Professional websites · Built for landscapers
If a £10,000 garden is won on photos and reviews before you even quote, your landscaper website should be the one winning it.
A £300 garden tidy gets booked on price. A full design and build gets researched for weeks, shortlisted from photos, and won by whoever looks most capable of handling five figures of someone's savings. We build landscaping websites that put your best gardens in front of both searches, and make you the safe choice for the big one.
Every spring, your area decides which landscaper has a good year. It decides on Google.
Landscaping enquiries follow the calendar. The first warm weekend of March sends half the country into the garden, and by Sunday evening they are searching "landscaper near me" and "garden makeover cost" with a screenshot of someone else's patio saved on their phone. The projects they are pricing run from a £600 turfing job to a £15,000 design and build. The season's biggest jobs are handed out in a few short weeks.
Miss those searches and you don't lose a job, you lose the backbone of your year. One decent garden build keeps a two-man team busy for three weeks and pays like it. If your name isn't in the results when the shortlists are being drawn up, you spend the summer on the small stuff while a competitor's van sits on the five-figure project that should have carried your season.
And in this trade, photos do the selling. Nobody hands over £10,000 on a promise; they want to see gardens you have already built, sharp before-and-afters, real reviews with real names on them. Word of mouth still matters, but every recommendation gets checked online before anyone rings. A landscaper whose best work is buried in their camera roll is invisible in exactly the moment it counts.
Find out who is really winning the garden searches on your patch. Free.
Most landscapers assume they rank because a mate found them once. The free audit checks the reality: your actual map position for "landscaper near me" across every part of the country you cover, whether that is a city, a county or three, shown next to the firms currently collecting the enquiries.
Green where the searches reach you, red where they reach someone else. In a trade where one enquiry can be a £12,000 project, a red patch over the affluent end of town is expensive. Turning it green is precisely what proper landscaper website design exists to do.
Climbing the results until you're on the shortlist for the big builds.
This is what the structure earns over time: your landscaping business moving past the established names on your patch until the patio search, the turfing search and the full garden design search all put you in front of the homeowner.
Five profile faults that send the £10,000 enquiry elsewhere.
Your dashboard includes a full Google Business Profile audit built around how homeowners choose a landscaper. In this trade the profile is a shop window for finished gardens, and most landscapers leave it half empty: wrong category, three photos from 2022, design and build not mentioned anywhere. That is where the serious enquiries leak away.
You get a straight list of what to fix, ordered by what wins the most valuable work first. Sort it yourself in an evening, or send it over and we handle it. No jargon, no retainer.
The profile gets you seen on the map. The website is where the homeowner goes next to judge whether you can handle their garden, and a proper landscaping website is built to pass exactly that judgement.
The structure underneath a landscaping site that actually ranks.
Rankings are not bought and they are not luck. They come from a site where every search a homeowner in your area types, from "patio installers" to "garden design", has a well-built page ready for it.
A page for every kind of garden work.
Design and build, patios, turfing, decking and fencing each get a dedicated page, ranking for that exact project search.
A page for every town you'll travel to.
The big-budget gardens are spread across your county. An area page for every town you cover puts you in front of all of them.
A portfolio Google can actually read.
Your before-and-afters are structured and captioned properly, so they rank in image search and sell on the page.
Answers the research-phase questions.
Costs, timescales, whether the lawn survives a build. Cover what homeowners ask and Google and AI search hand them to you.
Together, that is what earns the rankings, and what keeps the enquiry forms filling up after the spring rush has settled.
Designed to move homeowners from browsing gardens to booking the site visit.
No filler. Every part of the site works towards one moment: the homeowner deciding you are the landscaper to invite round. That is what landscaper website design is for, from the gallery to the quote form.
Someone searching "patio installers" should find your patios and paving page, not your competitor's.
Service pages built for your site:
- Garden Design & Build
- Patios & Paving
- Turfing & Lawns
- Decking & Fencing
Area pages built for your site:
- Cheltenham
- Gloucester
- Stroud
- Tewkesbury
Inside a landscaper website design built to win project work.
Agencies will happily take £3,000 for a brochure that never ranks, and DIY builders leave you cropping patio photos at ten o'clock after a day of laying them. We do the design, the writing and the ranking work, then manage it for you all year.
Project portfolio built to sell
Your gardens shown as proper case studies with before-and-afters, not a cramped grid of thumbnails.
APL and BALI badges on display
Association of Professional Landscapers or BALI membership shown where a five-figure client looks for reassurance.
Marshalls accredited installer badge
If you hold it, it sits on your paving pages, where the patio shoppers are comparing you.
A garden design and build page
Your flagship service gets its own page, written to rank for the searches behind the biggest budgets.
Patio and paving page
The highest-volume hard landscaping search in every town, answered with your own slabs and edging.
Turfing and lawn page
Catches the spring surge and the smaller jobs that fill gaps between projects.
Area pages across your county
Every town you cover gets its own page, wherever you are in the UK, because the big gardens are not all in one place.
Quote form that qualifies the job
Asks for project type, budget band and timeframe, so you can spot the serious enquiries before you drive out.
Reviews beside the work
Google reviews shown next to the relevant projects, proof and portfolio doing the selling together.
Enquiries by text from the site
Details land on your phone, so you can respond from the digger seat before a competitor does.
Optional blog service
We write and publish the planning-phase articles homeowners read all winter.
You own the site and the domain
Your portfolio lives on an asset you own, not inside a directory profile you rent.
