Quick answer: Most Denver homeowners pay $45 to $95 per visit for routine lawn care and landscape maintenance. Full-service monthly plans run $150 to $450+ per month, and one-time projects, sod, xeriscape conversions, sprinkler systems, hardscape, and design, range from a few hundred dollars to well over $10,000 depending on scope. Your final Denver landscaping cost comes down to lot size, the Front Range’s heavy clay soil, the services you need, and how the Mile High climate and Denver Water restrictions shape the work, especially the choice between a thirsty Kentucky bluegrass lawn and a water-wise xeriscape.
This guide breaks down real 2026 Denver-area pricing by service so you can budget before you call for a quote.
About these numbers: The ranges below reflect typical 2026 pricing across the Denver metro (Denver, Arapahoe, Adams, Jefferson, and Douglas counties), based on common local service rates. Every property is different, soil, slope, sun exposure, and water use all move the price, so treat these as planning ranges, not firm quotes. For an exact figure on your yard, a written estimate is free: (720) 650-0165.
Related cost resources: Cost Calculator · Lawn Care Pricing
How Much Does Landscaping Cost in Denver?
Full-yard landscaping in Denver averages about $5,423, typically $2,444-$8,347. Xeriscaping runs roughly $5-$20 per square foot ($3,000-$15,000+), but Denver Water and the City of Aurora offer lawn-replacement rebates of about $1-$3 per square foot that cut the net cost. Denver’s short season and water restrictions make drought-tolerant design a strong long-term value.
Sources: Denver Water (lawn-replacement and water-wise rebates) and CSU Extension (Colorado xeriscape and planting guidance). Updated 2026-06-18.
At a glance, here is what Denver homeowners typically spend:
| Service | Typical Denver Cost (2026) | How It’s Billed |
|---|---|---|
| Lawn mowing & maintenance | $45 – $95 | Per visit |
| Full-service monthly plan | $150 – $450+ | Per month |
| Sprinkler blow-out (winterization) | $75 – $150 | Per fall |
| Core aeration | $75 – $200 | Per visit |
| Sod installation | $1.25 – $2.25 / sq ft | Installed |
| Xeriscape conversion | $8 – $20 / sq ft | Installed |
| Sprinkler / irrigation system | $3,000 – $6,500 | Per system |
| Rock & mulch installation | $65 – $120 / cu yd | Installed |
| Paver or flagstone patio | $14 – $40 / sq ft | Installed |
| Full landscape makeover | $5,000 – $40,000+ | Per project |
The most common spend, the one most Denver homeowners ask about, is recurring lawn care, and that is where the $45 to $95 per visit range lives. The rest of this guide explains what sits inside each number.
Denver Lawn Care and Maintenance Costs
Recurring lawn care is the backbone of most Denver landscaping budgets. Most Front Range lawns are cool-season Kentucky bluegrass or tall fescue, which stay green through Denver’s sunny summer but lean heavily on irrigation in a semi-arid, Mile High climate, so watering, mowing, and seasonal care all factor in.
Mowing and Recurring Maintenance by Lot Size
Per-visit pricing in Denver scales with lot size and how much trimming, edging, and bed work the property needs:
| Lot Size | Per-Visit Mow, Edge & Blow | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Small (under 5,000 sq ft) | $45 – $55 | Tight lots in Wash Park, the Highlands, central Denver |
| Medium (5,000 – 10,000 sq ft) | $55 – $75 | Most established metro neighborhoods |
| Large (10,000 sq ft – ½ acre) | $75 – $95 | Bigger lots in the suburbs and the foothills edge |
| Over ½ acre | $95+ | Quoted per property |
A standard visit covers mowing, string-trimming, edging beds and walkways, and blowing off hard surfaces. Bluegrass and fescue are usually cut weekly through the growing season and held a bit higher, around 3 inches, so the turf shades its own roots against the intense high-altitude sun and dries out less between waterings.
What Changes the Per-Visit Price
Within the $45 to $95 range, a few details push you toward the high or low end:
- Fenced or gated access that slows the crew down
- Heavy trimming around mature trees, beds, and rock features
- Slope and rocky ground on foothills and west-side lots
- Frequency, weekly accounts often price slightly lower per visit than one-off cuts
Sprinkler Winterization and Spring Start-Up
This is a Denver line item that warm-climate cities never deal with. Because the ground freezes hard, every irrigation system has to be blown out with compressed air each fall so water left in the lines doesn’t freeze and crack pipes or valves, a repair that costs far more than the service. Plan on:
- Fall blow-out (winterization): $75 to $150
- Spring start-up and check: $75 to $150
Skipping the fall blow-out is one of the most expensive mistakes a Denver homeowner can make.
