Professional Fence Repair Houston 76
1034 Main Street, Houston, TX
Fence specialists offering installation, repair, and maintenance. We work with all materials and ensure gate alignment and durability.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
Professional professional fence installation in Houston. Skip the DIY risk — 124 licensed pros deliver results that last, backed by warranties and proper permits.
Typical cost in Houston
$15–$50 / linear ft
124 contractors in Houston
1034 Main Street, Houston, TX
Fence specialists offering installation, repair, and maintenance. We work with all materials and ensure gate alignment and durability.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
8974 Main Street, Houston, TX
Experienced fence contractor providing installation and repair services. Competitive pricing, quality materials, and professional workman¦
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
292 Main Street, Houston, TX
Professional fence installation and repair. Wood, vinyl, metal, and composite options with custom designs and quality craftsmanship.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
6738 Main Street, Houston, TX
Fence specialists offering installation, repair, and maintenance. We work with all materials and ensure gate alignment and durability.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
9921 Main Street, Houston, TX
Full-service fencing company: design, installation, and maintenance. We build fences that last using quality materials and expert technique.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
434 Main Street, Houston, TX
Full-service fencing company: design, installation, and maintenance. We build fences that last using quality materials and expert technique.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
9006 Main Street, Houston, TX
Fence specialists offering installation, repair, and maintenance. We work with all materials and ensure gate alignment and durability.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
410 Main Street, Houston, TX
Professional fence installation and repair. Wood, vinyl, metal, and composite options with custom designs and quality craftsmanship.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
3400 Main Street, Houston, TX
Fence specialists offering installation, repair, and maintenance. We work with all materials and ensure gate alignment and durability.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
6611 Main Street, Houston, TX
Professional fence installation and repair. Wood, vinyl, metal, and composite options with custom designs and quality craftsmanship.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
2832 Main Street, Houston, TX
Custom fencing solutions for residential and commercial. Design consultation, installation, and repairs with warranties on all work.
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
7607 Main Street, Houston, TX
Experienced fence contractor providing installation and repair services. Competitive pricing, quality materials, and professional workman¦
Serves: 77001, 77002, 77003, 77004 +92 more
For: 150 linear ft fence in Houston, TX
Houston's fence installation costs are shaped by two forces that work in opposite directions: relatively lower labor rates (fence installation workers in the Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land MSA average $18–$28/hr per BLS SOC 47-4099) and uniquely challenging soil and climate conditions that drive up material costs, post depth requirements, and maintenance cycles compared to most U.S. markets.
Houston's expansive clay (Beaumont Clay / gumbo clay) soil — the same soil that makes foundation repair a multi-billion dollar industry in Harris County — is the defining physical constraint for fence installation. Fence posts set in gumbo clay are subject to seasonal heave: the clay swells when wet (spring rains, Harvey-scale flooding) and shrinks when dry, causing posts to shift, lean, and fail at rates 2–3× higher than in sandy or loam soil markets.
| Fence Type | Materials | Installed Cost (per linear foot) |
|---|---|---|
| Cedar privacy fence (6 ft) | Dog-ear cedar, treated pine posts | $18–$35/lft |
| Cedar privacy fence (8 ft) | Required in some Houston HOA rear yards | $22–$42/lft |
| Wood picket fence (4 ft) | Pine pickets, treated posts | $12–$22/lft |
| Vinyl privacy fence (6 ft) | PVC panels, aluminum inserts | $25–$40/lft |
| Wrought iron / ornamental steel | Powder-coated steel panels | $30–$55/lft |
| Aluminum fence (4–5 ft) | Pool code compliant | $25–$45/lft |
| Chain link (industrial, 6 ft) | Galvanized, residential grade | $12–$22/lft |
| Composite fence (6 ft) | Composite board, steel posts | $28–$48/lft |
| Concrete post and board | Wet-cast concrete posts | $22–$38/lft |
Example project costs:
Standard residential fence post depth in most markets is 18–24 inches. In Houston's gumbo clay, professional fence contractors set posts 30–36 inches deep in an oversized hole (10–12 inch diameter) and fill with concrete mixed with gravel or a foam-backed expansion buffer. Some contractors use concrete post collars that extend the base footprint. This extra depth and concrete volume adds $3–$6 per linear foot to installation cost vs. a standard-soil market — but it's essential for fence longevity in Harris County. Posts set to standard depth in Houston clay lean, heave, and fail within 5–7 years.
