Search any forum or homeowner Facebook group and you’ll find the same conversation: someone asking whether they should hire a professional to remove their bamboo or just deal with it themselves. The answers split predictably — “I did it myself, took two weekends, saved $2,000” versus “I tried it myself, gave up, called the pros, paid more than if I’d just called them first.”
Both answers are honest. Both are common. The right answer depends almost entirely on which bamboo you have and how big the problem really is — not on how much you want to save money. This guide walks through the actual cost comparison over a 5-year horizon, the conditions where DIY genuinely works, and the warning signs that mean you’ll spend more attempting DIY than you would by hiring it out from day one.
Related reading on bamboo removal
The Real 5-Year Cost Comparison
Most DIY-versus-pro discussions stop at the first quote: “$1,500 to hire it out, or $300 in supplies if I do it myself.” That’s not the comparison that matters. The comparison that matters is what each path costs over a 5-year horizon — because bamboo regrowth is the silent expense that turns a $300 DIY into a $3,500 DIY-then-pro.

The pattern in the chart above is what we see most weeks on regrowth callouts. The homeowner spent $200–500 on chemicals and tools in year 1, watched the bamboo come back, tried again in year 2 with more aggressive chemicals and a hired excavator, watched it come back smaller, then finally called a professional in year 3 to do it properly. Total spend by year 3 is typically $2,500–$4,500 — for the same job that would have cost $1,500–$2,500 done once professionally.
This isn’t an argument against DIY. It’s an argument against attempting DIY on the wrong type of bamboo. For a small contained clumping bamboo in soft soil, the DIY path is genuinely cheaper — half a day of physical work for the price of a mattock and a couple of bags of soil amendment. For running bamboo on an old established stand, the DIY path almost always ends in calling a professional anyway, plus the cost of everything you tried before that.
The True Cost of DIY Failures

The four numbers above are what we see most frequently when a previously-DIY job gets handed over to us. None of them are obvious at the start of a DIY attempt — they only show up after the fact.
- $300–500 wasted on chemicals. Glyphosate, root killers, weed killers — bought, applied, watched fail. The chemicals worked exactly as designed, just on the wrong target. Bamboo’s underground rhizome network isn’t reached by leaf-applied herbicide in killing concentration.
- 14 hours of weekend time. Three to four weekends of digging and hauling. That time has a real cost — even if you don’t put a dollar value on it, it’s time not spent doing other things you’d rather do.
- 6 weeks until regrowth appears. The minimum fragment size capable of regrowth is 50mm. Even careful DIY excavation typically misses 20–30% of the rhizome network. New shoots start coming up at the 6-week mark, often from positions you thought you’d cleared.
- 2.3× pro cost when called in after DIY. Partially-dug stands are harder to remove than untouched ones because the remaining rhizomes are now hardened off, deeper, and harder to follow. The professional cost to finish what DIY started is typically 2–3× the cost of doing the same job fresh.
What Professional Removal Includes That DIY Skips
The price difference between DIY and professional bamboo removal isn’t just labour — it’s the things a professional crew includes by default that DIY almost always skips.

- Species identification by a Cert3-qualified arborist. DIY usually skips this and treats every bamboo the same way. Wrong identification = wrong method = wrong outcome.
- Rhizome mapping with a probe before quoting. A 30-second tile-rod probe of the soil tells us where the rhizomes actually run, which is almost always further than the visible canopy. DIY estimates the spread by eye, usually under-estimating by 30–60%.
- Mechanical excavation with the right machine. Hand-digging is realistic for clumping bamboo up to 2m diameter. Anything bigger needs a mini excavator. Hiring an excavator yourself is $300–500/day plus you have to operate it without damaging anything underground (services, irrigation, footings).
- Disposal handled. Bamboo waste isn’t standard green waste — it can’t be composted because the rhizomes will regrow. Tip fees are higher for bamboo than for grass clippings. Pros include this in the quote; DIY pays separately and often doesn’t know in advance.
- 6-week follow-up visit included. The 5–10% of jobs that see a regrowth fragment at the 6-week mark get cleared under the original quote. DIY has no follow-up — once you’ve done it, the regrowth is a new problem to solve.
When DIY Actually Works
To be clear: DIY bamboo removal does work in the right conditions. The conditions are narrower than most homeowners realise, but they’re real. If all of these apply to your situation, DIY is genuinely the better path.
