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Web Design · Landscapers & Lawn Care

Landscaping websites that sell
the yard before you quote it.

Landscaping websites win or lose on photos. A homeowner planning a backyard in Mississauga decides from your gallery before reading a single word, so I build custom-coded, gallery-first sites for landscapers across Brampton, Peel Region and the GTA that load fast and make the work impossible to scroll past.

Bought with the eyes

A landscape website is a portfolio with a phone number.

Nobody hires a landscaper from a paragraph. They hire from a photo of a yard that looks like the one they want, in a neighbourhood that looks like theirs. That single fact should shape every page of the site.

Most landscaper sites in the GTA get this backwards: stock photos of generic gardens, dense text about quality workmanship, and the real portfolio buried three clicks deep on a slow gallery plugin. The homeowner never sees the work that would have sold them.

The builds here reverse it. Real projects on the first screen, before-and-after pairs organized by job type, and pages fast enough that a visitor on a phone flips through twenty photos without waiting once.

What every build includes

The four parts of a landscaping site that books jobs.

01

Gallery-first layout

Before-and-after pairs of real yards, organized by job type: interlock, decks, full design-build, maintenance. The photos sell; the site just gets out of their way.

02

One page per service

Interlocking, sod, grading, lighting and maintenance each get searched on their own. Separate pages catch separate searches, which is how a landscape website ranks past the directories.

03

Seasonal quote flow

A quote form tuned to how landscaping is actually bought: job type, rough budget, photos of the space. Serious leads arrive pre-qualified, tire-kickers filter themselves out.

04

Local proof by city

Projects tagged Brampton, Mississauga or Caledon, with content that names the neighbourhoods. Google matches you to nearby searches; homeowners see yards like theirs.

Beyond the build

Landscaping marketing that matches the season.

Landscaping demand is a spring flood. Searches for design and interlock work start climbing when the snow melts, which means the marketing for landscaping has to be built over the winter: rankings, gallery, reviews, all in place before the first warm weekend.

The compounding half is local SEO. A Google Business Profile full of real project photos, service pages that own their searches and reviews that name the neighbourhood keep pulling leads year after year, and that work is whatSEO for contractorscovers.

Landscape advertising has a place too: paid ads can fill the calendar during the spring rush. But ads rented on top of a weak site burn budget, so the site and SEO come first. Every landscape marketing dollar works harder once the foundation exists.

Straight pricing

What a landscaping website costs here.

A custom landscaping website starts at $999 CAD with local SEO built in, and larger builds run up to about $2,500. Up to 5 custom-coded pages, the gallery engine, click-to-call, schema markup and on-page keyword work in one price. Ongoing SEO and updates run from$300/mo CAD, or$600/mo with ads management.

Fixed price in writing before work starts. If your current site just needs the gallery and speed fixed rather than a rebuild, the free audit will say exactly that.

Recent work

Real sites, real clients.

Keep going

Winter is for building. Spring is for booking.

Start with the free written audit and find out whether your site, your profile or both are costing you the spring wave.

FAQ

Landscaping websites: your questions.

How much does a landscaping website cost?

A custom-coded landscaping website starts at $999 CAD for a 5 to 6 page site with local SEO setup built in, and larger or more complex builds run up to about $2,500 CAD, with a project gallery and contact form throughout. Price fixed in writing before work starts.

What makes landscaping websites different from other trades?

Landscaping is bought with the eyes. A homeowner planning a $15,000 backyard decides from your photos before reading a word, so the gallery is the site's engine, not an afterthought. Before-and-after pairs of real GTA yards outsell any paragraph.

When should a landscaping company build its website?

Fall or winter. Spring is when homeowners start searching for landscapers, and rankings plus a portfolio need to be in place before that wave. Building the site in June means paying for a season you already missed.

Is SEO or advertising better for landscaping marketing?

They answer different timelines. Landscaping advertising like Google Ads brings clicks this week and stops the day the budget does. SEO compounds: the rankings built this winter keep pulling design-build leads every spring after. Most landscapers do best starting with SEO, then adding managed Google and Meta ads (from $600/mo here) for the spring push.

Can a website bring commercial landscaping contracts?

It filters you in or out. Property managers shortlisting maintenance contractors check the site for crew size, insurance and commercial project proof before ever calling. A residential-only gallery quietly costs you those bids.

Do I own the website when it is done?

Yes. Code, domain and content are yours, no builder lock-in and no hostage hosting. The optional retainer covers updates and SEO, nothing else.

Work with me

Your best yards are your best salesmen.

Send your current site or Google Business Profile link. You get a free written audit showing why homeowners scroll past your work, and what it costs to fix before spring.

Get a Free Website Audit