The research
- Why you should trust us
- Who this is for
- How we picked
- How we tested
- Top pick: National Tree Company 7.5-foot Feel Real Downswept Douglas Fir (PEDD1-D12-75)
- Realistic look with traditional lights: Puleo 7.5-foot Royal Majestic Douglas Fir Downswept Tree (RMDD-75QC8)
- An unlit tree that can last: Balsam Hill 7.5-foot Classic Blue Spruce Tree
- A standard tree within a smaller footprint: Grandin Road 7.5-foot Classic Slim Christmas Tree
- A flocked style: King of Christmas 7-foot King Noble Flock Fir
- Retro metallic glamour: Puleo 6.5-foot Royal Majestic Spruce Rose Gold Tree (RMSRG-65C5)
- Budget pick: Puleo 7.5-foot Pre-Lit Aspen Fir Tree (277-APG-75C7)
- The competition
- On fake trees, real trees, and harming the environment
Why you should trust us
Our crash course in artificial Christmas trees began in 2016, when I spent hours examining trees at House of Holiday (New York City’s largest holiday shop), whose owner, Larry Gurino, “love[s] to geek out over artificial trees”—and did so, to my great benefit. I later visited a fake-tree manufacturer’s New Jersey headquarters to learn more about how trees are designed and made. Since then I’ve shopped extensively for trees online and at several big-box stores, spoken with the owners and representatives of many manufacturers, and set up, troubleshot, decorated, and packed away nearly 20 trees. Senior editor Courtney Schley interviewed the American Christmas Tree Association, which represents artificial-tree makers, to further understand the industry itself, including the manufacturing processes, sales and design trends, and statistics. And many Wirecutter staffers own one of our picks and have provided detailed feedback over the years.
Who this is for
The best way to think about who should get an artificial Christmas tree is to compare the benefits and drawbacks of fake versus live trees.
On the plus side, artificial trees are:
Durable: A good artificial Christmas tree can last a decade, whereas live trees last a single season.
Cost-effective over the long term: Up front, artificial trees are much more expensive than live trees. In 2022, a live tree on average cost $80, according to the National Christmas Tree Association, which represents the live-tree industry. If you live in a major city, you may find that hard to believe; in our experience, prices there have tended to be much higher. In any case, a good artificial tree can last a decade or more, so the up-front cost is spread out over time.
Low maintenance and low stress: You don’t have to water a fake tree or shimmy underneath it to secure it in a stand. You don’t have to get to the live-tree lot early enough every year to find a good one, or schlep it home from a cut-it-yourself farm (traditions that plenty of people enjoy, of course). Having the tree at home and ready to go when Thanksgiving wraps up means one fewer errand and one less expense at a busy, budget-straining time of year.
Not messy: A fake tree doesn’t scratch up the roof of your car in transit or cover your hands in sap when you’re moving it or setting it up. A fake tree doesn’t shed, and it wouldn’t leave a sad trail of needles if you were to you drag it out of the house after New Year’s Day.
Safer than live trees: A 2019 New York Times article noted that around 160 home fires a year involved Christmas trees, and the National Fire Protection Association reported that “a disproportionate share of Christmas tree fires involved natural trees.” (In an NFPA video, a dry, unwatered live tree burns furiously.) The NFPA also found that Christmas tree lights were the cause of close to half of all Christmas tree fires. Be sure to check any tree lights for exposed wires, and never hang ornaments directly on a wire—the sharp point on a hanger can pierce the wire’s protective coating.
On the downside, fake trees are:
A pain to store: Storage is the most important reason to skip a fake tree—if you don’t have a garage, a big closet, or a basement where you can keep a box the size of a water heater in the offseason, forget it. And if you store your tree in an uninsulated space, both heat and dampness can damage it and shorten its lifespan. We recommend further protecting your investment with a dedicated storage bag, such as the Elf Stor Christmas Tree Bag; they’re easier to get a tree into than the original carton.
Not beautiful out of the box: With a fake tree, setup is hardly effortless, as we saw consistently during our firsthand tests. “Fluffing,” or individually splaying and shaping the hundreds of branch tips, can take an hour if you’re working alone. By contrast, once you get a live tree back home and secure it in the stand, you just need to put its best face forward and start decorating.
