Gardening in Tallahassee
Compare local gardening & yard maintenance pros in Tallahassee and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: $75–$3,700
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
Gardening prices in Tallahassee
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recurring maintenance visit Weeding, edging, light pruning, and tidy for an average yard | $75 | $140 | $280 |
| Seasonal cleanup (spring or fall) Leaves, cutbacks, bed edging, and debris hauling | $180 | $370 | $740 |
| Shrub and hedge pruning day Crew half-day to full day shaping shrubs and hedges, debris hauled | $280 | $510 | $920 |
| Bed refresh with mulch Weed, edge, and mulch typical foundation beds, material included | $280 | $550 | $1,100 |
| Overgrown yard recovery Multi-day clearing of a neglected yard with heavy disposal | $740 | $1,650 | $3,700 |
How to hire a gardening pro in United States
- Get 2-3 quotes describing tasks specifically (bed weeding, shrub pruning, mulching) — 'yard cleanup' quotes vary wildly without a task list
- Verify general liability insurance; for crews, ask about workers' comp coverage
- Check local business licensing — many cities and counties require a license for landscape maintenance businesses
- If any chemical treatment is involved (weed killer in beds, insecticide on shrubs), the applicator needs a state pesticide applicator license
- Confirm debris handling: hauling to a green waste facility is often 15-30% of a cleanup job's cost
- For recurring service, agree a written scope per visit and a seasonal schedule
- Ask whether the crew that quotes is the crew that shows up — subcontracting is common in the US market
Yard maintenance itself requires only local business licensing in most US jurisdictions, but commercial pesticide application requires a state applicator license everywhere, and some states require contractor licensing when work extends beyond maintenance into construction or irrigation. Liability insurance is a market norm, not a legal mandate — which is why you must ask.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives gardening prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
What questions should I ask before hiring a gardener?
Ask: Do you have public liability insurance? Is green waste removal included? What's your cancellation and weather policy? Can you name plants — or will prized perennials get weeded out? Do you bring your own tools? For regular slots, ask what happens to the schedule when they take holidays.
Should I hire a solo gardener or a garden maintenance company?
A solo gardener is cheaper, builds knowledge of your garden, and is ideal for regular maintenance — but service stops when they're ill or fully booked. Companies bring teams, insurance, and cover, and handle bigger one-off jobs. Many households use a solo regular plus a company for annual heavy work like hedge reductions.
When is the best season to book garden work?
Spring and early summer are peak demand — book maintenance slots weeks ahead. Structural pruning of many trees and shrubs is best (and cheapest to book) in the dormant season. Autumn cleanups are the second peak. For big tidy-up projects, late winter often gets you faster scheduling and keener pricing in Tallahassee.
Do gardeners take away garden waste?
Many do, for a fee that reflects local disposal costs — green waste is charged by volume at commercial facilities. Alternatives: your green-waste bin (slow for big jobs), composting on site (free, needs space), or a one-off waste collection. In several countries the person hauling your waste must be a licensed/registered waste carrier, so ask.
What does hedge trimming cost?
Hedge trimming is priced by length, height, and access — a low boundary hedge costs far less than a 3m conifer run needing platforms. Disposal of trimmings can be a third of the total, so ask for the price with and without haul-away. Overgrown hedge reductions (cutting into thick wood) cost several times a routine trim.
What do US gardeners charge?
General yard maintenance labor runs $50-$100 per hour per worker in 2026, often quoted as a crew rate. Recurring maintenance visits for an average yard commonly land at $100-$250 per visit depending on scope. One-time cleanups are usually quoted flat: a few hundred dollars for light work, $500-$1,500+ for heavy seasonal cleanups with hauling.
What's a fall/spring cleanup and what does it cost?
The seasonal cleanup is a US market staple: leaf removal, cutting back perennials, bed edging, and debris hauling in one visit. Typical suburban yards run $200-$600 per cleanup, more with mature trees. Booking the same company for both cleanups plus summer maintenance usually earns a package discount.
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
How Handld works
- 1
Tell us what you need
Describe the job and where you are. It takes about a minute.
- 2
We match your request
Your request goes to local professionals who cover your area and service.
- 3
Compare quotes and choose
Pros reply with quotes. Compare, ask questions and hire on your terms — free for you.