Complete Landsculpture
2000 Sandy Ln , Dallas, TX 75220-4213
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Tree Services, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
24-hour 24 hour landscaping design service service is available in Dallas. Browse 69 contractors who respond nights, weekends, and holidays — because emergencies don't keep business hours.
Typical cost in Dallas
$2,000–$15,000 / project
69 contractors in Dallas
2000 Sandy Ln , Dallas, TX 75220-4213
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Tree Services, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
1306 Exchange Dr , Richardson, TX 75081-2315
Lawn Maintenance, Landscape Contractors, Tree Services ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
16910 Dallas Pkwy STE 114 , Dallas, TX 75248-1927
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Remodel Contractors, Construction Services, Landscape Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
3 , Garland, TX 75043-1249
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Tree Services, Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
2 Collins Ct , Richardson, TX 75081-2537
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Design, Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
Richardson, TX 75080
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Roofing Contractors, Landscape Contractors, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
2950 Irving Blvd , Dallas, TX 75247
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Tree Services, Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
Richardson, TX 75081-5662
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Tree Services, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
17727 Frank Jackson Dr , Dallas, TX 75252-6307
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Lawn Maintenance, Landscape Contractors, Tree Services ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
6101 Westlake Ct , Garland, TX 75043-6462
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Sprinkler Systems, Landscape Contractors, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
1030 Martinique Ave , Dallas, TX 75223-1446
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Irrigation Repair, Irrigation Installation
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
8735 Elam Rd , Dallas, TX 75217-4213
Tree Services, Landscape Contractors, Lawn Maintenance ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
For: front and back yard design and installation in Dallas, TX
Landscaping design in Dallas is driven by the North Texas Blackland Prairie climate zone (USDA Hardiness Zone 8a/8b), which allows for a wide plant palette but demands attention to the region's unique challenges: clay-dominant expansive Vertisol soils, sporadic drought broken by heavy rain events (flash flooding), hot-humid summers (dewpoint 65–75°F in July–August), and occasional hard freezes that test Zone 8b plant selections. According to BLS SOC 37-1012 (first-line supervisors of landscaping workers) in the Dallas MSA, installation labor runs $25–$50/hr. Here's what Dallas homeowners pay at each investment level:
| Service | Scope | Dallas Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Landscape design plan only (residential) | Planting plan, layout, plant list for 1/4-acre lot | $500–$2,500 |
| Full landscape design + installation (front yard) | Average Dallas quarter-acre front yard | $8,000–$25,000 |
| Full landscape design + installation (backyard) | Average Dallas backyard with patio expansion | $15,000–$60,000 |
| Native plant garden design + install | Low-water, NTMWD-approved plant palette | $8,000–$20,000 |
| Irrigation design + installation | Smart drip system for average lot | $4,000–$12,000 |
| Seasonal color rotation (annuals) | Quarterly replanting — beds only | $600–$2,000/quarter |
| Tree installation (2-inch caliper native) | Single shade tree, balled-and-burlapped | $400–$1,200 installed |
| Hardscape (flagstone patio or walkway) | 300–500 sf flagstone or pavers | $6,000–$18,000 |
| Retaining wall (natural stone) | Per linear foot with drainage | $35–$80/lf installed |
| Outdoor lighting system design + install | 12+ low-voltage fixtures with transformer | $2,500–$8,000 |
Dallas sits atop Blackland Prairie Vertisol clay — the same soil that causes more foundation movement in North Texas than anywhere else in the US. Texas A&M AgriLife Extension documents the critical relationship between landscaping and foundation stability: large trees planted too close to a Dallas foundation actively extract moisture from clay soils, causing differential settlement and foundation cracking. This is not theoretical — it's documented in thousands of Dallas structural engineering reports annually.
A professional Dallas landscape designer accounts for foundation proximity:
Installing an irrigation system in Dallas — even as part of a broader landscape installation — requires a Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) Irrigator License (30 TAC Chapter 30, Subchapter L). The TCEQ Irrigator License is a separate credential from any nursery or landscaping license. Verify your Dallas irrigation installer's license at tceq.texas.gov/licensing/irrigators. Unlicensed irrigation installation can result in code violations and voided permits.
Dallas area landscaping professionals increasingly design around NTMWD water conservation guidelines. Drought-tolerant, native, and adapted plants reduce irrigation requirements and lower seasonal landscaping maintenance costs substantially:
Texas regulates several aspects of landscaping work that homeowners commonly overlook:
Irrigation installation: TCEQ Irrigator License required. Any contractor who installs, maintains, alters, repairs, or services an irrigation system in Texas for compensation must hold a TCEQ Irrigator License. Verify license status at TCEQ's online license search. Irrigation work performed by an unlicensed contractor cannot be inspected by the City of Dallas, may violate City of Dallas plumbing code, and leaves the homeowner with no regulatory recourse for defective work.
