owner, not the company that caused it. Bonding protects against incomplete or abandoned jobs. Insurance covers injury on site, which matters more than people expect given how physical this work is.

San Antonio sees its share of storm-chasing crews after severe weather, offering fast, cheap removals with none of that protection in place. Asking to see proof of insurance before any work starts is a reasonable question, and any legitimate company will have it ready.

Have you ever had a contractor hesitate when you asked for proof of insurance? What made you trust the company you ended up hiring?

#SanAntonioTreeService


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A photo of a crew working safely with proper gear and equipment on a San Antonio job site, conveying professionalism and training. Authentic photos of real crew members at work outperform generic stock imagery for this kind of trust-building content.

Google Drive image folder.

Canva text suggestion: "Licensed, Bonded, Insured, No Exceptions" or "Ask to See the Paperwork First"


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