Not 100% realistic: Even the highest-quality fake trees still don’t appear truly lifelike when viewed up close. They can be quite similar to the real thing, but their plastic branches usually have a uniform appearance and a waxen shine that tells the eye they’re unnatural. That said, from a distance and lit up, they can look very, very good.
Odorless: Fake trees lack the sweet piney aroma that many people associate with Christmas.
There’s also the question of whether fake trees or real trees are better for the environment. The conclusion we reached is that live trees are considerably better in that regard. But buying a fake tree every 10 years is a drop in the environmental bucket compared with the ecological cost of other, everyday consumption (gasoline, food, electricity, plane travel, and so on).
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How we picked
We sought versatile designs around 7 feet in height. You can find plenty of great artificial trees these days, in all manner of “species” (assorted firs, spruces, redwoods, and pines) and in multiple heights, girths, forms, colors, and lighting styles. For this guide, we defaulted to the most popular species, as determined by our research into sales trends. Interviews with manufacturers and the American Christmas Tree Association revealed that a 7- or 7.5-foot size is the most popular, since ceilings in US homes are usually 8 or 8.5 feet high, so our picks generally reflect that.
We felt some sticker shock. We were surprised to find how much a good fake tree costs. But cost and realism go hand in hand on artificial trees. Using molds often taken from actual branches, artificial-tree manufacturers shape polyethylene (PE) to produce highly realistic branch tips. A higher percentage of polyethylene on a tree generally commands a higher price.
We sought a blend of materials. Well into the 2000s, the only material that manufacturers used in artificial trees was polyvinyl chloride (PVC). On most trees now, PVC appears primarily as the obviously fake, tinsel-like filler branches near the tree’s trunk. Those branches aren’t prominently visible, but they do add visual density, helping to give the impression of an especially full tree. PVC is cheaper to produce than PE, and it’s also a lot lighter. In searching for trees that had a good mix of realistic PE tips and internal PVC filler, we balanced realism, cost, and weight.
On the topic of PVC: The use of lead as a PVC stabilizer was once a genuine health concern, but this hasn’t been an issue in artificial trees sold in the United States (PDF) for years. So we didn’t rule out trees with PVC in the mix.
We wanted them pre-lit. Pre-lit trees make up 90% of the artificial trees sold in the US, according to the American Christmas Tree Association, and most of them now use energy-saving and durable LED bulbs. We looked for pre-lit trees that had roughly 100 bulbs (or more) per foot of tree height; fewer than that can make the lighting appear sparse. To cover everyone’s tastes, we kept an eye out for trees that could switch between all-white and multicolor lighting. We didn’t prioritize flashing light patterns or other visual effects. As House of Holiday’s Larry Gurino told us, “Most people don’t use them—they just want to see them [advertised] on the box.”
We decided to dismiss extremely low-priced options. After years of testing trees in every price bracket, in 2021 we elected to stop recommending trees at the lowest pricing tiers (those in the $150-or-less range at the 7-foot height). The flimsy materials they’re made of quickly reveal their shortcomings: The needles readily shed when you’re setting up the tree or packing it away, branches break, and the overall look goes from passable to ragged over a few years.
We considered smart options. Finally, we looked into smart trees that you can control via an app or voice assistant, but we soon realized that the best way to do so is to use a reliable plug-in smart outlet and control the tree through that.
How we tested
For the 2019 version of this guide, we brought in eight trees of various styles and levels of realism and asked a diverse group of Wirecutter folks—writers, programmers, business managers, our editor-in-chief—to set them up in our office in Long Island City, New York. I participated in the setup of each tree to get firsthand experience with all of our contenders. And we invited everyone in the office to share their preferences and impressions of the trees over the course of two weeks. Since then, with office access restricted due to the pandemic, I’ve tested a more limited number of trees on my own, primarily aiming to diversify our range of recommendations.
Here’s what we learned from group testing:
- No fake tree looks truly lifelike. If you’re up close (say, at a distance of 6 feet or less), you’ll know it’s synthetic. Living trees have asymmetries, scars, and other “imperfections” that tell the eye that they’re real.
- But even inexpensive trees can look very good. That’s especially true for trees that are in dim light, fully decorated, and seen from a slight distance. Pricier trees—those with a high proportion of realistic branch tips—can look confusingly real.
