Gardening in Diepsloot
Compare local garden services pros in Diepsloot and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: ZAR 300–ZAR 3,500
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Gardening prices in Diepsloot
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small garden service visit Team visit: mow, edges, sweep, refuse bagged | ZAR 300 | ZAR 450 | ZAR 600 |
| Medium garden service visit Standard suburban stand, full maintenance bundle | ZAR 450 | ZAR 600 | ZAR 800 |
| Large garden service visit Big stands with extensive beds and lawn | ZAR 700 | ZAR 900 | ZAR 1,300 |
| Once-off cleanup Team day recovering a neglected garden, refuse removed | ZAR 900 | ZAR 1,800 | ZAR 3,500 |
| Monthly contract (weekly visits) Four supervised visits per month, medium garden | ZAR 1,300 | ZAR 2,000 | ZAR 3,000 |
How to hire a gardening pro in South Africa
- Choose between a garden service company (team visits, equipment included) and employing a gardener directly — direct employment makes you an employer under SA labour law
- For services: check company registration, public liability insurance, and COIDA cover for workers
- For direct hire: comply with national minimum wage, a written employment contract, and UIF registration
- Agree the visit scope: mowing, edges, beds, sweeping, and refuse bagged is the standard service bundle
- Confirm refuse removal — garden refuse rules and dump fees vary by municipality
- Ask for references in your suburb; the market is hyper-local
- For irrigation and borehole systems, confirm the service checks and reports faults
Garden services are unregulated as a trade, but South African employment law is central: directly-employed gardeners fall under the national minimum wage and domestic worker protections including UIF and COIDA; using a registered service company shifts those obligations to the company. Municipal refuse rules govern green waste disposal.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives gardening prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to provide tools for a gardener?
Professional gardeners bring their own hand tools, mower, and hedge trimmer — that's built into their rate. If a 'gardener' expects your tools, you're hiring casual labour, which is fine at a lower rate but means you supply and maintain equipment. Clarify before the first visit, especially for petrol machinery.
How often should I book a gardener?
For an average garden, fortnightly visits in the growing season and monthly in the off-season keeps things under control. Weekly only makes sense for large or high-maintenance gardens. A longer gap costs more per visit because overgrowth takes longer to clear — fortnightly is usually the sweet spot of cost versus tidiness.
How much does an overgrown garden clearance cost?
Clearing a badly overgrown garden is a project, not a visit: expect a team-day or several solo days, plus significant disposal fees — waste volume is the big driver. Get a fixed quote after a site visit rather than an hourly estimate, and check whether the quote includes stump treatment, brambles dug out versus cut down, and haul-away.
How much does a gardener cost per hour?
Gardeners price general maintenance — weeding, pruning, hedge trimming, bed care — by the hour or half-day, with rates driven by local wages and whether they bring a van and equipment. Expect the low end for basic weeding and tidying, and the top end for skilled pruning or a gardener who hauls green waste away. Always ask whether the rate includes disposal.
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 Diepsloot.
What do garden services cost in South Africa?
Per-visit team services run R400-R600 for medium gardens and R800-R900 for large ones (Procompare 2025-26 data), with monthly weekly-visit contracts at R1,200-R2,500. A directly-employed gardener working one day a week costs less in cash terms but adds employer obligations — contract, minimum wage, UIF.
Garden service vs 'garden day' domestic worker — how does SA handle this?
Both models are common. The service brings a supervised team with equipment for a fixed visit price. The traditional model — a gardener who comes weekly using your tools — is cheaper per day but you're the employer: minimum wage (reviewed annually), UIF registration, and a written contract are legally required, and enforcement has tightened.
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