Done Right Landscaping
San Antonio, TX 78252-2802
Landscape Contractors, Tree Services, Lawn Maintenance. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Read real landscaping design reviews reviews from Austin homeowners before you hire. Compare ratings across 56 local contractors and choose the highest-rated pro for your job.
Typical cost in Austin
$2,000–$15,000 / project
56 contractors in Austin
San Antonio, TX 78252-2802
Landscape Contractors, Tree Services, Lawn Maintenance. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
2720 Bee Caves Rd , Austin, TX 78746-5642
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Design, Landscape Contractors, Landscape Maintenance ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
6521 Burnet Ln Ste 106 , Austin, TX 78757-2848
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance, Lawn Care ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Austin, TX 78702-3615
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Organic Fertilizer, Landscape Contractors, Gardener ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Austin, TX 78702-3708
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Landscape Maintenance, Landscape Design ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
9800 Brown Ln , Austin, TX 78754-4020
Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance, Landscape Design ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Austin, TX 78745-6724
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Mason Contractors, Patios and Decks ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
2331 Thornwild Pass , Austin, TX 78758-2416
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Design, Landscape Contractors
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
9729 N Interstate 35 , Austin, TX 78753
Irrigation Equipment, Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Austin, TX 78703-0005
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Home Repair, Painting Contractors, Landscape Contractors ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Austin, TX 78704-7335
BBB Accredited A- rated. Landscape Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Painting Contractors ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
Austin, TX 78721-3075
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Home Renovation, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor ...
Serves: 78701, 78702, 78703, 78704 +37 more
For: front and back yard design and installation in Austin, TX
Austin's explosive growth has created a mature, competitive landscaping market with a wide price range — from neighborhood irrigation crews to full-service landscape architecture firms serving Westlake Hills and Tarrytown estates. Here's the breakdown of realistic costs for Austin homeowners in 2025.
| Service | Details | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Basic landscape design consultation | 1-hour site visit, sketch plan | $150 – $400 |
| Full residential landscape design | Planting plan + hardscape layout | $800 – $3,500 |
| Landscape architect stamped plan | Required for permits, large projects | $2,500 – $8,000 |
| Sod installation (Bermuda, St. Augustine) | Per sq ft installed | $0.90 – $2.50/sq ft |
| Native plant bed installation | Design + plants + mulch | $1,500 – $6,000 |
| Drought-tolerant xeriscape conversion | Per sq ft (design + materials + install) | $5 – $15/sq ft |
| Irrigation system (new installation) | Per zone (drip + spray), 1-acre lot | $2,500 – $8,000 |
| Retaining wall (limestone) | Austin Hill Country stone, per sq ft face | $30 – $65/sq ft |
| Outdoor lighting installation | 8–12 fixture system + transformer | $1,500 – $4,500 |
| Complete front yard renovation | Design + plants + hardscape | $5,000 – $20,000 |
| Full property Master Plan | Design only, 1/2 acre+ | $3,000 – $10,000 |
Austin's landscaping cost depends heavily on which part of the city your property sits in:
East Austin / South Austin / Pflugerville (clay): Heavy black clay (Vertisol) — similar to Dallas, it swells when wet and cracks when dry. Lawn establishment is harder, drainage projects may be needed, and soil amendment costs run $300–$800 for a typical installation.
West Austin / Westlake / Cedar Park / Lake Travis (caliche/limestone): Rocky limestone substrate, sometimes only 2–4 inches of topsoil over solid limestone. Standard tilling is impossible — rocky soil requires jackhammering or specialized planting techniques. Planting beds require imported topsoil at $35–$55/cubic yard delivered. Projects in these areas cost 20–40% more than flat East Austin equivalents.
Austin's Heritage Tree Preservation Ordinance (Land Development Code §25-8-641) protects trees with a trunk diameter of 19 inches or more (measured 4.5 feet off ground). Any landscape design that involves construction within the Critical Root Zone (a radius equal to the tree's diameter in inches, expressed in feet) of a protected tree requires an ISA-certified arborist report and City of Austin approval. Non-compliance fines run $500–$5,000 per tree. Any Austin landscape architect or designer worth hiring will identify Heritage Trees on-site before scoping the plan — it's a non-negotiable step that affects design options in neighborhoods like Hyde Park, Bouldin Creek, and Clarksville, which have heavy live oak canopies.
Austin's water utility is governed by the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA) Stage 1–3 water restrictions. During Stage 2 drought restrictions (triggered frequently during dry years), landscape irrigation is restricted to specific days and hours. A poorly designed lawn requiring 2–3 weekly waterings can be in violation during restriction periods and subject to fines. The City of Austin's WaterWise landscape program promotes irrigation-efficient designs — certified WaterWise designers can help create landscapes that function within restriction periods.
Per BLS Occupational Employment data for the Austin-Round Rock-Georgetown MSA, the median wage for landscaping and groundskeeping workers (SOC 37-3011) is $18.20/hour in the Austin metro, plus overhead and profit. Landscape design professionals (landscape architects and designers) bill $75–$175/hour for design services, separate from installation labor.