Harris County falls within ASCE 7 Wind Zone B, and areas near Galveston Bay and the Ship Channel experience tropical storm and hurricane wind events (Harvey 2017: sustained 45 mph, gusts to 130 mph on the coast). Houston fence contractors building in suburban areas near Clear Lake, League City (adjacent to Houston), Pasadena, and Baytown increasingly use steel post sleeves inside the wood post for reinforcement, and build cedar fences with a top rail and double bottom rail for wind resistance. These reinforcements add $2–$4/lft but significantly extend wind event survival.
Western red cedar and its treatment requirements must be managed in Houston's subtropical humidity (average 74% RH year-round, up to 90%+ in summer). Untreated or improperly sealed cedar in Houston will gray out, develop mildew, and begin checking and splitting within 2–3 years. Professional fence contractors in Houston:
Houston itself has no citywide fence ordinance (no height limits or permit requirement for standard wood fences ≤8 ft). However, the suburban communities that functionally define Greater Houston — The Woodlands, Sugar Land, Katy, Pearland, Friendswood, Cypress — have highly specific HOA Architectural Review Committee (ARC) requirements covering:
Always obtain ARC approval before installation in any Greater Houston HOA community. Unapproved fences are subject to mandatory removal at the homeowner's expense.
Houston sits above one of the most complex underground utility networks in the country — natural gas mains, petroleum pipelines, and flood control infrastructure. Always call Texas 811 (call or visit texas811.org) at least 2 business days before any digging. Post holes in Sugar Land, Humble, and inner-loop Houston have hit gas mains. Professional Houston fence contractors confirm 811 clearance before any machine or manual post hole digging.
Texas does not issue a statewide license for fence contractors. However, all home improvement contractors in Texas — including fence installers — are subject to the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Act (DTPA), which prohibits false representations, warranty violations, and unfair contract terms. For fence contractors:
For projects exceeding $10,000, confirm the contractor carries a performance bond — especially for large wood or iron fence installations in Greater Houston suburbs.
Business verification:
The minimum insurance Houstonians should require from any fence contractor:
| Coverage | Minimum |
|---|---|
| General Liability | $300,000 per occurrence |
| Workers' Compensation | Voluntary in TX — but require it anyway |
| Property Damage | Included in GL policy |
Texas workers' compensation is voluntary — Texas is the only state that does not require employers to carry WC. This means a fence crew working in your yard in Memorial, Meyerland, or River Oaks may have no workers' comp coverage at all. If a crew member is injured on your property, you may face a personal injury lawsuit with no insurer to buffer the claim. Always require proof of workers' compensation before work begins — or verify the contractor has a WC waiver and that your homeowner's policy has adequate personal liability coverage.
Houston's expansive clay soil has destroyed more fences than any hurricane. A fence contractor from Dallas, Austin, or out-of-state who quotes standard 18–24 inch post depth is setting you up for a leaning, failing fence within 5 years. A Houston-experienced fence contractor:
Greater Houston's sprawling master-planned communities (The Woodlands, Sugar Land, Katy, Pearland, Friendswood, Cypress, League City) have HOA architectural standards that fence contractors must navigate. A professional contractor familiar with Greater Houston:
Contractors who "start and hope" on HOA properties — installing before approval — create situations where the homeowner must pay for removal and reinstallation.
