Casillas Hard Scape & Custom Homes LLC
723 W Finnie Flat Rd Spc 90 , Camp Verde, AZ 86322-7590
General Contractor, Landscape Contractors, Fence Contractors.
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
What's the average cost of average cost of fence installation in Phoenix? Get real local pricing data and free personalized quotes from 55 licensed contractors — no guessing required.
Typical cost in Phoenix
$15–$50 / linear ft
55 contractors in Phoenix
723 W Finnie Flat Rd Spc 90 , Camp Verde, AZ 86322-7590
General Contractor, Landscape Contractors, Fence Contractors.
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
P.O. Box 14555 , Phoenix, AZ 85063-4555
Ornamental Metal Work, Fence Contractors, Doors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
1605 E Adams St , Phoenix, AZ 85034-1210
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Contractors, Steel Fabrication, Iron Works ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
1838 W Lincoln St , Phoenix, AZ 85007-3326
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Contractors, Fence Sales, Gates ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
PO Box 6746 , Phoenix, AZ 85005-6746
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Contractors, Landscape Contractors, Fence Sales ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
895 W Elwood St 2 , Phoenix, AZ 85041-1102
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Chain Link Fence Contractors, Fence Contractors, Fence Sales ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
6940 NW Grand Ave , Glendale, AZ 85301-1029
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Sales, Fence Contractors, Vinyl Fences ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
P.O. Box 11374 , Glendale, AZ 85318-1374
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Contractors, Chain Link Fence Contractors, Wood Fences ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
20625 N 29th Pl , Phoenix, AZ 85050-4778
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Nets, Construction Services, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
11414 W Puget Ave , Peoria, AZ 85345-3405
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Contractors, Chain Link Fence Contractors, Wood Fences ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Mesa, AZ 85201-7008
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fence Contractors, Chain Link Fence Contractors, Wood Fences ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Surprise, AZ 85378-9325
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Mason Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
For: 150 linear ft fence in Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix fence installation costs are shaped by three distinctive local factors: the ubiquity of HOAs (setting material standards), the desert climate (making wood and vinyl less durable than in humid markets), and the prevalence of masonry block walls as the Phoenix default backyard privacy solution. Here's what fencing costs in the Phoenix metro in 2025.
| Material | Typical Scope | Price per Lin Ft (Installed) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| CMU (concrete block) wall | 6 ft standard privacy, block + stucco | $35 – $65/lin ft | Phoenix default; most HOA-compliant |
| Wood (cedar/pine) | 6 ft privacy, treated posts | $18 – $35/lin ft | Warps in Phoenix UV/heat; 10–15 year lifespan |
| Vinyl/PVC | 6 ft privacy | $20 – $45/lin ft | Must be UV-stabilized; chalks quickly if not |
| Tubular steel (wrought iron aesthetic) | 4 ft or 6 ft decorative | $30 – $55/lin ft | Popular in front yards; low maintenance in desert |
| Chain link | 4–6 ft, galvanized | $12 – $22/lin ft | Most HOAs prohibit; common in commercial |
| Wrought iron (custom) | Custom ornamental | $40 – $75/lin ft | Highest cost; longest lifespan in desert |
| Aluminum ornamental | 4–6 ft decorative | $25 – $45/lin ft | No rust; lightweight; popular pool fence |
Per-linear-foot prices include materials, posts, hardware, and labor for standard Phoenix installations.
Concrete masonry unit (CMU) block walls are the dominant backyard fencing material in Phoenix for good reason: they outperform every other material in the Sonoran Desert climate. CMU walls:
A standard 6-foot CMU block wall with stucco finish costs $35–$65 per linear foot installed in Phoenix — higher than wood but lasting 30–50 years with zero maintenance vs. 10–15 years for wood.
Phoenix metro has one of the highest HOA participation rates in the US — approximately 65–70% of Phoenix households live in HOA communities. HOA fence restrictions commonly include:
HOA architectural violation fees can range from $25–$200/day in Phoenix communities. Always verify HOA requirements and obtain written approval before your contractor begins work.
