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How Much Does Landscaping Cost in Toronto in 2026?

Last updated: By YardQuote Research TeamReviewed by Yevhenii Kuznietsov, 11-year SEO & local-market data analyst

Most standard Toronto backyard projects run $2,500 to $10,000, while a full redesign typically lands between $6,000 and $50,000 depending on hardscape scope, according to HomeStars and Design Landscaping. As a rule of thumb, budget $7 to $35 per square foot. Crews charge $50 to $100 an hour, and excavation, grading and drainage are usually the largest hidden line items.

What does landscaping cost per square foot and per project?

YardQuote compiled this table from 11 named Canadian sources; where they disagreed, we widened the range rather than pick one.

Researched July 2026. CAD, sources named per row. Add 13% HST unless noted.
ItemTypical rangeUnitSource
Full backyard redesign, mid-range scope (Toronto)$6,000$50,000(typ. $15,000–$35,000)per projectDesign Landscaping (Toronto)
High-end design-build outdoor renovation (Toronto)$20,000$300,000+(typ. $50,000–$90,000)per projectCurbz Landscaping (Toronto)
Residential landscaping, all-in project rate$7$35(typ. $10–$20)per sq ftBayview Landscaping (Oakville/GTA, 2025)
Landscaping crew labour (charge-out rate)$50$150(typ. $50–$100)per hourHomeStars Landscaping Cost Guide – Toronto (corroborated by Land-Con)
Garden bed creation (edged, soil prepared)$50$100per linear footAbsolute Home Services (Burlington, ON, Sept 2025)
Garden beds + planting package (full yard)$2,000$6,000per projectDesign Landscaping (Toronto)
Bulk mulch, supplied (spreading labour extra)$45$85(typ. $60)per cubic yardAbsolute Home Services (Ontario)
Tree planting (supplied and planted)$150$500per treeAbsolute Home Services (Ontario)
Shrub planting (supplied and planted)$50$200per shrubAbsolute Home Services (Ontario)
Sod installation, residential (labour included)$1.10$4.00(typ. $1.50–$3.50)per sq ftThe Sprinkler Company Inc (Toronto/GTA, corroborated by Bayview Landscaping)
Backyard regrading$2$12+(typ. $5–$12 (typical regrade); $1,500–$5,000 total for an average Toronto yard)per sq ftThe Sprinkler Company Inc (Toronto/GTA, 2026)
Grading + drainage correction package$3,500$9,000per projectDesign Landscaping (Toronto)
French drain installation (parts and labour)$25$40per linear footThe Sprinkler Company Inc (Toronto/GTA, 2026)
Paver patio / interlocking walkway$4,000$12,000(typ. $6,559 (HomeStars Toronto average))per projectDesign Landscaping (range) / HomeStars (Toronto average)

What drives the price?

Not every quote is the same job. These are the variables that move landscaping pricing most in Toronto, so you can read a quote and see where the money goes.

  • Site access — downtown Toronto semis and laneway-only yards often require hand-digging and wheelbarrow hauls instead of machines, multiplying labour hours
  • Hardscape share of the design — patios, walls, and decks ($15–$60/sq ft) dominate budgets versus soft-scape planting
  • Soil excavation and disposal — bin rental and tipping fees for removed soil/turf are a major hidden line item on grading jobs
  • Drainage complexity — slopes, clay soil, and water pooling can add French drains ($25–$40/lin ft), catch basins, or swales
  • Material grade — natural stone runs roughly $25–$40/sq ft installed versus $10–$20 for concrete pavers
  • Design fees — professional landscape design runs $1,000–$3,000 (Bayview) or $75–$150/hr consultation (Absolute Home Services)
  • Permits and engineering — retaining walls over 1.0 m need a Toronto building permit plus engineered drawings; typical permit fees $100–$500 (Land-Con)
  • Seasonality — spring peak demand (April–June) means waitlists and firmer pricing across the GTA
  • Plant maturity — caliper trees ($150–$500 each installed) versus small potted stock changes planting budgets several-fold

What's specific to Ontario and Toronto?

Ontario rules and Toronto's climate change the math in ways national price guides miss. Here is what applies locally, from HST to permits to freeze-thaw.