- Fake trees need fluffing. Arriving with their branches tightly compressed from being squeezed into the shipping box, they look like furry green war clubs. To make a tree look good, you have to “fluff it,” a tedious process in which you manually separate and arrange the branch tips to give the tree more volume and a lifelike form. If you’re working solo, the task can take up to an hour. The branches can scrape your hands and forearms, so wear gloves.
- Hooking up the strings of lights on pre-lit trees can be a hassle. With many trees, you have to hunt down the plugs on each section and either hook them together or draw them down through the tree to a common, power-strip-like master plug. We greatly prefer trees whose wiring runs through the “trunk” and automatically connects when you stack the sections atop one another during setup.
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Top pick: National Tree Company 7.5-foot Feel Real Downswept Douglas Fir (PEDD1-D12-75)
Top pick
National Tree Company 7.5-foot Feel Real Downswept Douglas Fir (PEDD1-D12-75)
The best artificial Christmas tree
Realistic, full, generously sized, and versatile, this LED-lit tree can switch between all-white and multicolor modes, and the lights connect as you put the sections together.
Buying Options
$599 from Home Depot
$621 from Lowe's
National Tree Company’s 7.5-foot Feel Real Downswept Douglas Fir (PEDD1-D12-75) is our pick among artificial Christmas trees. We’ve seen much pricier trees that look somewhat more realistic, as well as much cheaper trees that look reasonably lifelike. But the Downswept Douglas Fir strikes a sweet balance of price, realism, and ease of setup.
Its generous, 59-inch girth will fill most living rooms. At least as much as height, the width of a tree defines its perceived size. Narrower trees have their strengths, too—they take up less room in an apartment or smaller living area—and are readily available. But if you can accommodate it, a wide tree like the Downswept Douglas Fir brings a bountiful feeling to your decorating.
You get a lot of realism for the price. With 1,867 lifelike polyethylene branch tips, the Downswept Douglas Fir is thickly foliated, and it shows no gaps after fluffing. At 37% polyethylene, it has a higher proportion of realistic foliage—and a lower proportion of fake-looking PVC—than many trees in its price range.
The dual-color LED bulbs let you change its appearance and mood. They can switch between multicolor and a beautiful champagne white—plus multiple combinations of color and white, as well as flashing or “sparkling”—to match a wide range of tastes. The colored lights may add a cheerful air to family gatherings, while white may better complement grown-up parties or traditional decor. Though some of the flashing modes would look at home in a disco, when we selected the “sparkling” mode on the white bulbs (with the lights gently fading and then re-brightening), several people gasped in surprise and delight.
And it has plenty of those lights. With 750 bulbs, the Downswept Douglas Fir meets our recommendation of 100 bulbs per foot of tree height. Fewer than that can look sparse, but the Downswept Douglas Fir’s bulbs are sufficient in number and evenly spaced, producing a well-lit appearance.
The light strings connect automatically. When you stack the tree’s three sections together, the lights link up automatically, thanks to cables and plugs that run through the “trunk.” That’s much handier than hunting down bare plugs among the foliage and manually hooking them together, as you need to do on older trees and more than a few contemporary models.
You get warranty coverage. National Tree Company warrants its realistic pre-lit trees taller than 6.5 feet, including the Downswept Douglas Fir, covering manufacturer defects for five years from the date of purchase; it covers the LEDs for three years. You need proof and the date of purchase to file a claim, and you need to have treated the tree and lights with reasonable care to have your claim approved.
Customer service is good, too. Accidents do happen, like the time editor-in-chief Ben Frumin’s robot vacuum severed a section of his Downswept Douglas Fir’s electrical cord. All it took was one call to customer service and a $15 charge—in 48 hours he had a replacement cord in hand, and the tree was merry and bright once more.
This tree is widely available. If you’d like to see the Downswept Douglas Fir in person, Home Depot, Kohl’s, and many holiday stores typically carry it.
But this isn’t National Tree’s only good option. If realism isn’t your cup of tea, we recommend National Tree’s 7.5-foot Winchester White Pine (WCHW7-300-75). We tested this model in our office, and even our staffers who prefer live trees thought it was beautiful. Its white branches, trunk, and glitter-dusted all-PVC needles give it a pretty, crystalline look when the lights are off. And with the lights on, all of those reflective surfaces make the tree glow from within—whereas green foliage simply disappears into a dark silhouette once the lights are on, the Winchester White Pine transforms into a snowy lantern when lit. The effect is especially striking in a dark room, or in a corner that doesn’t receive a lot of natural light in the daytime.
