Forested hillslopes are zones of specific surface hydrology and geomorphic activity regimes. Their distinct properties, namely terrain microrelief (<10 m in diameter and height), are often a result of past disturbances that control forest stand conditions, soil formation processes, and superficial processes. A clear bioindicator of the past forest disturbance is pit-mound topography, which, however, is challenging to study because of its complexity and relatively small sizes of individual forms (usually <5 m in diameter). The present study analyzed the spatial representation, geomorphometric, and geophysical evaluation of the rare pit-mound topography in the Karkonosze Mountains National Park, SW Poland, Central Europe. For this task, two digital terrain models (DTMs) have been considered and were based on different quality point clouds collected during airborne and terrestrial laser scanning (ALS and TLS, respectively). The first data allowed the production of the DTM in 1 × 1 m spatial resolution, while the second data offered the DTM in 0.025 × 0.025 m resolution. Various geomorphometric derivatives (Terrain Ruggedness Index, Geomorphons, Topographic Wetness Index, Valley Depth, and Negative Openness) were applied and compared based on these models. In the further part of the study, we applied electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and electromagnetic induction (EMI), assisted by shallow soil sampling and analyses to support the interpretation of geophysical models.Our TLS-based DTM offered higher-quality models and a better representation of pit-mound topography. The high-quality TLS-based DTM elevation model can support close-to-reality hydrological and geomorphic modeling. The geophysical investigation allowed us to isolate a critical difference between treethrow pits and mounds better represented by ERT models than shallow EMI models. The differences were partly supported by soil properties, namely lower electrical resistivity in treethrow pits were related to higher moisture conditions, organic matter, organic carbon, and silt content in pits. As a general property, pit-mound topography resulting from tree uprooting adds to the complexity of forested hillslope hydrology and geomorphic activity. The surficial heterogeneity in hillslope topography was also evident in soil properties with sharp changes in short distances between treethrow mounds and pits.