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The average cost of hiring a landscaper in the UK is £500–£3,000. Prices vary by job type, location and complexity. Get free, no-obligation quotes on TradeMatch to compare local prices.
Below we break down prices by job type, explain what affects the cost, compare regional variations and share tips to get the best value.
£500–£3,000
Range across typical landscaper jobs. London and South East premium 20–40%. Northern England, Wales and Scotland often more affordable. Get a fixed-price quote on TradeMatch.
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Every tradesperson is verified against the UK accreditation bodies that matter for the work — before they can quote.
| Job Type | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patio installation | £1,000 | £2,500 | £5,000 |
| Garden fencing (10m) | £500 | £1,000 | £2,000 |
| Artificial turf | £800 | £1,500 | £3,000 |
| Decking installation | £1,200 | £2,500 | £5,000 |
| Garden design & build | £2,000 | £5,000 | £15,000 |
Estimated UK averages for 2026 · Actual costs vary by location, materials and scope
Pick a job, scope and region. Numbers update live — based on UK 2026 averages from this guide. For a real fixed-price quote, post free on TradeMatch.
Patio installation · Standard · Midlands (UK average)
Estimates are guidance only — based on UK 2026 averages, scope and regional indices. Actual prices depend on materials, access, urgency and the landscaper's rates. TradeMatch quotes are fixed-price, escrow-protected and tied to verified pros.
Larger, more complex landscaper work costs more. A simple repair is far cheaper than a full installation or renovation.
London and the South East command the highest rates — typically 20–40% above the national average. Northern England, Wales and Scotland tend to be more affordable.
Premium materials cost more. Discuss options with your tradesperson — they can often suggest good-value alternatives without compromising quality.
Emergency and weekend callouts typically cost 25–50% more. Plan ahead where possible to get standard rates.
Difficult access (scaffolding, tight spaces) or significant preparation work adds to the total cost.
More experienced and highly qualified tradespeople may charge more, but often deliver faster, better-quality work.

In 2026, landscaper costs in the UK typically range from £500–£3,000. The final price depends on the complexity of the work, materials required, your location and the tradesperson's experience level. London and South East prices tend to be 20–40% higher than the national average.
The main factors are: job complexity and scale, materials quality, your location (London rates are highest), urgency (emergency callouts cost more), access difficulties, and the tradesperson's qualifications and experience. Getting 3 quotes helps you find fair pricing.
Compare at least 3 quotes from vetted professionals on TradeMatch. Be flexible on timing (avoid peak seasons), supply your own materials where possible, bundle multiple jobs together, and get a detailed written quote before work starts to avoid unexpected charges.
Not necessarily. The cheapest quote may cut corners on materials or quality. On TradeMatch, you can compare reviews, qualifications and pricing side-by-side. Choose a tradesperson who offers fair value, good reviews, and proper insurance — not just the lowest price.
Most tradespeople request a deposit (typically 10–25%) for larger jobs to cover materials. Never pay the full amount upfront. On TradeMatch, payments can be managed securely through the platform, providing protection for both homeowner and tradesperson.
Hourly rates for a landscaper range from £1000 to £5000 depending on the job, location and experience. London rates are 20–40% higher. However, most landscaper professionals prefer to quote per job rather than per hour — post on TradeMatch for accurate fixed-price quotes.
Landscaper work is typically cheapest from November to February when demand drops. Spring and summer are the busiest and most expensive periods. Booking mid-week can also save 10–20% compared to weekends. Plan ahead and get quotes early for the best rates.
A professional landscaper quote should include: itemised labour and materials costs, start and completion dates, payment schedule, VAT status, scope of work, and any exclusions. On TradeMatch you can compare up to 5 detailed quotes side by side.
Common landscaper services include: Patio Installation (£1,000–£5,000), Garden Design & Build (£2,000–£15,000), Artificial Turf Installation (£800–£3,000), Decking Installation (£1,200–£5,000). Each service has different pricing factors. Post your specific job on TradeMatch for accurate quotes.
A UK landscaper is the trade you call when you need garden design, landscaping, turfing and outdoor transformations. The day-to-day workload of a typical landscaper in 2026 spans residential repairs, planned installations, emergency callouts and survey work. On TradeMatch alone, the landscaper discipline maps to 4 distinct service categories — from small fix-and-leave jobs to multi-week installations.
The most common UK landscaper job is patio installation, which typically runs £1,000-£5,000 depending on scope, location and access. Garden fencing (10m) is the second-most-common, running £500-£2,000. London and the South East routinely sit 20-40% above the national average; Northern England, Scotland and Wales typically run 10-20% below.
What separates a landscaper you should hire from one you should not is rarely price — it is the quality of the survey, the clarity of the written quote, and whether the firm carries appropriate accreditation. Every landscaper on TradeMatch is independently verified against Relevant trade association before they can submit a quote on your job. The verification is logged on the trader's profile, with a link to the public register so you can independently confirm.
