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Fence Cost Calculator

Estimate fencing costs by linear feet, material, height, and gates — wood, vinyl, chain link, aluminum, or wrought iron.

Last updated June 2026

Fence specs

Total fence cost

$—

Material

$—

Labor

$—

Cost per linear ft

$—

Line itemCost

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How This Calculator Works

Fences are priced by linear foot — material drives 60-75% of the cost and labor the rest. Wood privacy and vinyl are middle-priced workhorses; chain link is the budget option; wrought iron and ornamental aluminum sit at the top. Whatever material you pick, the per-linear-foot cost should hold roughly constant as you scale up perimeter, so this is one of the easier home projects to estimate accurately.

The formulas:

Material cost = perimeter (lf) × $/lf

Labor ≈ material × 35%

Total = material + labor + (gates × $300) + (removal × $5 if checked)

A typical residential project: 200 linear feet of 6-foot wood privacy at $30/lf = $6,000 material + $2,100 labor + $300 gate = $8,400. Add $1,000 for old-fence removal and you're at $9,400. That's about $47/lf installed — the standard ballpark for new wood privacy fencing in most U.S. markets.

Why labor is "only" 35%. Fence install is fast, repetitive work — a 2-person crew can install 100-150 lf of standard fencing per day. The work concentrates on post-hole digging (often with a power auger), setting posts in concrete, and attaching panels. Compared to deck building or concrete pouring, fencing is a relatively lightweight labor operation.

Understanding Your Results

Three outputs:

  • Total fence cost — all-in install: material + labor + gates + optional removal.
  • Material vs Labor split — useful for vetting bids. If a contractor's labor is more than 50% of material, they're either pricing high or anticipating difficult site conditions.
  • Cost per linear foot — your apples-to-apples comparison number. Wood privacy installed should be $40-50/lf in most markets; vinyl $50-65/lf; chain link $20-30/lf; wrought iron $80-120/lf.

The breakdown table itemizes each line. Use it to verify a contractor's bid covers the same components — a common surprise is gate hardware that's quoted separately, or post caps that aren't included. Always ask for an itemized estimate, not a single total.

DIY math: set labor to $0 effectively (override material % manually) and you're looking at ~65% of contractor pricing. DIY fence install is achievable for a moderately experienced homeowner with a couple of weekends, a power auger rental ($75/day), and a helper. Concrete post setting is the most tedious part — plan it across two days minimum to let concrete cure.

Factors That Affect Fence Cost

Material choice

Chain link ($15-25/lf installed): cheapest, ugliest, 20-30 year life. Wood privacy ($30-50/lf): standard residential, 15-20 year life with stain maintenance. Vinyl ($40-65/lf): zero maintenance, 30+ year life, color limited. Aluminum ornamental ($35-55/lf): elegant, doesn't rust, low maintenance. Wrought iron ($60-120/lf): premium look, requires periodic painting to prevent rust.

Height

4-foot fences: decorative/dog containment. 6-foot: standard privacy, what most homeowners install. 8-foot: maximum allowed in most cities without special permit, doubles wind load (heavier posts, more concrete). Higher fences require more material per linear foot proportionally — a 6-ft fence isn't just 1.5× a 4-ft fence; it's more like 1.6-1.7× because posts must also be longer and stronger.

Site grade and soil

Flat lots install fastest at quoted cost. Sloped lots require either "stepped" installs (each section steps down with the grade) or "racked" installs (panels follow the slope). Both add 10-20% to labor. Rocky soil that defeats power augers requires hand digging or rock drills (+30-50% labor).

Gates

Standard 4-foot pedestrian gate: $250-400 installed. Double-gate for vehicle access (12-16 ft): $600-1,200. Self-closing pool gate (required by code in pool-fence applications): +$100-200 for hardware. Each gate adds time for post hardware, hinge mounting, and latch installation.

Old fence removal

Typical add: $5-8/lf depending on material. Concrete-set posts are the slow part — they require sledgehammering and hauling away the concrete-encased base. Chain link with no concrete posts removes fastest; wood privacy fence with concrete-set 4×4 posts is the worst.

Permits and HOA approval

Most municipalities require a fence permit ($50-200), especially for anything over 6 feet, on a corner lot (sight-line ordinances), or in a historic district. HOAs almost always have approval processes — submit drawings before signing a contractor.

Property survey

For fence installs on or near property lines, a survey ($400-800) prevents future disputes with neighbors. Without a survey, neighbors can challenge fence placement years later and force you to move it. Always survey if the line is contested or unclear.

Climate and treatment

Wet climates (Pacific Northwest, Gulf Coast) shorten wood-fence life and require pressure-treated lumber rated for ground contact. Hot/dry climates (Southwest) make vinyl warping a concern — choose UV-stabilized vinyl or aluminum. Cold climates (frost-line states) need posts set 36-48″ deep to prevent heaving.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a fence last?
Chain link 20-30 years; wood 15-25 years with proper staining; vinyl 25-40 years; aluminum 30+ years; wrought iron 50+ years with periodic painting. Wood fence life is highly dependent on maintenance — stained every 3 years it lasts 20+ years; left untreated it can fail in 8-10.
Do fences add home value?
Modestly. National recoup is around 50-65% for new fencing, but a missing or dilapidated fence is a significant negative factor in buyer perception. The single biggest value-add of fencing is removing a "needs a fence" objection from prospective buyers.
Who owns the fence between two properties?
Depends on the state and how it was built. Generally: a fence on the property line that was paid for jointly is co-owned; a fence built entirely on one side's property is owned by that side. Always document maintenance agreements in writing.
Should I install it myself?
Chain link and pre-built wood panel installs are DIY-friendly. Anything with concrete-set posts requires 3+ weekends and a power auger. Custom builds (curved sections, ornamental ironwork) are best contracted. Save typically 35-40% by DIY-ing a standard wood privacy fence.
How deep should posts go?
1/3 of the fence height below grade as a baseline. For 6-ft fences, that's 2 feet deep minimum; for 8-ft, 2.5-3 feet. In cold climates with deep frost lines, posts must extend below the frost line (often 36-48″) regardless of fence height.
Wood or vinyl for low maintenance?
Vinyl, hands down. No painting, no staining, no rot, no termites. The trade-off is upfront cost (~50% more than wood) and aesthetic — wood looks "natural"; vinyl looks "vinyl." If you'll live in the home 10+ years, vinyl's lifetime maintenance savings usually offset the upfront cost.

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Next Steps

Once you've estimated the fence cost, the natural next steps:

Disclaimer

Site grade, rocky soil, and HOA-required spec changes (e.g., specific stains or wood species) all add cost. Pull a permit before installing anything over 6 ft, and survey if the property line is unclear.