Austin's unique geology, Heritage Tree ordinance, water restrictions, and aggressive HOA standards make professional landscape design meaningfully different from a DIY plant-and-sod approach. Here's what licensing, credentials, and local expertise look like in Austin's market.
Texas does not require a general landscape contractor license. However, several specific activities in Austin's landscape industry are regulated:
Anyone installing or servicing irrigation systems in Texas must hold a Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) irrigator license under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1903. A licensed irrigator must: pass the TCEQ exam, complete 4 hours of continuing education annually, carry $1,000,000 liability insurance, and be listed in the TCEQ irrigator registry. Hiring an unlicensed irrigator in Austin is illegal and voids any inspection approval — ask for the TCEQ license number before any irrigation work begins.
Any landscape project requiring a City of Austin permit (retaining walls over 4 feet, grading changes affecting stormwater, Heritage Tree proximity work) must be designed by a Texas Registered Landscape Architect (RLA) — licensed by the Texas Board of Architectural Examiners (TBAE). Verify RLA status at TBAE's online lookup.
Landscape companies that apply herbicides, insecticides, or fungicides must hold a Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA) Pesticide Applicator License. Verify at TDA's license verification. Unlicensed pesticide application in Austin is a TDA violation.
Austin's Heritage Tree Ordinance is among the most protective in Texas — and professional landscapers know it well. Key protections:
A professional Austin landscaper will identify Heritage Trees before design begins, understand CRZ setback requirements, and either design around protected trees or flag the need for a City arborist review. DIY landscapers routinely violate Heritage Tree protections unknowingly — fines are real and tree damage is irreversible.
Austin's newer master-planned communities (Round Rock Ranch, Steiner Ranch, Mueller, Circle C Ranch) have HOA landscaping standards including: minimum front yard turf coverage percentages, approved plant species lists, irrigation system standards, fence setback lines, and seasonal planting requirements. A professional Austin landscaper familiar with these HOAs will check CC&Rs before designing — saving the rework cost of an HOA-rejected installation.
Any legitimate Austin landscape company should carry:
Verify insurance with a COI. Any reputable Austin landscaper will provide it without pushback.
Austin's unique combination of Heritage Tree protections, dual soil types, LCRA water restrictions, and TCEQ irrigation licensing requirements creates meaningful legal and practical barriers to DIY landscaping — especially for anything beyond basic maintenance.
| Factor | DIY | Licensed Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Basic sod installation (flat, no obstacles) | ✅ Feasible — $0.30–$0.90/sq ft materials + labor time | $0.90–$2.50/sq ft professionally installed |
| Heritage Tree identification | ⚠️ Must self-identify 19"+ diameter trees | Professional identifies + designs around CRZ |
| Irrigation installation | ❌ TCEQ irrigator license required in Texas | Licensed irrigator required by law |
| Pesticide/herbicide application | ❌ TDA pesticide applicator license required for hire | Licensed applicator, compliant with Austin water buffer rules |
| Rock/limestone retaining wall (4 ft+) | ⚠️ Permit required — landscape architect stamp needed | Stamped plans + L&I permit handled by firm |
| Native plant selection for Austin | ⚠️ Easy to pick wrong species for your soil zone | Professional selects for East/West Austin soil type |
| LCRA water restriction compliance | ⚠️ Easy to design non-compliant irrigation | WaterWise-certified designer ensures compliance |
| HOA approval (Steiner Ranch, Mueller, Circle C) | ⚠️ High rejection rate without professional plan | Contractor familiar with HOA specs |
| Xeriscape rebate paperwork (Austin Water) | ⚠️ Self-managed but bureaucratic | Many pros handle rebate submission |
| Overall result quality | Variable — success depends heavily on experience | Consistent, warranted installation |
Mulching: Applying cedar or hardwood mulch to existing beds (3" depth) is straightforward and dramatically reduces water loss — critical in Austin summers. Mulch cost: $35–$55/cubic yard; a typical front bed takes 2–4 yards. H-E-B Garden Center locations carry bulk mulch seasonally.
Native plant addition to existing beds: Austin's Native Plant Society of Texas has extensive local guides. Adding plants like Salvia greggii (Autumn sage), Pavonia lasiopetala (rose pavonia), or Turk's cap (Malvaviscus arboreus) to existing beds is DIY-appropriate — these species are resilient, low-water, and available at The Natural Gardener on Southwest Parkway or Barton Springs Nursery.
Basic sod installation on flat grade (East Austin clay areas): If grading is level, no irrigation is being installed, and the area is under 500 sq ft — DIY sod installation with St. Augustine or Bermuda is manageable. Costs: $250–$400 in sod from SodFarm or local nursery, plus rent a sod cutter if removing old grass.
Austin Water's Landscape Rebate Program pays $0.10–$0.25/sq ft for converting turf to water-efficient native landscapes. A 1,000 sq ft conversion qualifies for $100–$250 in rebates plus eliminates an estimated $200–$400/summer in water use. A professionally designed xeriscape — $5,000–$10,000 installed — can break even vs. high-water turf alternatives within 3–5 years when considering water savings and rebates.
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