DIY conditions that make sense
- The species is clumping — Bambusa multiplex, Bambusa textilis, Fargesia. Rhizome stays in a tight ball, not a sprawling network.
- The clump is less than 2 metres in diameter.
- The plant has been in the ground for less than 5 years — the rhizome is still relatively soft.
- The clump is at least 2 metres from any structure — fence, pool, paving, building.
- The bamboo is entirely on your property (no neighbour source).
- You have two free weekends to commit to the dig.
- You have a mattock, a spade, and a wheelbarrow. Bonus: a small electric mini-tiller.
If all seven of those apply, the DIY path is realistic. Cost: $50–150 in supplies plus two weekends. Result: a properly removed clump that doesn’t come back, for less than 10% of the professional rate.
“The team were responsive and professional. Their quality of work was exceptional, thorough and suggestions were made while the original scope was being carried out that was extremely helpful. A detailed quote and scope of work was provided prior to commencement of the job.”
— Christina, Oyster Bay · ★★★★★
When You Should Skip DIY From Day One
The flip side of the DIY-works list is the DIY-won’t-work list. If any of these apply, attempting DIY is almost certainly going to end with you spending more than if you’d hired a professional from the start.
Conditions where DIY is the more expensive path
- The bamboo is a running variety (Phyllostachys species). Rhizome network is too large for hand excavation and will keep coming back from the perimeter you can’t reach.
- The stand is 5+ years old. Rhizome mat is dense, hardened, deep. The dig is multiple times the work of a younger stand.
- The bamboo is within 2 metres of a fence, pool, paving, or building. Risk of structural damage during excavation exceeds the cost of professional removal.
- The rhizome crosses your boundary into a neighbour’s yard. Partial removal leaves the source intact and the bamboo will keep re-invading.
- You’ve already tried once and it came back. The second removal is harder than the first, and the rhizome has had time to regrow with denser, more aggressive growth.
- You’re not physically up to multi-day digging. The job is genuine heavy labour — six to eight hours per day of pickaxe work, two to three days running.
The Honest Middle Ground
- Clumping species, under 2m diameter
- Stand younger than 5 years
- Soft sandy or loose loam soil
- At least 2m from any fence, pool, or structure
- You have 2 free weekends and basic tools
- Phyllostachys (running) species — any size
- Stand 5+ years old, dense canopy
- Within 2m of fence, pool, paving, or footings
- Source on neighbour’s side — boundary issue
- Previous attempts that grew back stronger
For a lot of Sydney homeowners, the situation isn’t a clean fit with either the DIY list or the skip-DIY list. The bamboo is medium-sized, partly contained, on your side of the fence, but you don’t have weekends free to do the dig yourself.
For those situations, the honest middle ground is to get a written professional quote anyway, then decide. Quotes from ASET are free, written within 48 hours, and you’re under no obligation. Seeing the actual number lets you compare:
- What the professional removal would cost in dollars
- What the DIY removal would cost you in weekends + chemicals + tools + tip fees
- What the risk of DIY failing and needing a pro at year 3 looks like
Half our quotes get accepted, half don’t. We’re not offended by the half that DIY — the goal is the homeowner makes an informed call, not that they go with us by default.
“Great team who does fantastic work. Came out to inspect, talked me through the work, kept me well informed during booking, before arriving and on the job. Very knowledgeable and professional. Job well done and easy recommendation. Will be retaining their services for ongoing work.”
— Kevin, Regents Park · ★★★★★
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, but it usually costs 2–3× more than if we’d done the original removal fresh. Partially-dug stands have the remaining rhizome harder to follow (because it’s been disturbed), deeper (because we have to dig past the broken-off rhizome tips), and more compressed (because compacted soil resists the machine). We’ll quote honestly on whatever state the job is in — but going pro from day one is the cheaper path on anything other than a small clumping job.
The cheapest professional option is a small clumping bamboo job — $500–900 — which is also the only situation where DIY is genuinely cheaper. For anything bigger, professional pricing scales but so does the DIY difficulty, so the relative cost of the two paths stays similar. Full cost breakdown on our bamboo removal cost page.
Yes, on request. If you’ve done the cane removal yourself but want professional excavation, we can quote machine-only for the rhizome work. Saves typically 15–25% on the total compared to a full-service quote. Most homeowners decide a full-service quote is simpler — but if you’ve got the time and want to save the labour cost, we’ll structure the quote that way.
Want a Sydney bamboo specialist to look at your stand? Free on-site visit, written quote within 48 hours.