Core Aeration
Front Range clay compacts hard, and Kentucky bluegrass thatches up over time, so annual core aeration is standard care here, it opens the soil so water and air reach the roots. Budget $75 to $200 depending on lot size, often paired with a fall fertilization.
Full-Service Monthly Maintenance Plans
Homeowners who want one predictable bill usually move to a monthly plan:
| Plan Level | Monthly Cost | Typically Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Basic | $150 – $200 | Weekly mow, edge, blow |
| Standard | $200 – $325 | Mowing plus bed maintenance, light pruning, weed control |
| Premium | $325 – $450+ | Above plus fertilization, aeration, irrigation checks, seasonal color |
Premium plans that bundle aeration and irrigation management are the best value on the Front Range, where water and clay both need ongoing attention.
Seasonal Cleanups
Denver’s two cleanup pushes are fall leaf and perennial cleanup and spring cleanup after a winter of snow, wind, and the hail that hammers the Front Range. A seasonal cleanup, hauling debris, cutting back perennials, refreshing beds, typically runs $200 to $600 depending on how much material comes off the property.
Denver Landscaping Project Costs
Beyond maintenance, most homeowners eventually take on one-time projects. These are priced by material and square footage, so the ranges are wider.
Sod and Lawn Installation
New sod is common after a dry, sunny summer or a winter that desiccates the turf. Installed pricing runs $1.25 to $2.25 per square foot, including soil prep:
| Grass Type | Installed Cost / sq ft | Denver Fit |
|---|---|---|
| Kentucky bluegrass | $1.40 – $2.00 | The Front Range classic, lush, self-repairing, thirstiest |
| Tall fescue | $1.25 – $1.85 | Deeper roots, more drought- and heat-tolerant than bluegrass |
| Buffalo grass / native | $1.60 – $2.25 | Low-water native, tan and dormant outside summer |
For a typical 1,500-square-foot front yard, that works out to roughly $1,900 to $3,400 installed. With Denver Water restrictions in mind, many homeowners now keep bluegrass only where it is used and convert the rest.
Xeriscape Conversion
This is the signature Denver project, the term xeriscape was coined here by Denver Water. Replacing thirsty turf with drought-tolerant plants, rock, mulch, and drip irrigation cuts water use dramatically and is often supported by Denver Water rebates. Installed cost typically runs $8 to $20 per square foot depending on plant density and hardscape, with a simple rock-and-shrub conversion at the low end and a designed native garden at the high end.
| Xeriscape Element | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Turf removal & soil prep | $1.50 – $4 / sq ft | Strip sod, amend, prep beds |
| Rock / mulch & weed fabric | $2 – $6 / sq ft | Cobble, crusher fines, or mulch |
| Xeric plantings | $5 – $12 / sq ft | Natives, ornamental grasses, perennials |
| Drip irrigation conversion | $1,500 – $4,000 | Water-wise, restriction-friendly |
Up front it costs more than a strip of sod, but it pays back every year on the water bill and under tightening Denver Water rules.
Rock, Mulch, Beds, and Planting
- Rock or mulch installed: $65 to $120 per cubic yard, Colorado cobble, crusher fines, and bark are the Front Range standards
- Flower bed install or refresh: $300 to $1,200 depending on size and plants
- Native and xeric plantings: priced per plan, but natives like blue grama, yarrow, rabbitbrush, and Rocky Mountain penstemon thrive in Denver’s sun and cut long-term water and replacement costs
Irrigation and Sprinkler Systems
In a semi-arid climate, irrigation is not optional, and efficiency matters under watering restrictions:
| System | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New 4–6 zone system | $3,000 – $5,000 | Standard suburban yard |
| Larger 7+ zone system | $5,000 – $6,500+ | Bigger lots, mixed turf and beds |
| Drip conversion for beds | $1,500 – $4,000 | Water-wise, restriction-friendly |
| Repair / tune-up | $150 – $500 | Heads, valves, controller |
A weather-based smart controller is well worth it on the Front Range, and any new install should account for Denver Water’s watering-day rules and backflow requirements.
Hardscape: Patios, Walkways, and Walls
Colorado stone gives Denver hardscape its character, and a hard freeze-thaw cycle makes a proper base essential:
| Hardscape | Installed Cost / sq ft | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Crusher-fines path | $6 – $12 | Affordable, natural, great drainage |
| Concrete paver patio | $14 – $28 | Durable, many styles |
| Colorado flagstone / buff sandstone | $20 – $40 | Premium local stone look |
| Retaining wall (face) | $25 – $55 | Common on sloped foothills lots |
A 300-square-foot paver patio typically lands between $4,200 and $8,400, while the same patio in Colorado flagstone can run $6,000 to $12,000. On expansive clay with hard winters, base prep and drainage are what keep that hardscape from heaving.
Landscape Design
A standalone design plan, scaled drawings, plant lists, and a phasing plan, runs $300 to $2,500 depending on lot size and detail. Many Denver homeowners roll the design fee into a larger design-build or xeriscape project, where it is credited back against the work.
