Landscaping web designfor the design-build work, not the mow.

A custom landscaping website built to book the design-build, hardscape, and irrigation work worth quoting, and to filter out the low-margin mowing requests. Yours to own after launch, structured to rank, never rented on a monthly subscription.

Custom landscaping website design showcasing a finished design-build backyard.

Why most landscaping websites bring in the wrong jobs.

Most landscaping sites are not bad because of how they look. They are bad because nobody decided what they were supposed to do. So they say “landscaping and lawn care,” show a stock photo of a green yard, and wait. The homeowner planning a full backyard redesign lands there, sees nothing that speaks to a real project, and calls the next name on Google.

There is a second trap, and it is everywhere in this trade. The subscription web-design shops that dominate the search results stamp one near-identical template across every lawn-care client they sign, then rent it back to you month after month. Stop paying and the site disappears. You never owned it. The layout that “sold” you is the same layout selling three thousand other landscapers, so it says nothing specific about your work and it pulls in exactly the jobs you want fewer of: the forty-dollar mow, the one-time cleanup, the price shopper.

A site should do the opposite. It should make the design-build and hardscape buyer feel like they found the right crew, and quietly let the low-margin requests fall away.

Built around the work you actually want more of.

The fastest way to change who calls you is to build the site around the jobs worth booking. That means a real page for each of your high-value services, one page each, written to sell the scope and quality of that work rather than a single “Services” list that lumps a patio build in with weekly mowing:

  • Landscape design and planning
  • Hardscaping and concrete
  • Irrigation installs and repairs
  • New-construction and post-build landscaping

Structure does the filtering. When a design-build page walks a homeowner through what a full transformation involves and what your crew brings to it, the serious buyer leans in and the tire-kicker self-selects out. Each of those pages also earns its own search traffic, because someone typing “paver patio installation” and someone typing “spring cleanup” are two different customers with two different budgets. We build the site to catch the first one.

This is the same approach we bring to home remodelers, another design-build trade where the goal is winning the substantial project, not the odd-job call.

Landscaping website with a dedicated page for each high-value service.

Your gallery is the product.

Landscaping sells on transformation. Before anyone reads a word, they want to see a yard like theirs turned into something they would pay for. That is why the gallery is the most important thing on the page, and it is where the template mills are weakest. They give you a random slideshow of thumbnails. The inspiration sites you have been scrolling for “best landscaping websites” show gorgeous work you cannot actually hire.

We build the gallery around your real projects and organize it the way a buyer shops: filterable by project type, with genuine before-and-after pairs. Patios and retaining walls in one filter. Full yard redesigns in another. Irrigation and xeriscape conversions in their own. A homeowner who came to browse ends up seeing three projects like the one in their head, and that is the moment they ask for an estimate. Real photography of your crew's work does more than any stock image ever will.

Filterable before-and-after landscaping project gallery grouped by project type.

Built to fill the spring calendar in the off-season.

Landscaping demand runs on a season, and most sites ignore it completely. Homeowners research and plan design-build and hardscape projects in fall and winter, then book for spring and summer. A site that only says “call for a quote” loses the person who is planning in January and not ready to dial yet.

We build for that planner. Project galleries give them something to browse and save. Service pages sell the value of planning the work now so the crew is booked when the ground thaws. Clear estimate paths let them raise their hand the moment they are ready. The goal is simple: your spring calendar fills before spring arrives, instead of scrambling for it in March.

Any trade that lives and dies by a season needs a site built for the planning window, not just the busy one. It is the same reasoning behind the work we do for heating and cooling companies, where a slow shoulder season is the time to book the next rush.

A homeowner planning a landscaping project in the off-season on a landscaping website.

A site built to rank, and the local SEO to back it.

The subscription shops list “SEO” as a perk with nothing behind it. We build the site to rank from the first day it goes live: one page per service, service-area pages so nearby towns can find you, clean schema, and real page speed. More than half of landscaping searches now happen on a phone, and most visitors abandon a page that takes longer than three seconds to load, so we build for a fast mobile experience from the first day. Landscaping is intensely local and driven by reviews, so the site is only half the job.

