Landscaping in Chicoutimi
Compare local landscaping pros in Chicoutimi and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: CA$1,400–CA$55,200
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Landscaping prices in Chicoutimi
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Front yard refresh Beds, mulch, shrubs, and edging | CA$1,400 | CA$3,200 | CA$6,000 |
| New lawn (sod) installation Grade, soil, and sod for an average yard | CA$1,400 | CA$2,950 | CA$6,000 |
| Interlock patio or walkway Excavation, deep granular base, and pavers | CA$3,700 | CA$7,350 | CA$16,600 |
| Full backyard landscaping Hardscape, planting, and lighting for a typical backyard | CA$9,200 | CA$23,000 | CA$55,200 |
| Retaining wall Engineered wall with drainage, frost-depth footing | CA$3,700 | CA$8,300 | CA$18,400 |
How to hire a landscaping pro in Canada
- Get 3 itemized bids specifying base depths — Canadian freeze-thaw cycles destroy paving on inadequate sub-bases, so specification matters more than in mild climates
- Verify liability insurance and provincial WCB/WSIB coverage
- Request utility locates before any digging (Ontario One Call, Click Before You Dig, and provincial equivalents) — required before excavation
- Check municipal permits for retaining walls (commonly required above ~1m), grading changes, and structures
- Confirm frost-appropriate construction: footings below frost line for structures, polymeric-sand jointing, and drainage designed for spring melt
- Book early — the construction season is short (roughly May-October) and good contractors fill by late winter
- Structure payments around milestones with 10-25% deposit
Landscaping is unlicensed in most of Canada (business licensing aside), but utility locates before digging are mandatory through provincial one-call services, and municipal permits commonly apply to retaining walls and grading. Freeze-thaw engineering — frost-depth footings and deep granular bases — is the technical standard that separates real contractors from cheap ones.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives landscaping prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How do I check a landscaper is legitimate?
Look for: an established business with reviewable past projects (ask to see one in person or talk to a past client), public liability insurance, itemised written quotes, and no pressure tactics. In markets with trade licensing, verify the licence covers the structural work quoted. Photos of 'their work' prove nothing — completed local references do.
Should I phase a big landscaping project or do it all at once?
One mobilisation is cheaper per unit of work — machinery hire, waste logistics, and crew setup get amortised. But phasing spreads cash and lets you live with the garden before committing to later stages. If you phase: do groundworks, drainage, and irrigation conduits first, even for areas finished later. Retro-digging finished areas is the expensive mistake.
What are the hidden costs in landscaping projects?
The usual surprises: waste disposal (excavated soil is heavy and expensive to dump), poor access surcharges, drainage problems discovered mid-dig, tree roots, buried services, and irrigation added late. A contractor who surveys properly and asks about underground services before quoting is protecting you from mid-project extras.
What should be in a landscaping contract?
A drawing or written scope, itemised price, payment schedule tied to milestones, start window and estimated duration, who handles waste and any permits, a variations process (changes priced in writing before work), warranty terms on hard landscaping, and a plant establishment/replacement policy. No contract, no project — verbal landscape deals go wrong at the first rain delay.
Does landscaping add value to a property?
Tidy, structured, low-maintenance landscaping consistently helps sale prices and time-on-market; overpersonalised or high-maintenance designs don't. The reliable value plays: healthy lawn or paved entertaining area, defined beds, screening for privacy, and solved drainage. If resale drives the project, spend on structure and simplicity, not exotic planting.
What does landscaping cost in Canada?
Canadian project costs track US figures roughly at par in local currency: typical projects CAD $2,000-$15,000, full backyard builds $15,000-$60,000, hardscape at $15-$35/sq ft installed. The short season concentrates demand — winter-quoted projects often price 10-15% better than mid-summer bookings.
How does the Canadian climate change landscaping construction?
Freeze-thaw is the design constraint: paver bases need 8-12 inches of compacted granular (versus 4-6 in mild climates), structural footings must reach below frost line (1.2-1.8m in much of the country), and drainage must handle spring melt. This adds 20-40% to hardscape costs versus mild-climate equivalents — a cheap quote usually means a shallow base that heaves by year three.
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