Pricing
Pricing
Imported/specimen tree pricing is not a simple “per plant” number. It is shaped by maturity size, documentation workflow, and the engineering required to install and establish the tree.
Gallery
Specimen visual guide
Visual context for placement, scale, handling, and landscape integration.
No Four Leaf unit price list is published online. The amounts below are public reporting examples only, included for context. Your project pricing depends on your specific tree class, rootball handling, documentation, installation scope, and aftercare model.
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What drives cost
- Tree maturity/size class (small vs medium vs specimen-grade).
- Documentation and quarantine workflow (phytosanitary certificate and inspection steps).
- Engineering installation scope (soil engineering, drainage interfaces, and bracing where required).
- Irrigation establishment and early-stage maintenance requirements.
- Aftercare model and AMC structure (routine care vs replacement boundaries).
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Public reporting examples (context only)
- Economic Times reported Unique Trees’ imported rare/exotic trees as priced in a wide specimen range of approximately ₹10,000 to ₹12,00,000 per tree.
- Times of India reported two Spain-born olive trees at a combined ₹84 lakh total (₹42 lakh each) (reported example).
- Public listings can also include non-specimen “entry size” plants. For example, Exotic Flora lists an olive fruit plant publicly at ₹1,095 (not a specimen/tree-install price reference).
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How to convert guidance into BOQ scope
If you’re writing specifications, treat “tree pricing” as a bundle of engineered items: documentation package, rootball/handling approach, pit/soil engineering, irrigation establishment, and aftercare boundaries. For an import workflow view, see compliance workflow.
Related
Related links
Services, segments, cost, and proof.
- Why is there no single per-tree rate published?
- Maturity class, species rarity, documentation, engineered install, and AMC depth swing quotes more than a catalogue SKU. Publishing one number would mislead BOQ reviewers.
- What do public press price ranges actually represent?
- They are journalism examples of specimen sales — wide bands from Economic Times reporting, olive headlines in Times of India — labelled on our pricing page as public coverage only, not Four Leaf rates.
- How should teams compare supplier BOQs fairly?
- Line-item scope: rootball size, pit engineering, bracing days, acclimatisation visits, documentation fees, and AMC boundaries — not headline tree price alone.
- What drives the biggest cost swings on specimen BOQs?
- Trunk height/caudex grade, import paperwork, crane complexity, and establishment risk premium on slow or regulated taxa.
- Can entry-size online plant listings benchmark specimen installs?
- No — small potted listings are retail nursery SKUs, not engineered tree install packages with compliance and AMC.