The other half is the local search work that gets a landscaper found: Google Business Profile, reviews, and consistent listings across the directories that feed the map. We handle that too, and you can read how we approach local search for service businesses. The website and the local SEO are built by the same studio, so they pull in the same direction instead of fighting each other.

Landscaping websites across the Front Range.

We are based in Denver, and we know the Colorado landscaping market up close. We have built and written the growth strategy for a Denver-metro landscaper, so the seasonal reality here is not theory to us. Front Range demand is short, competitive, and increasingly water-wise: xeriscape conversions and drip irrigation matter to homeowners working within Colorado watering rules, and a site that speaks to that work wins the homeowner who is already thinking about it.

National or local, the build is the same standard. If you want to see real proof from the trades, our work lives with the trade and construction businesses we build for, the pillar that covers roofing, remodeling, HVAC, and the rest of the building trades.

A water-wise Front Range landscape with a Colorado mountain backdrop.

How a landscaping site comes together with Immense.

The process is plain on purpose. We start with a discovery call to understand your services, your best jobs, and where you want to grow. We design around that, build the full site on a foundation you own, and launch it after a staging walkthrough where you sign off. From there, we offer maintenance and hosting so the studio that built your site is the one that keeps it fast and current.

Scope and price are fixed in writing before any work starts. No mid-project surprises, no rented template, no meter running on “unlimited changes” you will never use. When you ask what it costs, you get a flat number for a defined scope, quoted before we build anything. If a five-page site is the right call instead of an over-built one, we will tell you that too. You can read more about how we approach custom web design across every project.

  1. 01
    Discovery

    A call to map your services, your best jobs, and where you want to grow.

  2. 02
    Design

    We design around what we learned.

  3. 03
    Build

    The full site built on a foundation you own.

  4. 04
    Launch

    Live after a staging walkthrough where you sign off.

Common questions.

What pages should a landscaping website have?

A homepage that says what you do and where you serve, one page for each high-value service (landscape design and planning, hardscaping and concrete, irrigation, and new-construction landscaping), a project gallery organized by project type, service-area pages for the towns you cover, an about page, reviews, and a clear estimate or contact page. The service pages are what attract the bigger jobs and help you get found in search.

How long does it take to build a landscaping website?

Most landscaping sites are a standard five-to-eight-page build, which takes two to three weeks. A larger site with more service and service-area pages runs two to four weeks. A single landing page is one to two weeks, and a redesign of an existing site is two to four weeks. We give you a firm timeline in the proposal before work starts.

How much does a landscaping website cost?

It depends on how many services and pages the site needs to cover. We do not publish ranges or run a subscription meter. You get a fixed scope and a flat fee in writing before any work begins, and the site is yours to own after launch, not rented month to month.

Do I need a custom site, or is a template builder or a monthly web-design subscription enough?

A template builder can put a page online, but it will look like every other landscaper and it will not be built to filter for the high-value work. The monthly subscription shops rent you a shared layout you never own and can lose the day you stop paying. A custom site is built around your specific services, your gallery, and your market, and it stays yours.

Will my landscaping website actually show up on Google?

That is the plan we build to. The site is structured to rank with one page per service, service-area pages, schema, and real page speed. Because landscaping is so local, we pair it with the local search work (Google Business Profile, reviews, and consistent listings) that moves you up in the map results.

I do not have project photos yet. What do we do about the gallery?

We stage the launch with high-quality imagery so the site looks finished on day one, then swap in your real project photos as your crew completes work. The gallery is built to make that easy, so it grows into a genuine record of your best jobs over your first season.

Can you redesign my existing landscaping website instead of starting over?

Yes. A redesign runs two to four weeks depending on scope. If a redesign is the smarter move than a full rebuild, we will say so, and if a rebuild will actually serve you better, we will say that instead.

Who hosts and maintains the site after launch?

We walk you through the site at launch, then offer maintenance and hosting so updates, monitoring, and hosting are handled by the studio that already knows your site. It stays yours the entire time.

Build the site that books the real work.

Tell us about your landscaping business and the jobs you want more of. We will scope it, quote it flat, and build you a site you own.