UK landscaper pricing in 2026 follows a predictable three-tier structure: hourly callouts (£40-£120/hour depending on trade), fixed-job pricing (the dominant model for installations) and project-based pricing for multi-day work. Hourly rates are most common for diagnostic, repair and small-fix work; fixed-job pricing dominates installations because both the homeowner and the trade need price certainty before materials are ordered.
For landscaper work specifically, the typical 2026 range across the UK is £500–£3,000, with patio installation costing £1,000-£5,000 (average £2,500). Garden fencing (10m) runs £500-£2,000 (average £1,000), while artificial turf typically runs £800-£3,000. These are 2026 UK averages from the TradeMatch verified-quote database; individual quotes will vary by access, materials specification, urgency and whether weekend rates apply.
Three factors push UK landscaper prices up: location (London/SE +20-40%, central business districts +10-20% on top), urgency (emergency callouts +25-50%) and weekend / out-of-hours work (+25-50% above weekday rates). Three factors push them down: booking off-peak season, supplying your own materials where the trade allows, and bundling multiple jobs in a single visit. The TradeMatch quote model is fixed-price, escrow-protected, and shows the full price up-front — no estimate-then-bill tactics.
Watch out for "from £X" pricing on competitor platforms. The "from" rate often excludes callout fee, materials, parking, congestion charge, waste removal and weekend uplift. By the time those line items land on the final invoice, the "from £80" job is £180. TradeMatch quotes are inclusive — what you see at acceptance is what you pay at sign-off.
A UK landscaper should hold Relevant trade qualifications, Public liability insurance, plus current public liability insurance (typically £2-£5M cover) and membership of Relevant trade association where applicable. Relevant trade association operates a public register: every TradeMatch landscaper carries a link to their entry on that register, so you can independently verify the accreditation is current and in scope for your specific job.
Qualifications matter for three reasons that affect homeowners directly. First — insurance. A non-qualified trade carrying domestic-only insurance can have a claim refused if commercial-grade work is involved. Second — building regulations. Notifiable work (electrical, gas, structural) requires either a competent-person scheme registration or a separate Building Notice (£200-£500 fee + inspection delay). Third — resale. Conveyancing solicitors will ask for certificates covering qualifying work since 2005; without them, the buyer can demand a regularisation certificate (£200-£500) or reduce their offer.
The TradeMatch verification process re-checks accreditation on each renewal cycle, so a trade who lapsed last month is not on the platform this month. Open directories rely on the trade self-declaring; the difference is who gets liable when the lapsed-accreditation work goes wrong. On TradeMatch, every quote includes a tap-through to the trader's public-register entry — you can verify the accreditation yourself in 30 seconds before signing.
Three UK landscaper scams to watch for in 2026. (1) The "while we're here" upsell — the trade arrives for the booked job, then claims to find an additional £500-£2,000 problem requiring immediate fix. Genuine problems exist, but reputable trades document and quote in writing; pressure to sign during the visit is the red flag. (2) The "deposit and disappear" pattern — large up-front deposit (often 50%+ of total), then the trade vanishes. Most common in summer landscaping and winter heating. TradeMatch escrow eliminates the risk: deposits sit in escrow until the agreed milestone is reached. (3) The "storm-chaser" door-knocker after a UK named storm — typically quotes 2-3x the verified-trade rate to "fix the urgent damage right now". Always TradeMatch-quote first; verified landscapers respond fast and cost less.
Two specific landscaper scams to know. The first is the cash-discount lure — "10% off if you pay cash". The cash discount removes your consumer protection (no chargeback, no Section 75, no IBG warranty), so the saving is illusory. The second is the unverified accreditation badge — a website with the Gas Safe / NICEIC / TrustMark logo but no number. Always copy the registration number into the body's public register; if there is no number, the badge is decorative.
The TradeMatch counter-pattern: every quote shows the registration number, every payment sits in escrow until you sign off, every dispute has a real mediation team, and every review is tied to a completed job. None of those are marketing claims — they are the platform mechanics. Compare with the Trustpilot complaint history of open directories like Bark, Checkatrade and MyBuilder for the structural difference.
The reliable landscaper-hiring sequence. Step 1: define the job in writing — what you want done, the rough budget you have in mind, the deadline, the access constraints. A 60-second job description gets better quotes than a 5-minute phone call. Step 2: post on TradeMatch with the description; up to 5 verified landscapers respond, typically within hours. Step 3: review each quote against the same criteria — fixed price (not estimate), itemised labour and materials, written warranty length, IBG status, accreditation number. Step 4: verify the top 1-2 quotes' accreditation on Relevant trade association's public register. Step 5: accept the quote that wins on quality + price (rarely the cheapest), pay deposit into escrow, agree milestone schedule.
Two steps before work begins. Step 6: the on-site survey — the landscaper visits to confirm scope before the work starts. This is where last-minute scope creep gets caught and added to the quote in writing, not invoiced as a surprise at the end. Step 7: written contract — even for small jobs, get the price, scope, timeline and warranty in writing (TradeMatch acceptance creates a contract automatically). Verbal agreements are unenforceable and the leading source of UK landscaper disputes.
