CanaCore
Landscaping Practice

How Much Does Landscaping Cost for a New Build in Ontario?

Date Published

Landscaping

New-build homeowners often receive a builder allowance for landscaping that does not match real-world pricing—or they face a blank lot and no clear starting point. Landscaping cost in Ontario varies with lot size, soil conditions, municipal requirements, and how much hardscape you include. Understanding line items helps you budget after construction without sticker shock or underfunded allowances.

Typical Budget Components

A complete new-build landscape usually includes rough and fine grading, topsoil supply and placement, sod or seed, driveway and walkway bases, patio or porch landings, plant material, mulch, irrigation if specified, fence coordination, and site cleanup after trades. Engineering for retaining walls, stormwater tanks, or lot servicing connections may sit outside basic landscape bids. Each component should be priced separately for transparency.

Indicative Ontario Ranges

Market conditions shift, but many suburban lots in the GTA see comprehensive landscaping from mid four figures for basic sod and grading to five figures and beyond when interlock driveways, retaining walls, mature plantings, and irrigation are included. Urban infill lots with tight access or engineered drainage run higher. Rural properties add longer service runs and septic/setback constraints. Treat online averages as orientation only—site quotes matter.

What Increases Cost

Clay soils needing extra drainage, rock during excavation, HOA or municipality landscape deposits, premium interlock patterns, large caliper trees, smart irrigation, and night lighting all move budgets. Winter timing, limited gate access, and stockpile areas on tight lots raise labour. Builder delay pushing landscape into peak season can affect availability and price.

Builder Allowances vs Reality

Contract allowances often assume minimal scope—sod front yard only, no side swales, no rear patio. Homeowners upgrade after possession and discover gaps between allowance and desired outcome. Negotiate allowance detail at purchase: what area is sodded, whether rough grade is builder or owner responsibility, and who restores compaction damage from construction.

Getting Comparable Quotes

Provide a recent survey, list desired hardscape areas, and state drainage concerns seen during construction. Ask each bidder to separate grading, softscape, and hardscape. Confirm warranty on plant material and base prep for pavers. Compare supervised alliance quotes that coordinate landscape with foundation drainage and downspout routing from the build.

Practical Takeaway

New-build landscaping cost is a bundle of civil, horticultural, and hardscape work—not a single sod line item. Budget grading and drainage first, then hardscape and planting. That sequencing matches how durable Ontario properties are actually built.