Realistic look with traditional lights: Puleo 7.5-foot Royal Majestic Douglas Fir Downswept Tree (RMDD-75QC8)
Best for
Puleo 7.5-foot Royal Majestic Douglas Fir Downswept Tree (RMDD-75QC8)
Best if you want a realistic look with traditional lights
Offering exceptional realism, Puleo’s Royal Majestic Douglas Fir comes with warm, clear incandescent lights—the kind that keep working even if one bulb goes out.
Buying Options
$479 from Home Depot
$479 from Amazon
$670 from Lowe's
If you’re looking for a terrifically realistic tree at a good price, consider the Puleo 7.5-foot Royal Majestic Douglas Fir Downswept Tree (RMDD-75QC8). Its polyethylene branch tips exhibit subtle variations in color, becoming lighter green at their ends, just as living branches do. It’s a remarkably convincing effect—upon seeing the Royal Majestic Douglas Fir for the first time, one Wirecutter writer simply said, “It looks like a real tree.”
The Royal Majestic Douglas Fir has a generous 1,860 realistic tips, just shy of the 1,867 tips of the National Tree Company Downswept Douglas Fir. It’s also notably easier to fluff than other trees we’ve tested, because its branches are made with memory wire (Puleo calls it Insta-Shape) and partially spring into place when you set up the tree for the first time. We spent just 10 minutes or so fluffing the Royal Majestic Douglas Fir; the Downswept Douglas Fir took more than twice as long. The pole-connecting lights (Puleo calls the design Sure-Lit) also make setup easier.
The incandescent, clear-only bulbs are the Royal Majestic Douglas Fir’s only potential drawback. If you prefer colors, you’ll have to unstring the lights the tree comes with and string your own, as Puleo does not sell an unlit version of the tree. These incandescent bulbs won’t last nearly as long as LED bulbs typically do, but unlike with older incandescents, a single burnt-out bulb here won’t make the rest of the string of lights go dark. The tree comes with 800 lights—exceeding our 100-per-foot-of-height rule of thumb for a well-lit tree—and incandescents have a lovely soft warmth that LEDs can’t match.
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An unlit tree that can last: Balsam Hill 7.5-foot Classic Blue Spruce Tree
Best for
Balsam Hill 7.5-foot Classic Blue Spruce Tree
Best if you need an unlit tree that can last
With no lights pre-strung but high-quality details aplenty, this entry point into Balsam Hill’s catalog is a great value if you’re up for the added decorating work.
Having a tree light up the moment you plug it in is nice, but it’s also a common source of frustrations as the years go by. Anyone seeking a long-term commitment to a single tree should consider an unlit model, such as the Balsam Hill 7.5-foot Classic Blue Spruce Tree, an approximately $500 entry point into a high-end tree brand whose trees we’ve recommended for years (even as we’ve watched with some alarm as more and more of the company’s prices have crested the four-figure mark).
In overall quality the Blue Spruce ranks among the top competitors from National Tree and others. The hinge hardware supporting its branches is some of the best we’ve seen in years of tree reviews. Robust steel channels cup the branch arms along a beefy but nicely camouflaged green flange, and through that piece runs a chunky little axle that feels built for years of movement, including the strains of being shoved into a box or bag at the end of the season. On inexpensive competitors, this part is usually a basic stamped rivet. The beefy hardware adds heft, though: This tree’s 47-pound weight is more than double our National Tree pick’s 20.7-pound weight.
The foliage on the Blue Spruce is what Balsam Hill refers to as “classic needle foliage,” which looks to our eyes like PVC. Normally we prefer trees with a mix of PVC and more realistic polyethylene tips, but in this case the PVC is lush, with a consistent and lifelike color quality that looks convincing across the tree’s 2,960 branch tips. (As a comparison, Balsam Hill’s Balsam Fir Tree has what the company calls “true needle foliage,” which looks to be a well-done version of polyethylene fir mimicry, at a price that starts around $700 for a 7.5-foot, unlit tree.)
