How to Become a Certified Arborist: Complete Guide 2026
Learn how to become a certified arborist in 2026. ISA certification requirements, exam topics, study resources, career outlook, and salary information.

A certified arborist is a tree care professional credentialed by the International Society of Arboriculture (ISA). Certification requires 3+ years of experience or a degree in arboriculture, passing a 200-question exam, and maintaining 30 CEUs every 3 years. Certified arborists earn $45,000-$85,000 annually.
Candidates can also sharpen their skills with our Prometric practice test 2026, which includes hundreds of practice questions in the exact format and difficulty of the real exam.
Healthcare candidates preparing for certification exams should also practice with our HESI practice test 2026, which covers the clinical reasoning and professional standards sections of the real exam.
Healthcare professionals preparing for certification should also practice with our RMA medical assistant exam 2026, which covers the clinical reasoning, patient care, and pharmacology sections of the official exam.
What Does an Arborist Do?
ISA Arborist Certification Requirements
To earn your arborist certification, you must meet ISA's eligibility requirements:
Option 1: Experience-Based
- 3 or more years of full-time, hands-on experience in arboriculture or related field
- Experience must be verifiable by an employer or supervisor
Option 2: Education + Experience
- Associate degree in arboriculture, forestry, horticulture, or related field + 2 years experience
- Bachelor's degree in a related field + 1 year experience
- Graduate degree in a related field + no minimum experience
Application Process:
- Create an ISA account at isa-arbor.com
- Submit your application with proof of experience/education ($200 application fee for ISA members, $350 for non-members)
- Receive approval and schedule your exam
- Pass the certification exam
- Maintain certification with 30 CEUs every 3 years ($130 renewal fee)
The Arborist Certification Exam
The ISA Certified Arborist exam is a comprehensive test of arboricultural knowledge:
- Format: 200 multiple-choice questions
- Time: 3.5 hours
- Passing score: 76% (152 out of 200)
- Delivery: Computer-based at Prometric testing centers or ISA-organized sessions
Exam domains and approximate weight:
- Soil management (11%) — Soil structure, drainage, compaction, amendments
- Tree biology (14%) — Photosynthesis, compartmentalization, growth patterns
- Tree identification and selection (10%) — Species ID, site matching, planting specifications
- Tree installation and establishment (9%) — Planting depth, staking, mulching, watering
- Pruning (14%) — ANSI A300 standards, pruning types, timing, wound response
- Diagnosis and treatment (13%) — Diseases, insects, abiotic disorders, IPM
- Tree risk assessment (10%) — TRAQ methodology, failure modes, target assessment
- Tree protection (6%) — Construction damage prevention, root zone protection
- Urban forestry (7%) — Community programs, ordinances, benefits valuation
- Safety (6%) — ANSI Z133 safety standards, PPE, electrical hazards
Study with our practice quizzes: Tree Biology and Physiology and Soil and Water Management.
Arborist Career and Salary Guide
Certified arborist salaries vary by role, location, and experience:
| Role | Experience | Annual Salary |
|---|---|---|
| Tree Climber/Groundworker | 0-2 years | $30,000-$42,000 |
| Certified Arborist (Field) | 3-5 years | $45,000-$60,000 |
| Senior Arborist/Foreman | 5-10 years | $55,000-$75,000 |
| Consulting Arborist | 10+ years | $65,000-$100,000 |
| Municipal/City Arborist | 5+ years | $55,000-$85,000 |
| Utility Arborist | 3+ years | $50,000-$70,000 |
The certified arborist credential adds approximately $5,000-$15,000 to base salary compared to uncertified tree workers. Consulting arborists who provide expert witness testimony can charge $150-$350 per hour.
How to Pros and Cons
- +Certified has a defined, publicly available content blueprint — candidates know exactly what to prepare for
- +Multiple preparation pathways (self-study, courses, coaching) accommodate different learning styles and schedules
- +A growing ecosystem of study resources means candidates at any budget level can access quality preparation materials
- +Clear score reporting allows candidates to identify specific strengths and weaknesses for targeted remediation
- +Professional recognition associated with strong performance provides tangible career and academic benefits
- −The scope of tested content requires substantial preparation time that competes with existing professional or academic commitments
- −No single resource covers the full content scope — candidates typically need multiple study tools for comprehensive preparation
- −Test anxiety and exam-day performance variability mean preparation effort does not always translate linearly to scores
- −Registration, preparation, and potential retake costs accumulate into a significant financial investment
- −Content and format can change between exam versions, making older preparation materials less reliable
Arborist Questions and Answers
About the Author
Environmental Scientist & Agricultural Certification Expert
UC Davis College of Agricultural & Environmental SciencesDr. Maria Santos earned her PhD in Agronomy from UC Davis and holds a Master of Science in Environmental Science alongside her Certified Hazardous Materials Manager designation. With 14 years of field and academic experience across soil science, water quality, and sustainable agriculture, she has guided hundreds of candidates through environmental and agronomy certification exams.
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