Pesticide application: TDA license required. If your Dallas landscaping company applies herbicides, insecticides, or any pesticide to your property for compensation, they must hold a Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA) Pesticide Applicator License. Dallas's landscape pest challenges (chinch bugs in St. Augustine, grubs, fire ants, army worms) regularly require pesticide application. Verify the company's TDA license before any treatment.
Landscape designer vs. landscape architect. Texas licenses landscape architects through the Texas Board of Architectural Examiners (TBAE). A licensed landscape architect (LA) can stamp construction documents for commercial projects and complex residential projects (retaining walls, drainage modifications, structural landscape elements). For typical Dallas residential projects, a landscape designer without a LA stamp is sufficient — but for projects involving significant grading, drainage redirection, or structural hardscape, a licensed landscape architect provides an additional layer of engineering oversight.
In most US cities, landscaping mistakes are aesthetic and correctible. In Dallas, the wrong plant placement can — over years — cause structural foundation damage costing $10,000–$100,000 to repair.
The Blackland Prairie Vertisol clay under most of Dallas (Highland Park, University Park, Lakewood, Uptown, Oak Cliff, Plano, Frisco, Allen) has a Plasticity Index of 30–55 — among the most expansive soils in North America. This clay swells dramatically when wet and shrinks severely during drought. The pressure differential creates foundation movement.
Large-canopy trees extract enormous volumes of moisture from this clay during Dallas summers — a mature Live Oak can extract 50+ gallons of soil water per day through transpiration. This extraction creates a moisture deficit zone beneath the foundation, causing the clay to shrink and the foundation to settle differentially. A professional Dallas landscape designer:
This isn't a niche concern. Dallas foundation repair companies report that landscaping errors (trees too close, uneven watering, grade that drains toward foundation) account for 40–60% of their remediation cases in established Dallas neighborhoods.
Before hiring any Dallas landscape designer, verify they can demonstrate knowledge of:
| Factor | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Design plan cost | $0 (time investment) | $500–$2,500 for residential plan |
| Foundation risk awareness | Low — most homeowners plant too close | Core competency — foundation setbacks built in |
| TCEQ irrigation compliance | Cannot legally pull irrigation permit | TCEQ-licensed irrigator required |
| TDA pesticide compliance | Must DIY with consumer products only | Licensed applicator can use professional-grade products |
| Plant selection for Zone 8a/8b | Relies on big-box store labels (often incorrect for Dallas) | Species-level expertise; proper freeze hardiness selection |
| Clay soil preparation | Often underestimated; common to skip amendments | Soil test conducted; compost and expanded shale amendment specified |
| Drainage design | Frequently creates pooling issues | Grade assessment + swale/French drain integration |
| Water conservation | Ad hoc watering; higher water bills | Smart irrigation zoning; NTMWD-compliant design |
| Tree placement relative to foundation | High risk of planting too close | Foundation-aware siting as base requirement |
| Permits required | Homeowner can pull some permits | Contractor pulls irrigation, drainage permits |
Small native plant gardens and beds. Dallas has an outstanding resource for DIY plant selection: the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center's Native Plant Database filtered to Texas — specifically North Texas. Species like Texas Mountain Laurel (Sophora secundiflora), Blackfoot Daisy (Melampodium leucanthum), Autumn Sage (Salvia greggii), and Prairie Winecup (Callirhoe involucrata) are drought-tolerant, native, and can be planted by any homeowner with adequate soil prep (6 inches of native soil + 2 inches expanded shale amendment to improve drainage in Dallas clay).
Raised bed vegetable gardens. Dallas's clay soil is notoriously difficult for vegetable gardening — root vegetables are nearly impossible without raised beds. A 4-inch cedar raised bed with imported loamy soil (Calloways or North Haven Gardens in Dallas carries specialty mixes) is a weekend project for any capable DIYer.
Mulching and bed maintenance. Applying cedar or hardwood mulch (2–3 inches) around existing Dallas plants to retain moisture during summer drought is straightforward DIY. Mulch keeps clay soil from drying and cracking, maintains consistent moisture for root systems, and moderates summer soil temperature significantly in Dallas.
Foundation proximity. If the project involves any tree planting or large shrub installation within 20 feet of your foundation, a professional who understands Dallas's clay soil dynamics is essential. A foundation repair in Dallas averages $8,000–$15,000 and can exceed $100,000 for severe cases; paying $500–$2,000 for a professional landscape plan with proper tree placement is cost-effective protection.
Irrigation installation. Texas law requires a TCEQ Irrigator License for irrigation installation — this is not optional. DIY irrigation in Dallas may result in failed permits, code violations, and inefficient systems that violate NTMWD water restrictions. The financial penalties and correction costs far exceed the $4,000–$12,000 professional irrigation installation cost.
After Winter Storm Uri-level freeze events. Dallas experienced a historic mass plant die-off in February 2021 when temperatures fell to 0°F for multiple days — plants rated to Zone 8b (-10°F) died across the metro. Replanting is an opportunity to reassess the entire landscape plan with a professional who understands post-freeze Dallas Zone 8a selection criteria.
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