This version of the Blue Spruce is unlit, which saves on cost but adds some extra work—or, you might argue, customization opportunities—as you decorate it. We have seen trends and preferences evolve in our years of editing Wirecutter’s Christmas lights guide, and you may want to keep your options open. If a tree ever has problems, the lighting components do tend to be the point of failure, especially after several years of use. If you like this tree but prefer it pre-lit, Balsam Hill offers options; basic clear lights add $100 to the total, and a couple of combo lighting options take the price north of $1,000.
The tree comes with a storage bag, which competitors often do not provide. Made of a crimson tarpaulin material, the bag has a pair of chunky handles for wrangling a tree. The general recommendation is to store a tree in a bag as opposed to the original box (and, no, the bag will not fit inside the box). The three tree parts in one bag (or box) can get heavy, and many people have to unload the parts one by one from the attic or basement as they set up their tree each year.
Balsam Hill’s warranty period is three years, the same as National Tree’s, but honestly the Blue Spruce feels durable enough to outlast that easily. We can say so after having tested lower-quality trees for several seasons, handling them roughly between shipping and storage, and seeing minimal wear and tear on their comparably lower-quality parts. It’s reasonable to expect your current strings of lights to fail before the Blue Spruce does, which is why we decided to recommend this tree as an unlit option.
A standard tree within a smaller footprint: Grandin Road 7.5-foot Classic Slim Christmas Tree
Best for
Grandin Road 7.5-foot Classic Slim Christmas Tree
Best if you want a standard tree with a smaller footprint
Slim trees tend to look too vertical, but this option is one of the few we’ve seen with a nice overall shape. With its realism and hardware, it’s standard, but not a standout.
Buying Options
$389 from Grandin Road
We’ve long sought a space-saving “slim” tree, but many we’ve tried over the years have been a touch too narrow, with a cypress-like shape that looked unimpressive and left little room for an ornament collection. You can get a nice compromise with the Grandin Road Classic Slim Christmas Tree, a 7.5-footer with a base diameter of 43 inches, a notable slimming from the typical 5-foot girth of a typical tree of that height.
This Grandin Road tree’s mix of PVC and polyethylene tips is a serviceable but not standout rendering of artificial-tree realism. One unique detail is an incorporation of brown flecks of PVC around the tree’s “trunk,” a detail that doesn’t look right, but is nearly invisible with the tree fluffed and decorated. The hardware on the tree consists of standard steel and rivets, all of which feels durable but not quite at the quality level of a Balsam Hill tree.
Subjectively speaking, this tree has a nice shape. The compact footprint saves space without looking too vertical, as many of its competitors do. One advantage we’ve come to appreciate when moving slim trees in and out of storage is the relative ease of fluffing and collapsing an overall shorter set of branches, from fitting it into a box or bag to just lifting it without it poking us in the face.
The lights on this tree are a warm white, but unfortunately they lack the color- change options we prefer. Considering the issues we’ve had in simply finding any affordable slim tree with the right overall shape, we had to compromise on the lighting options once we found such a tree.
It is relatively light, at 28 pounds, with a fairly standard piece of hardware for its stand. Grandin Road’s warranty, which covers the first year after the purchase, is less generous than some competitors’ three-year coverage.
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A flocked style: King of Christmas 7-foot King Noble Flock Fir
Best for
King of Christmas 7-foot King Noble Flock Fir
Best if you prefer a flocked style
In addition to having realistic needles, the King Noble is also flocked—covered in artificial snow. It’s lovely, especially set against a dark nighttime window or in an unlit corner.
Buying Options
$289 from King of Christmas
The King of Christmas 7-foot King Noble Flock Fir is a Euro-style tree—it’s deliberately sparser and more naturalistic than densely branched American-style trees. That lends it a different kind of realism, and it also allows ornaments to hang more freely and stand out against the foliage. This tree is also flocked, made to look as if it has been dusted with snow via a coating of white, foam-like material.
Our more traditionalist testers were initially skeptical, but it looked absolutely lovely after we set it up—especially against a dark background, such as a window at night, when the tree almost seemed to glow. Flocking is “kind of a specialty of ours,” Sol Lakein, the company’s chief operating officer, told us. And having seen an example firsthand, we wouldn’t argue.
