Landscaping in Kimberley
Compare local landscaping pros in Kimberley and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: ZAR 4,600–ZAR 230,000
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Landscaping prices in Kimberley
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garden refresh (planting-led) Indigenous planting, mulch, and bed redesign for a suburban stand | ZAR 7,350 | ZAR 18,400 | ZAR 41,400 |
| Instant lawn installation Prep, soil, and roll-on lawn for an average garden area | ZAR 4,600 | ZAR 11,000 | ZAR 23,000 |
| Paved entertaining area Excavation, base, and paving for a standard braai/patio area | ZAR 13,800 | ZAR 32,200 | ZAR 64,400 |
| Full garden landscaping Design, hardscape, planting, irrigation, and lighting | ZAR 36,800 | ZAR 82,800 | ZAR 230,000 |
| Irrigation system installation Automated irrigation for a typical suburban garden | ZAR 7,350 | ZAR 13,800 | ZAR 27,600 |
How to hire a landscaping pro in South Africa
- Get 3 itemised quotes — SALI (South African Landscapers Institute) membership is the recognised quality signal
- Check public liability insurance and COIDA registration for crews
- Design for water restrictions: municipalities impose tiered water pricing and periodic restrictions, so indigenous/water-wise planting and rainwater harvesting are mainstream, not niche
- Confirm compliance for any electrical work (garden lighting needs a certificate of compliance from a registered electrician)
- For retaining walls and structures, check municipal building plan requirements — walls above thresholds need approved plans
- Agree staged payments; never large sums upfront
- Ask for local completed gardens you can view — the market is reputation-driven
South African landscaping is unlicensed; SALI membership is the industry quality marker. Municipal rules matter most: building plans for retaining walls and structures above thresholds, electrical certificates of compliance for garden lighting, and water restrictions that increasingly drive indigenous, water-wise design.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives landscaping prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
What deposit is normal for a landscaping project?
10-30% at signing is typical, often structured as deposit, staged payments at milestones, and a final payment on completion. Be wary of demands for 50%+ upfront — materials for early stages don't cost that. Never make the final payment before snagging is done and you've walked the finished job.
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 Kimberley 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.
When is the best time of year to book landscaping?
Construction (paving, decking, walls) suits the drier months; planting establishes best in the local planting season (autumn or spring in most climates). The booking sweet spot is the off-season: quotes are keener, scheduling faster, and your project is ready to enjoy when the good weather arrives. Spring inquiries in Kimberley hit peak-demand pricing.
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 South Africa?
Finished landscaping runs roughly R150-R900 per m² depending on hardscape share, with typical suburban projects at R15,000-R150,000. Instant lawn installs around R60-R120/m² installed. Johannesburg and Cape Town premium suburbs price highest; labour-intensive work is comparatively affordable by global standards, materials less so.
What is water-wise landscaping and why does it dominate SA design?
Recurring droughts (Cape Town's Day Zero being the landmark) and tiered municipal water pricing pushed SA landscaping toward indigenous planting — fynbos, succulents, aloes — plus mulching, rainwater tanks, and greywater systems. Water-wise gardens cost similar to install and far less to run; most quality landscapers now design this way by default.
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