Landscaping in Laval
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Typical price: CA$1,500–CA$60,000
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Landscaping prices in Laval
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Front yard refresh Beds, mulch, shrubs, and edging | CA$1,500 | CA$3,500 | CA$6,500 |
| New lawn (sod) installation Grade, soil, and sod for an average yard | CA$1,500 | CA$3,200 | CA$6,500 |
| Interlock patio or walkway Excavation, deep granular base, and pavers | CA$4,000 | CA$8,000 | CA$18,000 |
| Full backyard landscaping Hardscape, planting, and lighting for a typical backyard | CA$10,000 | CA$25,000 | CA$60,000 |
| Retaining wall Engineered wall with drainage, frost-depth footing | CA$4,000 | CA$9,000 | CA$20,000 |
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 long does a landscaping project take?
A planting refresh: 1-3 days. A patio or new lawn: 3-7 days. A full garden rebuild: 2-6 weeks depending on size and weather. Add lead time — good landscapers in Laval book out weeks or months ahead in spring. Weather delays are normal for excavation and paving; a realistic contractor builds buffer into the schedule rather than promising exact dates.
What does new turf or a new lawn cost?
Turf is priced per square metre installed, and ground preparation is most of the cost — stripping old grass, levelling, importing topsoil, then laying. Seed costs a fraction of turf but takes a season to establish. Beware quotes that skip soil prep: turf on unprepared ground looks fine for weeks, then fails patchily.
How do I compare landscaping quotes properly?
Insist every quote itemises: site prep and excavation, materials by type and grade, labour, waste disposal, and planting with plant sizes specified. The classic trap is comparing a quote with 100mm compacted sub-base against one with paving laid on sand — same look for a year, then one fails. Cheapest itemised quote beats cheapest total.
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 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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