Calculate how many trees to plant to offset your CO2 emissions. Enter tonnes CO2 and see trees needed, land area, and time to reach full sequestration.
Trees absorb CO2 through photosynthesis, storing carbon in their wood, roots, and soil. A typical mature tree absorbs approximately 22 kg (48 lbs) of CO2 per year, though this varies enormously by species, climate, and age. Young trees absorb less; fast-growing tropical trees absorb more.
This Tree Planting Offset Calculator estimates how many trees you'd need to plant to offset a given amount of CO2. Enter your annual emissions and the calculator shows trees needed at different sequestration rates, plus the approximate land area required.
While tree planting is a popular and intuitive offset approach, it's important to understand its limitations: trees take decades to reach full sequestration, face risks from fire and disease, and require long-term stewardship.
This measurement provides a critical foundation for energy auditing and sustainability reporting, helping organizations meet regulatory requirements and voluntary environmental commitments. Integrating this calculation into regular energy reviews ensures that conservation strategies are grounded in measured data rather than assumptions about building performance and usage patterns.
Tree planting is the most tangible form of carbon offsetting. This calculator converts abstract CO2 numbers into concrete tree counts, making climate action feel achievable and helping plan realistic reforestation projects. Consistent measurement creates a reliable baseline for tracking energy efficiency improvements and validating the impact of conservation measures and equipment upgrades over time.
Trees needed = CO2 to offset (kg) / CO2 per tree per year (kg). Land area = Trees / Trees per hectare.
Result: ~455 trees needed
10 tonnes = 10,000 kg. Trees: 10,000 / 22 = 455 trees. At 1,100 trees/ha, that's ~0.41 hectares (1 acre).
Tree planting captures public imagination, but the science is nuanced. A tree planted today won't absorb its "average annual" amount for a decade or more. Permanence is not guaranteed. And global reforestation potential, while significant, cannot offset all fossil fuel emissions.
Not all trees are equal for carbon. Fast-growing species like eucalyptus absorb CO2 quickly but may harm biodiversity. Native species support ecosystems but sequester more slowly. Tropical reforestation generally has 2–3× the sequestration rate of temperate planting.
Well-designed reforestation projects provide habitat restoration, watershed protection, soil stabilization, and community livelihoods. These co-benefits often represent as much or more value than the carbon sequestration itself.
A commonly cited figure is 22 kg (48 lbs) CO2 per mature tree per year. However, this varies enormously: a fast-growing tropical tree might absorb 50+ kg/year, while a slow-growing boreal tree might absorb 5–10 kg/year. Species, age, climate, and soil all matter.
Young seedlings absorb very little CO2 in their first 1–3 years. Trees typically reach meaningful sequestration rates by age 5–10, and peak carbon uptake at age 10–30 depending on species. It can take 20+ years before a planted tree offsets the amount used in this calculator.
Typical spacing is 800–1,100 trees per hectare (2.5–4 acres). At 1,000 trees/ha, 1,000 trees need about 1 hectare. To offset 10 tonnes CO2/year with mature trees, you'd need ~0.5 hectares of forest.
Trees carry "permanence risk": fires, storms, disease, or land-use change can release stored carbon. Credible tree-planting programs include buffer pools and long-term management. Trees are best viewed as one tool among many, not a standalone offset strategy.
Protecting existing mature forests prevents immediate, large-scale carbon release. Planting new trees takes decades to build up equivalent carbon stocks. Dollar for dollar, forest protection often delivers more climate benefit per tonne than planting.
About 50% of forest carbon is stored in soil, not tree biomass. Healthy forest soils continue to store carbon for centuries. However, soil carbon accounting is complex and not always included in tree planting offset calculations.