The King Noble Flock Fir has 1,163 branch tips and comes with 500 white micro LED bulbs that connect automatically via the company’s Power Pole technology when you put the three sections together. You can set the lights to glow steadily, gently cycle from dim to bright and back, or blink, and you can control them via an included remote control, in addition to the foot pedal on the cord.
Setting up the King Noble Flock Fir was easy, thanks to the Power Pole connections and the somewhat low—but still ample—number of branch tips. Putting the tree together and fluffing it took only about 30 minutes. Predictably, a small amount of the flocking shed during the process, but a quick vacuum took care of that, and we were left with a convincing illusion of a snow-covered live tree.
Retro metallic glamour: Puleo 6.5-foot Royal Majestic Spruce Rose Gold Tree (RMSRG-65C5)
Best for
Puleo 6.5-foot Royal Majestic Spruce Rose Gold Tree (RMSRG-65C5)
Best if you like metallic glamour
Reminiscent of the aluminum trees of the mid-century modern era, this tree has shiny tinsel “needles” that offer a cheerful and charming sparkle.
Buying Options
$298 from Amazon
$298 from Walmart
May be out of stock
If Christmas turns your mind’s eye to the mid-century modern era, a tinsel tree may be just the thing for you. Similar to the aluminum trees of the age, tinsel trees’ foliage is made of metallic “needles,” and the Puleo 6.5-foot Royal Majestic Spruce Rose Gold Tree (RMSRG-65C5) is an example that we recommend from a manufacturer we trust.
Upon setting up this Puleo tree, one tester wrote: “I love the color, it’s just like a slightly warm silver.” My tree was basically silver with a slight coppery overtone, too. Neither screamed “rose gold,” but both were strikingly pretty, and with the lights on, both trees took on a peachy cast closer to their name.
The warm champagne glow of the 500 clear incandescent bulbs is perfect for this sort of tree; the cool white of many clear LEDs would look harsh. (Also, if rose gold isn’t to your taste, Puleo and many of the other manufacturers whose trees we recommend here make tinsel trees in plain silver, yellow gold, copper, pink, and other colors.)
The 1,228 branch tips are thick with foliage and give the tree a full and natural shape, and the white base and light-gray light strings disappear against the pale, shimmering needles. The foliage is well attached and evidently durable—only a few needles fell off during our setup and fluffing.
From an engineering standpoint, this is quite a rudimentary tree, most notably in its lack of automatic through-the-trunk connections for the light strings. We didn’t have much trouble finding and connecting their plugs manually—and the manual gives an illustrated how-to—but you can expect to spend a few minutes hunting among the branches. The wires of the lights are pale gray, which does a good job of camouflaging them. But since they don’t have a foot-operated power switch, turning the lights on and off means plugging and unplugging the tree at the wall—or installing a plug-in smart outlet that you can control with your phone.
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Budget pick: Puleo 7.5-foot Pre-Lit Aspen Fir Tree (277-APG-75C7)
Budget pick
Puleo 7.5-foot Pre-Lit Aspen Fir Tree (277-APG-75C7)
Trendy look, nice price
Trees like this Puleo offering, with a sparser, shaggier look, are trendy, and the larger gaps between their branches make it easier to hang and show off ornaments.
Buying Options
$258 from Home Depot
$259 from Amazon
$259 from Walmart
Sparser, naturalistic Euro-style trees are becoming increasingly popular, and Puleo’s 7.5-foot Pre-Lit Aspen Fir Tree (277-APG-75C7) is a terrific and very reasonably priced example. With 700 warm-white incandescent lights and 1,319 branch tips, it presents beautifully after fluffing. The branch tips fade from pale green at the outer ends to dark at the base, an eye-fooling detail that mimics the coloration of live trees, and the brown trunk (as opposed to the typical green) adds to the illusion of reality. The incandescent lights are the modern type—a blown bulb doesn’t cause an entire string to go dark.
Joe Puleo, the company’s owner, explained to us that designers and homeowners have come to appreciate the sparser Euro-style design because ornaments stand out better on such trees than they do on densely foliaged trees. And since you have fewer branches getting in the way, the ornaments are easier to hang. Fewer branches also mean you’ll spend less time fluffing the tree; working alone, I did it in about half an hour.
