When to Hire a Landscaper vs DIY
The landscaping industry benefits from homeowners believing every project needs a professional. Some projects genuinely do. Many do not. Here is an honest breakdown.
Projects You Can DIY
Planting beds and borders: Digging a bed, amending soil, and planting perennials or shrubs requires no special skill. The main risk is choosing wrong plants — solve this with research or an AI design tool that suggests climate-appropriate species.
Mulching: Spreading mulch is labor-intensive but straightforward. Order in bulk and spread 2-3 inches deep. Save $500+ over having a crew do it.
Container gardens: Pots, soil, and plants. Zero risk of permanent mistakes. Great for renters or anyone testing garden ideas before committing to in-ground planting.
Simple path installation: Stepping stones or gravel paths with landscape fabric underneath. A weekend project that costs $100-$300 in materials.
Raised beds: Prefab kits or lumber construction. Dozens of YouTube tutorials cover every variation. Fill with quality soil and plant immediately.
Lawn renovation: Overseeding, aerating, and top-dressing a lawn is tedious but not complex. Rent an aerator ($60/day) and buy quality seed.
Projects That Need a Professional
Anything involving drainage: Water moves in ways that are not obvious until it is raining hard. Poor drainage destroys foundations, floods basements, and kills plants. A professional grading plan is worth every dollar.
Retaining walls over 2 feet: Structural integrity matters. A wall that collapses can damage property, injure people, and cost far more to rebuild than it cost to build correctly the first time.
Patio and deck construction: Proper base preparation, drainage pitch, and structural connections to the house require expertise. A poorly built patio cracks. A poorly attached deck is dangerous.
Tree removal: Large tree removal involves chainsaws, rigging, and the potential to drop a multi-ton trunk onto your house, power lines, or neighbor's property. Always hire an arborist.
Irrigation systems: Underground pipes, pressure calculations, zone mapping, and backflow prevention. A botched irrigation system wastes water and money indefinitely.
Electrical work: Landscape lighting that runs on line voltage (not solar or low-voltage) requires a licensed electrician in most jurisdictions.
The Middle Ground
Fence installation: Doable as DIY but harder than it looks. Post holes must be precisely spaced and plumb. If your yard is flat and you have a post hole digger, go for it. Slopes or rocky soil push this toward professional territory.
Paver patios (small): A 100 sq ft paver patio is an ambitious but achievable DIY project. Anything larger or requiring cuts against curved edges benefits from professional efficiency.
The Decision Framework
Ask three questions:
- Is it reversible? If a mistake can be undone by replanting or rearranging, DIY is low risk.
- Is it structural? Anything bearing weight, holding back earth, or connecting to your house should involve a professional.
- Does it require a permit? If yes, hire someone who knows the permitting process.
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