
With images of spray-on snow and tacky plastic needles dancing in their heads, many holiday purists dismiss fake Christmas trees.
Pragmatists tally the time and energy spent growing and buying a real tree and tending it indoors and see advantages in the artificial, however — like not having to clean up needles and sap or even string lights in some cases.
But it may be most helpful to think of your tree choice as a question of style.
Do you cherish braving the chill winter air — perhaps the whole family heading all the way to the tree farm — to choose a tree to bring home and decorate? Or is the natural aroma of pine, spruce or fir outweighed by the predictability of a perfectly triangular tree that’s always the right height for your living room?
Here are some ways to compare.
Pricing the tree: A real tree can cost less than $10 but typically runs closer to $100 or more, depending on size and species. Artificial trees generally sell for $25 to about $400 but can hit $2,000, depending on size and features like lighting and stands and extras like storage bags. So a fake tree is likely to be cheaper once you spread the cost over the typical five- to 10-year life span.
And, despite the promise of recycled plastic, many fake trees sold in the U.S. are made abroad with no recycled content; others are made from recycled packaging material.
The stand, the skirt and the lights: Here’s where artificial trees come out way ahead. They require much less additional spending because they include a stand, often need no skirt and can be purchased with lights already attached.
Real trees, on the other hand, have roots, so require a stand ($15 to $90) to remain upright. Then you’ll want a skirt to hide the stand (another $10 to $50). A real tree also requires three or four (or more) strings of lights at $2 to $20 each for incandescents, depending on color, shape and volume. LED — or light-emitting diode — lights cost more but can last five times longer.





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