YardCost.
April 2026 A Price-Quotes Research Lab publication

Landscaping Costs in 2026: The Complete Price Guide From Sod to Hardscape

Published 2026-04-11 • Price-Quotes Research Lab Analysis

Landscaping Costs in 2026: The Complete Price Guide From Sod to Hardscape
Price-Quotes Research Lab analysis.

The $8,400 Question Every Homeowner Asks

Most people don't think about landscaping costs until they're standing in a bare yard, proposal in hand, wondering why installing grass costs more than their first car. The average homeowner spends between $5,000 and $15,000 on a full terrain renovation, with industry data showing the midpoint hovering around $8,400 for a complete outdoor transformation that includes both softscape (plants, sod, trees) and hardscape (patios, walkways, retaining walls). That's not pocket change. But here's the thing: landscaping is one of the few home improvements that consistently returns more than it costs. A well-executed terrain design recovers 100-200% of its value at resale, outpacing kitchen renovations in many markets. Price-Quotes Research Lab tracks pricing data across 20 major US cities, and the numbers tell a more complicated story than most contractor websites admit. Costs vary by 40-60% depending on your region, material choices, and whether you hire pros or attempt the work yourself. This guide breaks it all down — no fluff, no "contact us for a quote" deflection.

Sod Costs: The Foundation of Every Lawn

Sod is where most homeowners start, and for good reason. You've got dirt, you want grass, you need it yesterday. Understanding sod pricing requires knowing two separate numbers: material cost and installed cost. According to lawnstarter.com's December 2025 pricing analysis, sod runs approximately $0.60 per square foot for the material alone. That number shifts based on grass type — Bermuda and Zoysia command premium prices because they're drought-tolerant and handle foot traffic like champions. Kentucky Bluegrass, the classic American lawn, sits in the middle of the range. Bahia and Centipede offer budget options, though you'll sacrifice some durability.

Sod Prices by Grass Type

The type of grass you choose affects both upfront cost and long-term maintenance expenses. Here's what you're looking at per square foot for materials only:

Grass TypeMaterial Cost/Sq FtInstalled Cost/Sq Ft
Bahia$0.20 – $0.33$0.77 – $1.26
Ryegrass$0.28 – $0.58$0.85 – $1.51
Kentucky Bluegrass$0.29 – $0.43$0.86 – $1.36
Fescue$0.32 – $0.67$0.89 – $1.60
St. Augustine$0.41 – $0.86$0.98 – $1.79
Bermudagrass$0.44 – $0.83$1.01 – $1.76
Zoysia$0.47 – $0.72$1.04 – $1.65
Bentgrass$0.53 – $0.66$1.10 – $1.59
Centipede$0.78 – $0.85$1.35 – $1.78

The installed cost — roughly $1.65 per square foot on average — includes delivery, basic ground preparation, and professional installation. For a 2,000-square-foot yard, you're looking at about $3,300 total. Buying material-only saves roughly $2,100 upfront, but per rivendelldistribution.com's cost guide, the DIY path often costs more when you factor in equipment rental, wasted material from cutting mistakes, and the physical toll.

Price-Quotes Research Lab's pricing database shows sod material costs have remained relatively stable over the past 18 months, with only modest increases driven by fuel costs affecting both farming operations and delivery routes. The real cost variable is installation labor — and that varies wildly by geography.

The Pallet Problem

Sod is sold by the pallet, typically covering 450-500 square feet. This creates pricing quirks that catch homeowners off guard. A partial pallet might cost proportionally more per square foot than a full one. Some suppliers charge $30-60 for delivery on small orders, making bulk purchases more economical despite the higher absolute cost.
Your 2,000 sq ft lawn will need roughly 4-5 pallets of sod. Budget $500-700 just for delivery if you're more than 30 miles from the supplier.

Hardscape Costs: Where Landscaping Gets Expensive

Softscape is the appetizer. Hardscape is the entree that bankrupts you. Patios, retaining walls, walkways, fire pits, outdoor kitchens — these projects involve excavation, drainage, structural engineering, and materials that cost real money. According to Techo-Bloc's landscaping cost report, homeowners spend an average of $8,000-$15,000 on hardscape alone for a moderate-sized patio project. That's not paranoia — it's concrete (literally). A typical 400-square-foot paver patio with proper base preparation, edge restraint, and professional installation runs $12-18 per square foot in materials and $8-15 per square foot in labor, depending on your market.

Material Costs for Common Hardscape Projects

The cheapest path is concrete — poured and stamped, you might get away with $6-10 per square foot. But stamped concrete cracks in freeze-thaw cycles, and "cheap" hardscape looks cheap forever. Here's what the better options cost:

From Our Research Network