Three steps after the work is done. Step 8: walk-through with the landscaper — every defect noted on the day. Step 9: sign-off in writing only when the punchlist is clear; this releases the escrow payment. Step 10: file the certificates (Gas Safe CP12, Part P, FENSA, IBG) somewhere you can find them in 5 years for resale or insurance purposes. TradeMatch keeps a copy on your account profile.
UK landscaper work splits into three insurance layers that homeowners need to understand. Layer one — the landscaper's public liability insurance (typically £2-£5M cover), which protects you if the landscaper damages your property or causes injury during the work. Always ask for a current certificate; Relevant trade association requires this for membership. Layer two — workmanship warranty, which protects you if the landscaper's work fails within the warranty period (typically 1-12 months). Get this in writing on the quote; verbal warranties are unenforceable. Layer three — Insurance-Backed Guarantee (IBG), which protects the warranty itself if the landscaper ceases trading. Critical for any £5,000+ job.
For landscaper work specifically, the typical IBG cost is 1-2% of project value and gives 6-10 years of cover backed by an underwriter, not the trader. TrustMark-registered landscapers offer IBG as a standard product on deposit work. Without IBG, a workmanship warranty is only as good as the trader's solvency — a depressing number of UK trade firms cease trading within 5 years of incorporation, and the warranty dies with them.
Manufacturer warranties on materials and parts run separately. Typical ranges in 2026: boilers 7-12 years, kitchen units 10-25 years, roofing tiles 15-50 years, paint 5-10 years, electrical fittings 2-5 years. These warranties usually require annual servicing by an accredited installer (Gas Safe / NICEIC / FENSA) to remain valid. Skip a service and the manufacturer can refuse a £700 part replacement on a warranty claim. Build the annual service into the project budget from day one.
Most landscaper work is non-emergency — planned, surveyed, fixed-price, weekday-scheduled. The exception is landscaper work that becomes urgent due to weather damage, system failure, or follow-on damage from another trade's work. In those cases, TradeMatch surfaces the same verified landscaper pool with availability filters; you typically receive emergency quotes within hours. Emergency-rate uplift is normally 25-50%; weekend or out-of-hours another 25%.
Plan ahead and you avoid the emergency rate. The pricing premium on UK emergency landscaper callouts has been stable at 30-50% above weekday rates for over a decade. Booking standard work in the off-peak window saves the premium and gets the higher-quality firms (the cowboys cluster around emergency rates because that's where panic-buying happens).
Reviews matter — but most UK landscaper reviews online are not what they appear. Open directories (Google, Trustpilot, Bark, large parts of Checkatrade history) allow trades to influence which reviews appear; verified-job-only reviews are rare. Three filters separate trustworthy landscaper reviews from unreliable ones: (1) the review is tied to a verified completed job (not anonymous open-review), (2) the review names specifics (the trader's name, the job scope, the price) rather than generic praise, and (3) the review volume + recency is high (a 5-star average from 4 reviews is far weaker than a 4.6-star average from 80 recent reviews).
On TradeMatch, every landscaper review meets all three filters by design — the platform mechanics make it impossible to generate review content without a completed job tied to a specific homeowner. That structural constraint is the difference between TradeMatch and open directories like Bark or MyBuilder, where the review surface is open and gameable.
Some landscaper work is legally a pro-only domain. Most ${tn(trade)} work is not legally restricted, but quality and warranty considerations heavily favour using a verified pro. Other landscaper work is legal to DIY but rarely worth it — the time cost, the materials cost (DIY pays retail; trades pay trade prices), and the risk of having to pay a pro to fix the DIY mistake usually exceed the saving on labour.
Three DIY-vs-pro decision rules for landscaper work. (1) If the work is notifiable to Building Control or covered by a competent-person scheme — pro only. (2) If the work involves height (>4m), confined spaces, or structural elements — pro only. (3) If the work has a warranty implication on a manufacturer product (boiler service to keep manufacturer warranty valid, FENSA install to retain Building Reg compliance) — pro only. Everything else is a DIY-vs-pro judgement on time, skill and risk tolerance.
Side-by-side with the four most-searched UK trade platforms. No subscription fees, up to 5 competing quotes, escrow-protected payments — three things every other platform misses.
| Feature | TradeMatch | Checkatrade | MyBuilder | Bark | Rated People |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Up to 5 quotes | ✓ | Browse | Up to 5 | Varies | Up to 3 |
| Escrow payment protection | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
| No tradesperson subscription | ✓ | £50+/mo | ✓ | Credits | £15+/mo |
| Verified reviews (live) | ✓ | 5-day delay | ✓ | Mixed | ✓ |
| Background + qualification checks | ✓ | ✓ | Light | Basic ID | ✓ |
| Dispute resolution team | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
100%of TradeMatch payments held in escrow
Every landscaper job, every payment, every time. Funds held in a segregated client account until you sign off the work.
TradeMatch escrow operates through FCA-regulated payment providers. Customer funds are segregated from operating accounts and protected under UK consumer law.
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