How Much Does Landscaping Cost in El Dorado County, CA?
Full yard landscaping in El Dorado County runs $5,350 to $16,050. Compare 2026 local costs for hardscape, sod, and fire-resistant designs.
What homeowners in El Dorado County actually pay.
Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.
Full Yard Landscaping (front + back)
Hardscape Patio / Walkway (400 sq ft)
Lawn Installation (sod, 2,000 sq ft)
National avg $9,000 × 1.07x local adjustment = $9,630; min: $5,000 × 1.07x = $5,350; max: $15,000 × 1.07x = $16,050
Why El Dorado County prices look like this.
Labor Costs and Contractor Availability
Wildfire and Natural Hazard Risks for Landscaping
Climate Zone and Plant Selection in El Dorado County
Energy Costs and Solar Potential for Outdoor Projects
Financing a Landscaping Project in El Dorado County
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Questions buyers ask about landscaping in El Dorado County.
Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.
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What does a full yard landscaping project cost in El Dorado County, CA?
A full yard project (front and back combined) runs **$5,350 to $16,050**, with an average near **$9,630**. These figures apply a 1.07x local services adjustment to national benchmarks, reflecting the $22.49/hr mean wage for landscaping workers in the Sacramento-Roseville-Folsom metro, which is 12% above the $20.11/hr national mean.
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How much does a patio or walkway installation cost in El Dorado County?
A 400-square-foot hardscape patio or walkway runs **$3,210 to $8,560**, averaging around **$5,350**. Decomposed granite and concrete pavers, both fire-resistant options well-suited to the county's wildfire risk score of 99.71, fall toward the lower end. Natural stone and brick installations trend toward the upper end.
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What does sod installation cost for a 2,000-square-foot lawn?
Sod installation for 2,000 square feet runs **$1,605 to $4,280**, averaging **$2,675**, after applying the 1.07x local services adjustment. Given El Dorado County's IECC Zone 3B dry-summer climate and electricity costs of **$0.332/kWh**, many homeowners weigh sod against drought-tolerant alternatives that reduce long-term irrigation pump costs.
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How does El Dorado County's wildfire risk affect landscaping design?
The county's FEMA NRI wildfire score of **99.71 out of 100 (Relatively High)** places it in the most hazardous tier. California law requires **30 feet of defensible space** around structures. Select fire-resistant ground covers (decomposed granite, succulents, native bunch grasses) within that perimeter and install non-combustible hardscape buffers between vegetation and the building.
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Are landscaping labor costs higher here than the national average?
Yes. Landscaping workers in the Sacramento-Roseville-Folsom metro earn a mean of **$22.49/hr** ($46,770/yr) per 2025 OEWS data, compared to a national mean of $20.11/hr. That 12% wage premium drives the **1.07x local services adjustment** applied to all project estimates. With **7,410 workers** in the metro trade, crews exist but foothill demand keeps backlogs common.
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What financing options work best for landscaping projects in El Dorado County?
With the 30-year mortgage at **6.36%** (May 2026) and median home values at **$640,500** (3.72x the national average), most owners have meaningful equity to tap via home equity lines of credit. A $9,630 average project financed over 10 years adds roughly $80 to $110/month. Some contractors offer deferred-interest promotions through third-party lenders for jobs above $5,000.
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Which plants thrive in El Dorado County's IECC Zone 3B climate?
Zone 3B's dry-summer moisture regime and **2,138 annual heating degree-days** (about 42% below the national median of 3,700 HDD) favor drought-tolerant natives. Manzanita, California lilac, and native bunch grasses establish without supplemental summer water and double as fire-resistant choices. Avoid cold-sensitive tropicals at higher elevations where winter weather scores **85.39 (Relatively High)** per FEMA NRI.
How these numbers were built.
Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.