Calling Texas 811 is legally required (Texas Utilities Code §251.151) before any digging in Houston. Houston's underground network includes:
Call texas811.org or dial 811 at least 2 business days before any post hole digging. Legitimate Houston fence contractors confirm 811 clearance as part of their standard project start checklist.
Fence installation is one of the most attempted DIY outdoor projects nationally. In Houston, the combination of expansive gumbo clay soil, hurricane wind exposure, and HOA ARC requirements creates a uniquely high failure rate for DIY fence projects. This comparison is frank about where Houston homeowners succeed and where they spend more in the long run by going it alone.
| Factor | DIY | Professional Houston Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Cost (200 lft cedar) | $2,000–$4,000 materials + equipment | $4,500–$8,000 installed |
| Post depth | Standard 18–24" (typical DIY mistake) | 30–36" in gumbo clay (required) |
| Concrete volume | Often underestimated | 10–12" holes + gravel drainage |
| HOA ARC approval | Often skipped; fines result | Process managed by contractor |
| Texas 811 clearance | Often skipped; utility strike risk | Documented as standard |
| Wind bracing (hurricane zone) | Rarely added | Top rail + double bottom rail standard |
| Gumbo clay post heave risk | Very high (standard depth) | Managed (deep set + concrete) |
| Cedar sealing timeline | Often missed | Factory oil stain within 30 days |
| Gate alignment | Challenging; sag common | Self-closing spring hinge + bracing |
| Material waste | 15–20% overrun typical | Estimating software minimizes waste |
| Time (200 lft fence) | 2–4 weekends | 2–3 business days |
| Texas DTPA warranty | None | 1–2 year labor + material warranty |
Small, simple projects in post-Harvey reconstruction zones where the prior fence is already removed and the soil is well-documented are the best DIY candidates:
Material savings on 200 lft of DIY cedar fence: $1,500–$3,000 vs. having it professionally installed. But this saving is real only if the fence doesn't lean within 5 years — which requires proper gumbo clay post depth that most DIYers underestimate.
Houston's Beaumont/Lake Charles gumbo clay is the primary cause of fence failure in the metro. Clay swells by 20–30% volume when saturated (after major rain events, Spring flooding, post-hurricane) and shrinks dramatically in summer drought. A 24-inch post set in standard concrete in gumbo clay experiences lateral soil pressure during wet cycles that can push the post from vertical — sometimes visibly within the first wet season. A 4-inch lean on a fence post at grade becomes a 12-inch lean at the top of a 6-foot fence. DIYers who set 4-inch posts at 18–24 inches in Houston clay will be resetting posts within 3–5 years.
The solution — 30–36 inch depth, 10–12 inch diameter hole, concrete with gravel drainage bed at the bottom — requires a tow-behind power auger or a rental gas-powered auger that most DIYers don't have and don't budget for ($1,000–$2,000 rental for a full fence project).
The Woodlands, Sugar Land, Pearland, Katy, Friendswood, and Cypress all have HOA architectural standards that are strictly enforced. Homeowners who install a fence without ARC approval face:
A professional Houston fence contractor navigates this process automatically — they know the approved materials in each community and won't order materials or schedule installation without a written ARC approval in hand.
Post holes in Houston's inner Loop and suburban areas routinely encounter shallow utility lines. Natural gas mains, fiber optic cable, and flood control infrastructure are commonly found at 18–36 inches — within the range of a fence post. A professional Houston contractor calls 811 (texas811.org) as standard practice. Many DIYers skip this step until after they've hit a gas line or a fiber conduit.
Houston's humidity and soil movement make gate installation particularly challenging. A gate installed plumb in June may be a 2-inch out-of-square sagging gate by the following spring as the adjacent gumbo clay heaves. Professional Houston fence contractors:
For Houston homeowners, DIY fence installation saves money only if executed with the same engineering considerations a professional applies: 30–36 inch post depth, large concrete footings, Texas 811 clearance, and HOA ARC approval. Most DIY failures in Houston trace back to underestimating the clay soil problem — which is correctable with knowledge but not without the right equipment.
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