Enter your search term

Search by title or post keyword

Maple Trees

Acer

Quick Definition

Maple trees are deciduous shade and ornamental trees identified by opposite leaf arrangement, palmate lobed leaves, and winged samara seeds. Red maple, sugar maple, and Japanese maple are the most popular residential varieties. Zones 3 to 9 depending on species.

Quick Facts

Family
Sapindaceae (soapberry)
Leaf Type
Deciduous, opposite, palmate lobes
Height Range
10 to 75 ft (by species)
Growth Rate
Slow to fast (by species)
Zones
3 to 9 (by species)
Sun
Full sun to partial shade
Soil
Moist, well-drained, pH 5.5 to 7.0
Fall Color
Red, orange, yellow (by species)
Lifespan
100 to 300+ years
Common Species
Red, Sugar, Silver, Japanese, Norway

Popular Maple Varieties

Variety Height Growth Rate Zones Fall Color Best For
Red Maple 40 to 60 ft Fast (2 to 3 ft/yr) 3 to 9 Brilliant red Shade, fall color
Sugar Maple 60 to 75 ft Medium (1 to 2 ft/yr) 3 to 8 Orange to red Specimen, shade, syrup
Silver Maple 50 to 70 ft Very fast (3+ ft/yr) 3 to 9 Pale yellow Quick shade (weak wood)
Japanese Maple 10 to 25 ft Slow (6 to 12 in/yr) 5 to 8 Red to purple Ornamental, containers
Norway Maple 40 to 50 ft Medium 3 to 7 Yellow Urban tolerance (invasive in some areas)
Autumn Blaze Maple 40 to 55 ft Fast (3 ft/yr) 3 to 8 Orange-red Hybrid vigor, reliable color

Maple Tree Identification

All maples share opposite leaf arrangement (leaves grow in pairs on opposite sides of the stem). This alone separates maples from oaks, elms, and most other trees, which have alternate leaves. Maple leaves are palmate (lobed like an open hand) with 3 to 5 pointed lobes. Maple seeds grow in paired winged ‘helicopters’ called samaras that spin as they fall.

To distinguish species: red maple has 3 to 5 shallow lobes with V-shaped notches and smooth gray bark. Sugar maple has 5 deep lobes with U-shaped notches and furrowed bark. Silver maple has deeply cut 5-lobed leaves with silver undersides. Japanese maple has 5 to 9 delicate, deeply divided lobes.

Growing Conditions

Most maples prefer full sun to partial shade, moist well-drained soil, and slightly acidic to neutral pH (5.5 to 7.0). Red maple is the most adaptable, tolerating wet soils and a wide pH range. Sugar maple is more particular: it needs well-drained soil and struggles in compacted urban settings or alkaline clay. Japanese maple needs afternoon shade protection in zones 7+ to prevent leaf scorch.

In the Omaha metro, Autumn Blaze maple has become the go-to residential maple. It combines red maple’s adaptability with silver maple’s growth speed and delivers reliable orange-red fall color in our zone 5b climate. We avoid silver maple for clients because the weak wood drops branches in every ice storm.

Commonly Confused With

PlantKey Difference
Sweetgum Sweetgum has star-shaped leaves similar to maple but alternate leaf arrangement (not opposite). Sweetgum produces spiky ball-shaped fruit, not winged samaras.
Sycamore Sycamore has maple-like lobed leaves but alternate arrangement, distinctive peeling white bark, and round seed balls. Much larger than most maples at maturity.

Regional Notes

Central Plains (Omaha): Autumn Blaze maple is the most planted residential maple in the Omaha metro. It handles our alkaline clay (pH 7.5+) better than sugar maple, grows fast, and delivers reliable fall color. Avoid silver maple (branch breakage) and Norway maple (invasive, dense shade kills lawn underneath).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best maple tree for a yard?

Red maple for reliable fall color and adaptability. Autumn Blaze for fast growth with red-orange fall color. Japanese maple for small ornamental use. Sugar maple for specimen shade in well-drained soil. Avoid silver maple because the weak wood drops branches in storms.

How fast do maple trees grow?

Varies by species. Silver maple: 3+ feet per year (fastest, weakest). Red maple: 2 to 3 feet per year. Autumn Blaze: 3 feet per year. Sugar maple: 1 to 2 feet per year. Japanese maple: 6 to 12 inches per year. Faster growth generally means weaker wood and shorter lifespan.

When do maple trees lose their leaves?

October to November in most zones. Sugar maple and red maple produce peak fall color in mid-October in zone 5 to 6. Silver maple drops leaves earlier with less color. Japanese maple holds leaves into November. Leaf drop timing varies by 2 to 3 weeks depending on fall temperatures.

Why is my maple tree dripping sap?

Aphid honeydew is the most common cause. Aphids feed on leaf sap and excrete sticky honeydew that drips onto cars and decks below. The dripping is worst in late spring and early summer. A strong blast of water from a hose knocks aphids off small trees. Large trees usually outgrow the problem by midsummer.

Can I tap my maple tree for syrup?

Only sugar maple (Acer saccharum) produces sap with enough sugar content (2 to 3%) for syrup. Red maple and silver maple sap has lower sugar and produces inferior syrup. You need 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of syrup. Tap in late winter (February to March) when nights freeze and days thaw.