Calculate your annual landscaping budget including lawn care, seasonal planting, tree trimming, and irrigation system maintenance.
Landscaping is a recurring property expense that directly impacts curb appeal, property value, and tenant satisfaction. A well-maintained landscape can increase property value by 5–15%, while neglected yards deter quality tenants and invite code violations. This calculator helps you build a comprehensive annual landscaping budget.
The major landscaping expense categories include regular lawn care (mowing, edging, fertilization), seasonal planting and mulching, tree and shrub trimming, irrigation system maintenance, and leaf cleanup. Costs vary dramatically by property size, climate zone, and whether you DIY or hire a service. A typical single-family home spends $1,200–$5,000 annually on landscaping.
For landlords and property managers, budgeting for landscaping upfront prevents deferred maintenance that compounds over time. Overgrown trees damage roofs and foundations, neglected irrigation wastes water and creates drainage issues, and unkempt yards generate HOA fines and city code violations.
Homebuyers, investors, and real-estate professionals all benefit from precise landscaping budget figures when evaluating properties, negotiating deals, or planning long-term investment strategies. Save this calculator and revisit it whenever market conditions or your financial situation changes.
Landscaping costs are predictable and seasonal, making them ideal for budgeting. This calculator helps you forecast each expense category by frequency and cost, giving you a total annual figure to incorporate into your property budget or rental expense analysis. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis.
Annual Landscaping = (Lawn Care × Visits) + Seasonal Planting + Tree Trimming + Irrigation + Additional Monthly Budget = Annual Total / 12
Result: $2,700/year — $225/month
Lawn care at $50/visit for 30 visits = $1,500. Seasonal planting and mulch = $400. Annual tree trimming = $500. Irrigation maintenance = $300. Total annual landscaping budget: $2,700 or $225/month.
Single-family homes spend $1,200–$5,000 annually. Small multi-family (2–4 units) typically spend $2,000–$6,000 for common areas. Commercial properties and large apartment complexes can spend $10,000–$50,000+ depending on acreage and features.
Spring: cleanup, mulching, planting, irrigation startup, fertilization. Summer: weekly mowing, watering, pest control. Fall: leaf cleanup, aeration, overseeding, final fertilization, irrigation winterization. Winter: pruning, hardscape repair, snow preparation.
Professional landscaping typically returns 100–200% of its cost in higher rents and property value. Quality tenants expect well-maintained grounds, and it's often cheaper to hire professionals than to deal with the consequences of neglected landscaping.
Basic mowing and edging for a typical single-family yard costs $30–$80 per visit depending on size and region. Add $20–40 for fertilization treatments, $15–30 for weed control, and $20–50 for aeration. Full-service visits with all treatments can run $80–$150.
Most lawns need weekly mowing during active growth (spring through fall), which is roughly 26–34 weeks in most U.S. climates. Cool-season grasses in the northern U.S. may need 28–32 mowings. Warm-season grasses in the South may need 30–42.
Standard tree trimming costs $200–$800 per tree depending on size, species, and accessibility. Large trees or those near power lines can cost $1,000–$2,000+. Most trees need trimming every 2–3 years, though fast-growing species may need annual attention.
Yes, landscaping maintenance (mowing, trimming, seasonal care) is fully deductible as an operating expense in the year incurred. Major landscaping improvements (new hardscape, irrigation installation) may need to be depreciated over 15 years.
Annual irrigation system maintenance typically costs $200–$500 and includes spring startup, fall winterization, head adjustments, and minor repairs. Major repairs (broken main line, new controller) add $200–$800. System installation runs $2,000–$5,000.
For single-family homes, many landlords include landscaping in the lease or provide it as a service. For multi-unit properties, landlords typically handle common area landscaping. Making tenants responsible often results in neglected yards and potential property damage.