A typical agency quote for a site like this is £1,500 to £3,000, before they charge you to swap a photo. We start at £99 plus £15 a month, fully managed. Landscaper web design UK firms can pay for out of one small turfing job.
Live before the next quoting season.
Show us your best work
Day 1. A ten-minute call about your services, towns, accreditations and favourite finished gardens. We write everything from there.
We build the portfolio and pages
Days 2 to 5. Service pages, area pages and your project gallery, structured to rank for the searches worth ranking for.
You walk the preview
Days 6 to 9. Check every page like you'd walk a finished garden with a client. Anything not right, we change at no cost.
Launch, then climb
Days 10 to 14. Your landscaper web design UK build goes live on your own domain with SSL and your dashboard set up, and starts earning position.
Gardens are planned in winter. Be the name they find first.
That is why we offer an ongoing blog service. We research what homeowners in your area search while planning a garden, write the articles, and publish them for you. The person reading "how much does a garden makeover cost" in January is booking a landscaper in April. If your site is the one that answered them honestly, yours is the number they already trust when spring arrives.
- How much does a garden makeover cost in 2026?
- How much does a new patio cost per square metre?
- When is the best time of year to lay turf?
- Garden design and build: how long does a full project take?
Three steps between your camera roll and a live portfolio.
Step 1. Walk us through your best gardens.
Your services, your areas, your accreditations and the photos you're proudest of. Ten minutes, no tech talk.
Step 2. We build the site around your work.
Portfolio, service pages and area pages, written and structured to rank. You get a preview link to check at the end of the day.
Step 3. Sign it off and it goes live.
Want the decking page pushed harder or a project swapped in the gallery? Say so, we sort it, then it launches on your own domain.
A rounding error on one garden build.
Pick what fits where your landscaping business is now. Every plan is built, hosted and managed by us, so the admin never eats your evenings.
Landing Page, £99 setup plus £15 per month
For the landscaper starting out or going solo. One sharp page with your services, best project photos, reviews and a quote form. The simplest way into landscaper web design UK homeowners take seriously.
5-Page Website, £249 setup plus £19 per month
For the established firm ready to chase bigger projects. Home, about and dedicated service pages give your patio, turfing and design work room to rank, and give a £10,000 client enough to trust.
Full Package, £349 setup plus £22 per month
For the landscaping business that wants the whole county. A page for every service and every town, a structured portfolio, and the architecture that gets a website for landscaping business growth found on Google and in AI search.
Every plan includes hosting, your dashboard, unlimited enquiry texts to your phone, support and changes whenever you need them. No agency retainer, and you keep every lead.
Questions landscapers actually ask.
My work comes from recommendations and repeat clients. Why does a landscaper need a website?
Because every recommendation is now checked before anyone calls. A neighbour says your name over the fence, and the homeowner searches it that evening expecting to see your gardens. If nothing comes up, a chunk of those warm referrals go cold. A website for landscaping business owners is also what carries you through the months when recommendations dry up.
Can the site show off my finished gardens properly?
That is its main job. Your projects are presented as case studies with before-and-after photos, captions and location, not a squashed gallery grid. In landscaping the portfolio is the pitch, and a £10,000 client wants to see £10,000 gardens before they invite anyone round.
I do everything from small tidy-ups to full design and build. Can one site cover that range?
Yes, and it should, with a page for each. "Turfing", "patio installers" and "garden design" are different searches from different budgets, and one general page cannot rank for all three. Separate pages let the small jobs fill your gaps while the design and build page chases the projects that make your year.
Landscaping is seasonal. Is the site worth paying for over winter?
Winter is when the site quietly earns its money. The big spring projects are researched in January and February, homeowners saving photos and comparing landscapers long before the ground dries out. If your landscaping website is ranking through those months, you start March with a full quote book instead of an empty one.
I'm on Checkatrade and MyBuilder. Why pay for my own site?
On those platforms you are bidding against three other landscapers for the same lead and paying either way, and the platform owns the relationship. Your own website brings enquiries that are exclusively yours, at no cost per lead, from people who chose you off the strength of your work. Most established firms run both and watch the balance shift towards the website.
Can it help me win more patio and paving work specifically?
Yes. Patios are the most searched hard landscaping job in most towns, so your paving page is built to rank for exactly that, with your own slab and pointing photos plus your Marshalls accreditation if you hold it. It is often the first page on the site to pay for itself.
How much does a landscaper website cost?
Depending on the package, the build is between £99 and £349, with a small monthly fee from £15 covering hosting, updates and support. Set against a trade where a single garden build can be five figures, a website for landscaping business owners at this price is a rounding error on one job.
How long does it take to build a landscaper website?
Around two weeks from first chat to live. We handle the landscaper website design and every word of copy, you review a preview link at the end of a day on site, and it launches on your own domain. If you are heading into spring, that is quick enough to matter this season.
Who writes the content? I lay patios, I don't write pages.
We write all of it, from your service pages to the captions under your project photos. One short call about your work is all we need. Take the blog service and we keep researching, writing and publishing for you through the year.
What if I already have a website that never brings in work?
Very common in this trade: a homepage, a phone number and six photos with no captions is not something Google can rank. We rebuild it as a proper landscaping website with real service pages, area pages and a structured portfolio, and you keep your domain and your existing reviews.
Right now someone in your area is saving photos of a garden they want, and in a few weeks they will search for the landscaper to build it. Your best work either sits in your camera roll or sits where they are looking. That choice is the whole game.