ap

Skip to content
And Chris Allen carry a ...
Charlie Neibergall, The Associated Press
In this 2014 file photo, Avery Langholz, left, and Chris Allen carry a Christmas tree to load into a customer’s car Wednesday in Cumming, Iowa.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

DES MOINES, Iowa — Christmas trees likely will cost a little more this year, and growers like John Tillman say it’s about time.

Six years of decreased demand and low prices put many growers out of business. Those who withstood the downturn are relieved they survived.

“I’m awful proud to still be in the Christmas tree business,” said Tillman, who ships up to 20,000 trees each fall from nine fields south of Olympia, Wash. “We lost a lot of farmers who didn’t make it through.”

Prices vary according to the variety of tree, but growers this year will see about $20 per tree, $2 more than the last several years, according to Bryan Ostlund, executive director of the Salem, Ore.-based Pacific Northwest Tree Association. Prices likely will rise as the holidays near and supply decreases.

Consumers looking to deck their home could pay a little more than last year, but costs vary widely depending on factors such as transportation, tree-lot rental space and big-box retailers’ demand that prices remain stable.

RevContent Feed

More in Business