Website design for landscapers
A $50,000-grade website for a landscaping company, built for you, not by you.
A landscaping website has to show the work, because the buying decision is visual, and cover both the build (design, install, hardscaping) and the recurring side (maintenance, snow removal) that pays the bills year round. It needs per-area pages and a quote path tuned to project scope. AtlasForge builds that site free and live within 48 hours.
Who this is for.
A landscaping decision is made with the eyes. Someone imagining a new patio, a planted yard, or a maintained commercial property is browsing for proof that this company can produce the result they are picturing. At the same time the business runs on recurring work, maintenance and seasonal snow removal, that pays year round and is usually buried behind the showcase projects. The site has to sell the dream build and surface the boring revenue at once.
What the old landscaper website gets wrong.
These are the patterns we see on most landscapers’ sites, and what a proper build fixes.
- The work is visual but the old site has a thin gallery of low-resolution photos
- Recurring revenue (maintenance, seasonal snow removal) is buried behind the showcase projects
- Commercial and residential clients want different things and the site speaks to neither clearly
- Service-area coverage is vague, so local searches go to a competitor with a real local page
What a great landscaper website includes.
A great landscaping site puts a real, high-resolution gallery up front, organized by project type, so the work does the selling. It keeps the design-and-install side and the recurring maintenance and snow-removal side as separate tracks, and leads with whatever is in season so the year-round revenue stays visible. It speaks to commercial and residential buyers differently, because a property manager and a homeowner decide on different things, and it captures project scope in the quote form so estimates start qualified.
- A real, high-resolution project gallery organized by project type
- Separate tracks for design-and-install and for recurring maintenance and snow removal
- Commercial and residential paths, because a property manager and a homeowner buy differently
- A quote path that captures project scope so estimates start qualified
- Per-service-area pages for the towns and regions you cover
- Service and LocalBusiness schema for local and seasonal search visibility
Every one of these ships in the free build. This is the standard, not an upsell.
What a landscaper website actually costs.
A landscaping site is bought visually, so the gallery and the per-type organization are where the budget goes, and they are what a cheap build does worst. The split between the install work and the recurring maintenance side adds pages, but that split is what keeps the snow-removal and grounds-care revenue from disappearing under the showcase projects. You are paying for a site that sells the build and protects the recurring base in the same breath.
Real landscaper sites we have built.
Live, on their own domains. Each was built before the owner paid anything.
Vos Landscapes
Nanaimo
Vancouver Island landscaping company rebuilt as a 29-route Next.js site with service and service-area pages across the Nanaimo catchment.
Yard Worx Landscape
Ontario
Owner-operated four-season landscaping and snow-removal company rebuilt with 29 routes and 94 curated real project photos.
Picture Perfect Grounds Care
Ontario
Commercial snow and grounds-care company rebuilt as an 18-route Next.js lead-gen site with a quote flow and service pages.
Website design for landscapers by city.
Landscaping and grounds care website questions
Can the site cover both landscaping and snow removal?
How important is the photo gallery?
How does the site keep my maintenance work visible?
Does it matter whether my buyers are commercial or residential?
Related reading.
- How much a landscaper website costs
- Website design by industry
- What a website costs by industry
- A Wix alternative built for landscapers
- Landscaping and grounds care website design in Nanaimo
- What a small-business website needs
- AtlasForge compared to the alternatives
- The State of Small-Business Websites report