A minor complaint: You must manually connect the light strings, because they don’t automatically connect through the pole when you put the three sections together. Finding the plugs among the foliage is a bit challenging, and figuring out how to connect them in the proper order took some trial and error in our tests. The experience was not nearly enough of a hassle to dissuade us from recommending the Pre-Lit Aspen Fir, but we hope Puleo will offer a pole-connecting version in the future.
The competition
The Balsam Hill 7.5-foot Fraser Fir Flip Tree Color + Clear LED, a former upgrade pick in this guide, outshines other picks on all metrics: It has a higher proportion of realistic branches and quantity of lights, as well as some setup and transport features that our other picks lack. It also looks spectacular. However, in long term evaluation, it has had issues that led us to remove it from our recommendations. We’ve heard multiple reports of issues with its lighting, combined with a trend of negative experiences with replacement products and other customer service issues. We began recommending Balsam Hill trees in 2019, and since that time, Balsam Hill’s already high prices have reached unrealistic levels, and a new crop of high-end trees have emerged to meet the needs of buyers seeking a step up from the midrange options that have long been the central focus of this guide.
We recommended the National Tree Company 7.5-foot Feel Real Downswept Douglas Fir Pencil Slim based on 2019 tests, when it was one of the few space-saving lower-diameter trees on the market. Newer options have emerged since with greater quality and realism. We’re testing new slim candidates in search of a replacement that can save on footprint, storage space, weight, and price.
The 7.5-foot version of the Home Decorators Collection Twinkly Swiss Mountain Fir Christmas Tree comes with app-controlled LED lights that you can program directly or set to multiple preprogrammed patterns, pushing their abilities beyond the seven or eight presets that most white-plus-color trees come with. But compared with our picks, it has a higher proportion of cheap-looking PVC branches, and in our tests the finer polyethylene branches tended to break off during routine handling. We do love its Twinkly smart lights, though, enough so that we’ve added them to our guide to the best Christmas lights.
The National Tree Company PEDD1-312LD-75X (a former pick in this guide) is a great tree, but we made a mistake about one feature when we previously recommended it. This model lacks the company’s PowerConnect feature, which connects the lights when you attach the central pole.
Frontgate mostly competes with Balsam Hill in the premium category, as it focuses on super-realistic and super-expensive trees. You can’t go wrong with any of Frontgate’s offerings, but they are pretty limited, especially if you want something other than clear-only lights.
There are many, many more competitors than what we describe here. If you can’t find one of our picks or a comparable tree from the makers we list in this guide, you can still get an excellent tree. Use the criteria we outline in How we picked, especially regarding branch-tip count, material, and lighting. Once trees are fluffed, lit, and decorated, they can all look great in their own way.
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On fake trees, real trees, and harming the environment
Between artificial and live trees, which is greener? You may not be surprised to learn that within the industry, there is no consensus answer: The American Christmas Tree Association and the National Christmas Tree Association, which represent the artificial-tree and live-tree industries, respectively, both claim the “greener” title.
But an in-depth 2009 life-cycle report on the subject (PDF) gave the edge firmly to live trees, finding that an artificial tree would have to be used for 20 years before its carbon impact fell below that of buying a live tree annually over the same time frame. A more recent look at the topic by The New York Times reached similar conclusions.
Artificial trees are manufactured mostly in China, where environmental laws tend to be less stringent. In addition, the study did not take into account the environmental cost of producing the raw materials—steel and plastics—that the trees are made of, nor the cost of shipping them across the ocean, noted Travis Wagner, professor in the Department of Environmental Science and Policy at the University of Southern Maine. Lastly, artificial trees cannot be recycled because it’s too difficult to separate the various materials, so they wind up in landfills when they reach the end of their working lives.
Live trees can be sustainably farmed and harvested, they absorb carbon while growing, and they provide some measure of wildlife habitat. Although live-tree farms do contribute to the consequences of fertilizer and pesticide use, they add value to land that might otherwise be valuable only to developers. At the end of their lives, live trees can be “recycled” in a number of ways, such as by being turned into mulch, used to stabilize sand dunes, or even submerged in lakes to create fish habitat.
But as the 2009 study pointed out, driving a gas-powered car just a few hundred miles produces more greenhouse gases than producing a typical artificial Christmas tree. So compared with the cumulative environmental cost of everyday activities and consumption, a fake tree isn’t much more than a blip.
This article was edited by Harry Sawyers.