Gardening in Kimberley
Compare local garden services pros in Kimberley and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: ZAR 280–ZAR 3,200
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Gardening prices in Kimberley
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small garden service visit Team visit: mow, edges, sweep, refuse bagged | ZAR 280 | ZAR 410 | ZAR 550 |
| Medium garden service visit Standard suburban stand, full maintenance bundle | ZAR 410 | ZAR 550 | ZAR 740 |
| Large garden service visit Big stands with extensive beds and lawn | ZAR 640 | ZAR 830 | ZAR 1,200 |
| Once-off cleanup Team day recovering a neglected garden, refuse removed | ZAR 830 | ZAR 1,650 | ZAR 3,200 |
| Monthly contract (weekly visits) Four supervised visits per month, medium garden | ZAR 1,200 | ZAR 1,850 | ZAR 2,750 |
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.
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.
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.
What garden jobs are worth doing myself vs hiring out?
DIY-friendly: watering, light weeding, deadheading, mowing a small lawn. Worth hiring: tall hedge cutting (falls from ladders are the classic garden injury), tree pruning, clearing heavy overgrowth, and anything generating bulk waste you can't dispose of. The rule of thumb — if it needs a ladder, a chainsaw, or a trailer, hire it out.
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.
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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