Get a Free QuoteLook at where the new canes come up. Clumping bamboo throws new canes within 50–200mm of existing canes — the clump expands as a dense thickening cluster. Running bamboo throws new canes anywhere in the rhizome network, often 1–3 metres from any existing cane. If you’re seeing shoots come up in unexpected places — through paving, in the middle of a lawn, on the other side of a fence — it’s almost certainly running. See our running vs clumping guide.
The honest worst-case is a homeowner who spent three years trying chemical-only treatments on a Phyllostachys aurea stand that started at 4 metres of canopy and ended at 12 metres after the failed chemical treatments diverted the rhizome to push aggressively into the neighbour’s yard. The professional removal at the end cost more than 3× what it would have cost in year one — plus the neighbour took legal action over the boundary spread. Most DIY failures are not that dramatic, but the pattern of “small problem becomes a large problem because of attempted-but-failed treatment” is genuinely common.
Usually 5–7 days from your call, faster if you’re in a planning emergency (selling the property, neighbour dispute escalating, council notice received). Site visit is free anywhere in Sydney metro or Western Sydney, no obligation. Written quote follows within 48 hours of the visit. Call 0425 455 321 or email info@asettreeremoval.com.au.
More Bamboo Removal Guides
How You Make the Right Call
Deciding between DIY and professional bamboo removal doesn’t have to be complicated. At ASET Tree Removal, we help you understand exactly what your situation is and make sure you choose the path that’s actually going to work for your property — even if that path is DIY.
No pushy sales tactics. We have a friendly conversation, come out to look at the bamboo, tell you what we’d quote, and tell you honestly whether DIY is realistic for your situation. You move forward at your own pace. People choose to work with us because we educate them on their options and don’t pretend professional is always the right answer.
We’ll walk you through the comparison so you’re not caught off guard. We’ll explain what species you have, how big the underground network actually is, what hand tools could realistically achieve, and where the risk of regrowth lies. We’ll help you make the call that fits your budget and your time.
Our goal is straightforward. We want you to make the call you’d make if you had perfect information.
Get in touch with us today. We’ll review your situation, give you an honest quote, and tell you whether we’d recommend hiring us or trying it yourself.
How We Work With You
Step 1: We Talk and Answer Your Questions
Call or email. We’ll ask about the bamboo and your situation, and book a free on-site visit anywhere in Sydney metro or Western Sydney.
Step 2: We Give You an Honest Assessment
Ahmed comes out, identifies the species, maps the rhizome spread, and tells you whether DIY is realistic for your situation. If it is, we’ll point you at the right tools and method. If it isn’t, we’ll explain why and what the professional removal would involve.
Step 3: You Decide What Works Best
Written quote within 48 hours of the site visit. No deposit to lock in. You decide whether to hire us, do it yourself, or get a second quote — we don’t follow up with pressure.
Step 4: If You Hire Us, We Do the Job Properly
Cert3-qualified, fully insured, 6-week follow-up included, 12-month regrowth guarantee. If anything regrows from a fragment we missed, we come back and clear it under the original quote.
Get in Touch With Us Today
Honest quote on your bamboo situation. Free on-site assessment, written quote within 48 hours, and a candid recommendation on whether DIY is realistic for your job.
- Get in touch: asettreeremoval.com.au/contact
- Phone: 0425 455 321
- Email: info@asettreeremoval.com.au
- Service area: Sydney metro and Western Sydney
About the Author
ASET Tree Removal
ASET Tree Removal is a family-operated specialist vegetation business serving Sydney and Western Sydney. Ahmed is the head arborist — Cert3-qualified with 8+ years of field experience, leading every job on site. Amy handles client communication, quoting, and scheduling, making sure every property is handed back tidier than we found it. Together they run a business where one phone call gets you straight to the people doing the work.
Phone: 0425 455 321 · Email: info@asettreeremoval.com.au · Service area: Sydney metro and Western Sydney
Sources
- NSW WeedWise — Bamboo (Bambusa & Phyllostachys spp.)
- NSW Dividing Fences Act 1991 (boundary obligations between neighbours)
- SafeWork NSW — Manual handling and excavation safety
- Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority — Glyphosate guidance
- NSW Fair Trading — Contractor licensing requirements
- ACCC — Consumer guarantees for services
Information in the arboriculture industry changes frequently. Linked content may change or become outdated. Please always contact us for help with your important property decisions.