  • HST (13%) applies to landscaping labour and materials in Ontario; some contractor quotes show pre-tax numbers — always confirm whether HST is included before comparing bids.
  • Retaining walls: the City of Toronto requires a building permit for any wall with exposed height over 1.0 metre, normally with engineered drawings; a permit is required at ANY height if the wall supports a surcharge (driveway, patio, structure) or redirects drainage onto a neighbouring property.
  • City boulevard / right-of-way: landscaping on the City-owned strip needs to comply with Municipal Code Chapter 743. Fences and decorative/retaining walls under 0.9 m may be permitted without fee if set back at least 0.5 m from the curb or sidewalk; anything larger needs a Right-of-Way construction permit from Toronto Transportation Services.
  • Ravine and valley lots: landscaping in TRCA-regulated areas or under Toronto's Ravine and Natural Feature Protection By-law requires separate permits before any grading, fill, or planting changes — this affects a surprising share of Toronto lots backing onto ravines.
  • Tree protection: private trees with a trunk diameter of 30 cm or more are protected under Toronto's tree bylaw; injuring or removing one during landscaping requires a permit and can carry significant fines.
  • Lot grading: regrading that changes surface drainage patterns toward neighbouring properties can trigger City enforcement — drainage must be managed on your own lot.
  • Excavation law: Ontario One Call utility locates are legally required before any digging (free, but book about 5 business days ahead).
  • Season: the GTA build season runs roughly April to November. Spring is peak with deposits and waitlists; late-summer/fall slots are easier to book, and fall is agronomically better for sod and tree planting. Typical Toronto permit fees for landscaping projects run $100–$500 (Land-Con, 2026).

How can I pay less?

You can keep landscaping costs down without cutting the parts that matter. These are the levers GTA homeowners actually use, each tied to a real number above.

  • Get quotes from the right tier: maintenance crews handle $2,500–$10,000 refreshes while design-build firms start at $20,000+ — asking a design-build firm for a small job (or vice versa) wastes everyone's time and inflates pricing.
  • Book off-peak: request quotes in winter for early-season slots and consider September–November installs when crews are filling schedules; fall is also the best planting window.
  • Buy bulk mulch and soil yourself: supplied mulch runs $45–$85 per cubic yard in the GTA versus paying crew labour at $50–$100/hr to source and spread it — a DIY spread on 5–10 yards saves hundreds.
  • Phase the project: do grading, drainage, and hardscape first (the machine-dependent work), then add planting beds and trees in a later season with cash flow.
  • Keep walls under 1.0 m where the design allows — staying below the permit threshold avoids the building permit plus engineered drawings that can add thousands.
  • Preserve machine access: delaying fence installation until after excavation, or clearing a side-yard path, avoids expensive hand-dig labour on tight Toronto lots.
  • Plant smaller stock: young shrubs at $50–$200 and smaller trees establish faster and cost a fraction of mature caliper specimens at $500+.
  • Do your own demolition and turf removal where safe — disposal bins are cheap relative to crew hours billed at $50–$100/hr.

How did we research these numbers?

Every price on this page comes from a named Canadian source, and where sources disagreed we widened the range rather than pick a favourite. Here is how YardQuote reconciled the numbers.

  • All figures are CAD from Canadian-published sources. US cost guides that surfaced in research (Angi, HomeGuide, LawnStarter, Fixr, ZipRecruiter) were EXCLUDED rather than converted, because sufficient GTA-specific CAD data existed; ZipRecruiter's $14.80/hr Toronto figure is below Ontario minimum wage and was rejected as unreliable.
  • Sod pricing conflicts across sources: Absolute Home Services lists $0.30–$0.80/sq ft (material-only supply price), while installed GTA rates run $1.10–$3.50 (The Sprinkler Company) and $1.50–$4.00 (Bayview Landscaping). The table uses the installed basis with the range widened to $1.10–$4.00.
  • Hourly labour conflicts: Bayview Landscaping cites $30–$70/hr Canada-wide, but Toronto-specific sources run higher (HomeStars $50–$100; Land-Con $50–$150 for skilled work and design). The Toronto range is used; design consultation specifically runs $75–$150/hr (Absolute Home Services).
  • The Toronto market is bifurcated: maintenance/handyman-tier crews handle the HomeStars-typical $2,500–$10,000 projects (2025), while Toronto design-build firms like Curbz publish a project floor of $20,000 and tiers to $300,000+. The same 'backyard landscaping' search returns two very different products — compare quotes within the same tier.
  • HomeStars Toronto service averages (2025): interlocking brick $6,559, artificial turf $8,800, lawn care service $449, hedge trimming $840; overall Toronto project range $2,000 to $100,000+.
  • Real-world Toronto data point (Quora thread): a complete backyard by Markstone — patio stone, small sports court, and retaining wall — cost approximately $40,000.
  • Land-Con (Aurora, 2026 guide) stresses that the biggest budget items are usually invisible: excavation, grading, drainage, and site access. Tight downtown Toronto lots (semis, laneway access, hand-dig only) push labour hours and per-sq-ft prices well above 905-suburb equivalents.
  • Property-size benchmarks (Absolute Home Services, Sept 2025): small urban lots under 2,000 sq ft $5,000–$15,000; medium suburban 2,000–5,000 sq ft $15,000–$35,000; large properties over 5,000 sq ft $35,000–$100,000+.