Wood fencing in Phoenix warps significantly faster than in humid climates because the extreme heat draws moisture out of wood fibers rapidly. Redwood and cedar — the premium wood choices — have better natural oil content but still require sealing every 1–2 years in Phoenix (vs. 3–5 years in Pacific Northwest climates). Vinyl fencing must be specifically rated for high-UV environments — non-UV-stabilized PVC turns gray and brittle within 5–8 years in Phoenix regardless of brand.
Per BLS Occupational Employment data for the Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler MSA, construction trade workers earn $22–$30/hour median in Phoenix. Standard fence installation billing rates run $65–$95/hour for labor, with materials priced at cost plus contractor markup (typically 15–25%).
Arizona has one of the most robust contractor licensing systems in the country — the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) actively regulates residential and commercial contractors and provides a public-facing complaint and license database. Fence installation is licensed work in Arizona.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) licenses contractors through a classification system. Fence contractors in Arizona operating commercially must hold one of:
Verify any Phoenix fence contractor at azroc.gov: Enter the contractor's ROC number or name. The ROC database shows: current license status, bond status, complaint history, and any prior disciplinary action. This takes 60 seconds and is the single most important consumer protection step in Arizona.
The ROC reports that fence installation is among the top 5 most-complained contractor categories in Arizona. Common complaints: unlicensed contractors who cannot pull permits, substandard concrete footings that fail in Arizona's sandy soil, and disappearing contractors after partial completion. An ROC-licensed contractor:
City of Phoenix permitting rules for residential fences:
A licensed fence contractor handles permit pulling as part of the project — if a contractor says "we don't need a permit" for a block wall or fence over 6 feet, that's a red flag.
Any legitimate Phoenix fence contractor carries:
This is the question that Phoenix fence installation projects hinge on — not the usual DIY vs. pro question, since fence installation in Phoenix's caliche soil almost always requires professional equipment. Instead, the key decision is material selection.
| Factor | CMU Block | Wood (Cedar) | Vinyl/PVC | Tubular Steel | Chain Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost installed (lin ft) | $35–$65 | $18–$35 | $20–$45 | $30–$55 | $12–$22 |
| Lifespan in Phoenix | 30–50+ years | 10–15 years | 8–20 years | 20–30 years | 15–25 years |
| UV resistance | Excellent | Poor (fades, warps, splits) | Moderate (must be UV-stabilized) | Excellent (powder-coated) | Good |
| Heat performance | Excellent (thermal mass) | Poor (extreme warping) | Moderate (expands, chalks) | Good | Good |
| HOA acceptance | Almost universal | Varies (unfinished prohibited) | Often accepted | Often accepted | Usually prohibited |
| Privacy | Complete | Complete | Complete | None – decorative | None |
| Maintenance required | Minimal (repaint stucco every 10 yrs) | High (seal every 1–2 yrs in AZ) | Low (annual cleaning) | Low (check for rust at welds) | Low |
| Permit required (Phoenix) | Yes — always | No (under 6 ft) | No (under 6 ft) | No (under 6 ft) | No (under 6 ft) |
| Pool barrier compliance | With proper gate hardware | With proper gate hardware | With proper gate hardware | With proper gate hardware | ✅ Yes |
| Wind load (haboobs) | Excellent | Good | Good | Good | Good |
The dominance of CMU block walls in Phoenix backyard fencing is not aesthetic — it's logical. Phoenix's environment eliminates the advantages of competing materials:
Phoenix's caliche soil layer — a hardened calcium carbonate pan typically found 12"–36" below surface in much of Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Chandler, and Tempe — cannot be broken with a standard post-hole digger. Caliche requires:
This equipment requirement is why DIY fence installation in Phoenix fails more frequently than in other markets — posts set in shallow holes or in unbroken caliche shift or collapse within 2–3 years. An ROC-licensed Phoenix fence contractor has the right equipment for caliche penetration and knows the appropriate footing depth for specific neighborhoods.
Every Phoenix-area backyard has a buried irrigation system — and most have other buried utilities (gas, electric, cable, fiber). Call 811 (callbeforeyoudig.org) at least 3 business days before any fence post installation. The 811 system marks utilities for free. Unlicensed fence installers frequently cut irrigation lines — repair costs $150–$500 per break, and damage to gas or electrical utilities is dangerous. A licensed Phoenix fence contractor calls 811 as standard operating procedure.
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