Frequently Asked Questions: Fence Installation in Philadelphia, PA
How much does fence installation cost in Philadelphia?
Philadelphia fence installation runs $18–$32/linear foot for wood privacy fence (labor + materials), $28–$55/LF for aluminum ornamental, and $60–$120/LF for wrought iron in historic district applications. A typical South Philadelphia rowhouse rear yard of 80–100 linear feet: $1,500–$3,200 installed for a wood fence, or $2,300–$4,800 for aluminum ornamental. Philadelphia's labor rates are higher than the national average per BLS Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington MSA data — construction trade workers earn $28–$42/hour in the metro. Concrete and brick subsurface obstacles common in older Philly properties add $50–$150 per post for drill-or-break-through situations.
Do I need a permit to install a fence in Philadelphia?
Depends on location and height. City of Philadelphia L&I requires permits for: rear yard fences over 6 feet; front yard fences over 4 feet; fences in flood zones; and fences in historic districts. Standard 6-foot rear yard privacy fences in non-historic, non-flood-zone Philadelphia residential areas typically don't require a permit. However: if you're in Old City, Society Hill, Fairmount, Germantown, or any area with a historic overlay, the Philadelphia Historical Commission review is required for any front or side yard fence. Your fence contractor should identify the permit requirement based on your specific address — an experienced Philadelphia fence company knows the city's zone requirements and historic overlay maps.
What fence material works best in Philadelphia's climate?
For rear yard privacy: cedar (board-on-board) or high-quality pressure-treated pine with ground-contact-rated posts (UC4B) set in proper drainage-directing concrete. For front yard or historic district areas: aluminum ornamental (meets Historic Commission standards, durable, low-maintenance, significantly cheaper than wrought iron). For premium applications in Center City historic rowhouses: wrought iron or architectural steel (authentic period character; 40–80 year lifespan with periodic painting). Avoid: vinyl in front yards of historic districts (typically not approved by the Historical Commission), and unsealed wood in shaded Philadelphia rear yards (Philly's urban humidity accelerates rot faster than suburban environments).
How does living in a Philadelphia historic district affect my fence choices?
Significantly. If your home is within a Philadelphia historical overlay district (Old City, Society Hill, Washington Square West, Fairmount, Germantown Historic District, and others), the Philadelphia Historical Commission reviews and must approve any fence visible from the street. Material requirements typically include: iron or iron-lookalike material (aluminum ornamental is generally acceptable as a period-appropriate substitute for wrought iron); height alignment with neighboring fences; design patterns consistent with the neighborhood's historical character. Submit design to the Historical Commission before any fence installation — approval can take 2–6 weeks. Your fence contractor should have experience preparing Historical Commission submissions for Philadelphia residential work.
Do I need to contact 811 before fence installation in Philadelphia?
Yes — Pennsylvania law (Act 287) requires it. Contact Pennsylvania One Call (PA 811) at least 3 business days before any fence post installation. Philadelphia's older utility infrastructure — pre-1950 water mains, clay-tile sewer laterals, older electrical conduit in rear alleys — runs at irregular depths that standard utility maps don't fully capture. Fence posts are typically driven 2–3 feet deep, which is within the zone where older Philadelphia utilities run. No legitimate Philadelphia fence contractor should begin digging before 811 markout — and you share liability if work proceeds without a 811 call that damages a utility line.