Sources

Who can do the work?

YardQuote tracks 650 landscaping companies across the Greater Toronto Area, rated 4.77★ on average. The three below rank highest on our review-weighted score, based on YardQuote's analysis of 650 GTA businesses, July 2026.

  • Design Turf2
    Verified listingTop rated

    Design Turf

    Richmond HillLandscape Design

    Design Turf for Artificial Grass Lawns Toronto. Our artificial turf ranks #1 across Toronto and the GTA. Learn about our turf products here!

  • Niko's Gardening Inc.3
    Verified listingTop rated

    Niko's Gardening Inc.

    VaughanLandscaping

    Niko’s Gardening it's Toronto landscaping company has been in business since 2004. We provide landscaping services for residential and commercial clients.

See all 650 landscaping companies on YardQuote

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to landscape a backyard in Toronto?

Most standard Toronto projects run $2,500–$10,000 (HomeStars, 2025), but a genuine full backyard redesign typically lands between $6,000 and $50,000 depending on hardscape scope. Toronto design-build firms like Curbz publish project floors around $20,000, and luxury renovations with premium stone or structures exceed $100,000. As a rule of thumb, budget $7–$35 per square foot.

What do landscapers charge per hour in Toronto?

Toronto landscaping crews generally charge $50–$100 per hour, with skilled trades and design consultation reaching $150 per hour (HomeStars; Land-Con). Expect minimum service fees of $150–$300 for small jobs. Quoted crew rates sit far above advertised wages because companies carry WSIB, liability insurance, equipment, fuel, and disposal costs inside that hourly number.

How much does a new garden bed cost installed?

Garden bed creation in Ontario runs roughly $50–$100 per linear foot including edging and soil preparation (Absolute Home Services, 2025). A complete garden-bed-and-planting package for a Toronto yard typically costs $2,000–$6,000 from a professional crew. Plant costs add up separately: $3–$8 per flower, $50–$200 per shrub, and $150–$500 per planted tree.

How much does mulch cost delivered in the GTA?

Bulk mulch in the Toronto area costs about $45–$85 per cubic yard supplied (Absolute Home Services, 2025), with GTA suppliers like Van Beek's and Less Mess delivering to the driveway. Having a crew spread it adds labour at $50–$100 per hour. A typical front-and-back refresh uses 5–10 cubic yards, so budget roughly $400–$1,200 installed.

What does it cost to regrade a backyard or fix drainage in Toronto?

Backyard regrading in Toronto typically costs $1,500–$5,000 total — about $2–$5 per square foot for light grading and $5–$12+ where soil removal or drainage work is involved (The Sprinkler Company, 2026). Full grading-and-drainage correction packages run $3,500–$9,000 (Design Landscaping), and French drains cost $25–$40 per linear foot installed.

How much does sod installation cost in Toronto?

Professionally installed residential sod in the GTA runs $1.10–$4.00 per square foot including labour, so a typical 1,000 sq ft Toronto backyard costs about $1,100–$4,000. Full lawn packages from Toronto contractors run $1,800–$4,500 (Design Landscaping). Sod material alone is much cheaper at roughly $0.30–$0.80 per square foot; removal of old turf and regrading drive the installed price up.

Do I need a permit for landscaping work in Toronto?

Most planting and soft landscaping needs no permit, but Toronto requires a building permit for any retaining wall over 1.0 metre of exposed height, usually with engineered drawings. Work on the City boulevard needs a right-of-way permit, and ravine-adjacent lots fall under TRCA and ravine bylaw review. Budget $100–$500 for typical landscaping permit fees (Land-Con, 2026).

When is the cheapest time to book landscaping in the GTA?

Late summer through fall generally offers the best value. Spring (April–June) is peak season across the GTA, with waitlists, deposits, and firm pricing. Requesting quotes in winter for early-season slots gets you ahead of the rush, and crews filling September–November schedules negotiate more readily. Fall is also the agronomically better window for sod and tree planting, with the season running April to November.

Questions to ask your contractor

  • Can you show me WSIB clearance and $2M+ liability insurance?
  • What's the payment schedule — how much is the deposit?
  • Which parts are subcontracted, and who supervises on-site?
  • What does the itemized quote include for disposal and grading? Typical line items and costs
  • What plant warranty do you offer through the first winter?

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