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Landscaping websites

Landscaping websites should show the work and make estimates easy.

For landscapers, the website has to make the finished result visible. Project photos, service categories, seasonal timing, and estimate paths matter more than generic slogans.

What matters

Useful pages are built from useful decisions.

These are the details we would look at before deciding whether the site needs a new build, a rebuild, a focused refresh, or a smaller round of updates.

01

Proof

Project photos are not decoration. They are sales evidence.

Landscaping websites work best when photos show finished yards, materials, planting, hardscapes, maintenance results, and the kind of work the company wants more of.

  • Finished project galleries
  • Before-and-after context when useful
  • Captions that name the type of work

02

Services

Separate routine care from larger projects.

A customer looking for mowing, cleanups, drainage, patios, planting, or full landscape installation needs to understand quickly whether the business is a fit.

  • Clear service categories
  • Seasonal services and timing
  • Residential, commercial, or specialty notes

03

Estimates

Make the quote path feel simple and realistic.

A good landscaping website explains what information helps with an estimate, what areas are served, and what happens after someone reaches out.

  • Short estimate request form
  • Service-area details
  • Photo upload or project description prompts where useful

04

Updates

Seasonal website updates can support real demand.

Spring cleanups, summer maintenance, fall leaf work, winter services, and project booking windows all create natural reasons to keep the site current.

  • Seasonal service refreshes
  • New project photos
  • Google Business Profile alignment

Need a landscaping website that shows the work clearly?

Send the current URL and the services you want to emphasize. We will help structure the site around photos, services, and estimates.