Tree Care
Denver’s urban canopy, lots of ash, maple, locust, and spruce, needs informed care at altitude:
- Trimming / pruning: $150 to $650 per tree
- Large mature tree: $500 to $1,500+
- Storm and hail damage cleanup is common after Front Range hail season, and emerald ash borer has made proactive ash-tree care a real budget item across the metro
What Drives Landscaping Cost in Denver?
Two similar-looking yards can carry very different price tags. Here is what actually moves your Denver landscaping cost.
Lot Size and Terrain
Square footage is the first lever, but terrain matters too. Flatter lots on the eastern-plains side of the metro are quick to mow and build on, while west-side and foothills lots toward Golden, Morrison, and the Front Range edge often have slope, rock, and tighter access that add labor and equipment time.
Soil
The Front Range sits on heavy, expansive clay that swells when wet and shrinks when dry. It holds water but compacts hard and cracks hardscape that is not set on a proper base, so patios, walls, and beds all cost a bit more to build right, and core aeration becomes routine lawn care.
Water Restrictions and Xeriscape
Denver Water enforces watering-day restrictions that tighten in drought, often limiting irrigation to a few days a week. That makes water-wise design, xeriscape, drip irrigation, and native plants, a cost driver up front but a money-saver over time, on the water bill and on replacing plants that fail in the heat and sun. Denver Water rebates can offset part of a xeriscape conversion.
Turf Type
Kentucky bluegrass looks lush but is the thirstiest choice on the Front Range, which raises long-term water and maintenance cost under restrictions. Tall fescue uses less, and a xeriscape or buffalo-grass lawn uses far less still. The grass you choose shapes your spending for years.
Altitude and Climate
At a mile high, Denver gets intense UV, big day-to-night temperature swings, late spring frosts, a short growing season, and Front Range hail. All of it shapes plant selection, timing, and the occasional storm-cleanup bill in ways lower, milder markets never see.
Cost-Saving Tips for Denver Homeowners
- Convert thirsty turf to xeriscape. It costs more up front but cuts your water bill every year, and Denver Water rebates can offset part of the conversion.
- Never skip the fall sprinkler blow-out. A $75 to $150 winterization prevents frozen, cracked lines that cost far more to repair.
- Stay on the aeration schedule. Annual core aeration keeps bluegrass and fescue healthy in compacted Front Range clay and improves every watering.
- Right-size the lawn. Keep turf where it is used and convert the rest to native beds or rock to lower both water and mowing cost.
- Phase big projects. A design plan lets you build xeriscape, hardscape, beds, and irrigation in stages without losing the overall vision.
Denver Landscaping Cost FAQ
How much does lawn mowing cost in Denver?
Most Denver lawns are mowed for $45 to $95 per visit, scaling with lot size. Small central-Denver lots run $45 to $55, while larger suburban and foothills lots reach $75 to $95. Weekly service usually prices slightly lower per visit than one-time cuts.
How much does a xeriscape conversion cost in Denver?
Xeriscape conversions typically run $8 to $20 per square foot installed, depending on plant density and hardscape, a simple rock-and-shrub conversion sits at the low end and a designed native garden at the high end. Denver Water rebates can offset part of the cost, and the water savings continue every year.
Why do I need a sprinkler blow-out in Denver?
Because the ground freezes hard each winter, water left in irrigation lines can freeze and crack pipes, valves, and heads. A fall blow-out with compressed air, $75 to $150, clears the system and prevents repairs that cost far more. A spring start-up gets it running again.
How much does it cost to install sod in Denver?
Sod installation runs $1.25 to $2.25 per square foot installed, with tall fescue at the lower, more drought-tolerant end and Kentucky bluegrass at the lush, thirstier top. A typical 1,500-square-foot yard costs roughly $1,900 to $3,400.
Should I choose Kentucky bluegrass or xeriscape in Denver?
It depends on use and water budget. Bluegrass gives a classic lush lawn but is the thirstiest option under Denver Water restrictions; tall fescue uses less; and xeriscape with native plants uses far less while still looking great. Many homeowners keep a small bluegrass area where it is used and xeriscape the rest.
Is a full landscape makeover worth it in Denver?
A complete makeover ranges from $5,000 to $40,000+, but well-designed, water-wise landscaping suited to the Front Range climate adds curb appeal and resale value while lowering ongoing water and maintenance costs. Phasing the work, and prioritizing irrigation efficiency, keeps it manageable.
Get an Exact Denver Landscaping Quote
These ranges are a planning tool, your real cost depends on your lot, soil, water use, and goals. For a precise, no-obligation written estimate built around your property and Denver’s Mile High climate, reach Denver Pro Landscape at (720) 650-0165 for a free quote.