Quick answer: Most Nashville homeowners pay $45 to $95 per visit for routine lawn care and landscape maintenance. Full-service monthly plans run $150 to $450+ per month, and one-time projects, sod, irrigation, drainage, hardscape, design, range from a few hundred dollars to well over $10,000 depending on scope. Your final Nashville landscaping cost comes down to lot size, Middle Tennessee’s clay-and-limestone soil, the services you need, and the transition-zone climate that makes grass selection a real decision here.
This guide breaks down real 2026 Nashville-area pricing by service so you can budget before you call for a quote.
About these numbers: The ranges below reflect typical 2026 pricing across the Nashville metro (Davidson County and the surrounding Williamson, Rutherford, Sumner, and Wilson county suburbs), based on common local service rates. Every property is different, soil, slope, drainage, and shade all move the price, so treat these as planning ranges, not firm quotes. For an exact figure on your yard, a written estimate is free: (615) 334-9088.
Related cost resources: Cost Calculator · Lawn Care Pricing
How Much Does Landscaping Cost in Nashville?
In Nashville, routine lawn mowing averages about $88 per visit (typically $45-$144), core aeration runs around $215, and overseeding about $589. Full landscaping projects vary widely by scope. Transition-zone conditions and Central Basin clay soil influence pricing. Ask for an itemized quote so you can compare mowing, aeration, and seeding separately.
Source: regional cost context per UT Extension turf and landscape publications. Updated 2026-06-18.
At a glance, here is what Nashville homeowners typically spend:
| Service | Typical Nashville Cost (2026) | How It’s Billed |
|---|---|---|
| Lawn mowing & maintenance | $45 – $95 | Per visit |
| Full-service monthly plan | $150 – $450+ | Per month |
| Fescue fall aeration & overseed | $200 – $500 | Per year |
| Seasonal cleanup | $250 – $700 | Per visit |
| Sod installation | $1.25 – $2.25 / sq ft | Installed |
| Mulch installation | $55 – $90 / cu yd | Installed |
| Sprinkler / irrigation system | $3,000 – $6,500 | Per system |
| Drainage solution | $1,500 – $5,000 | Per project |
| Paver or stone patio | $14 – $40 / sq ft | Installed |
| Full landscape makeover | $5,000 – $40,000+ | Per project |
The most common spend, the one most Nashville homeowners ask about, is recurring lawn care, and that is where the $45 to $95 per visit range lives. The rest of this guide explains what sits inside each number.
Nashville Lawn Care and Maintenance Costs
Recurring lawn care is the backbone of most Nashville landscaping budgets. Because Nashville sits in the climate transition zone, lawns here are usually cool-season tall fescue, which stays green most of the year but needs specific care, so maintenance is more than just mowing.
Mowing and Recurring Maintenance by Lot Size
Per-visit pricing in Nashville scales with lot size and how much trimming, edging, and bed work the property needs:
| Lot Size | Per-Visit Mow, Edge & Blow | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Small (under 5,000 sq ft) | $45 – $55 | Tight lots in East Nashville, Germantown, 12South |
| Medium (5,000 – 10,000 sq ft) | $55 – $75 | Most established Davidson County neighborhoods |
| Large (10,000 sq ft – ½ acre) | $75 – $95 | Bigger lots in Brentwood, Belle Meade, the suburbs |
| Over ½ acre | $95+ | Quoted per property |
A standard visit covers mowing, string-trimming, edging beds and walkways, and blowing off hard surfaces. Fescue lawns are usually cut weekly through the spring and fall growing seasons and held higher, around 3.5 to 4 inches, to survive the hot, humid Middle Tennessee summer, then mowed less often in the heat of July and August when fescue slows down.
What Changes the Per-Visit Price
Within the $45 to $95 range, a few details push you toward the high or low end:
- Fenced or gated access that slows the crew down
- Heavy trimming around mature trees, beds, and rock outcrops
- Slope and rocky limestone ground common across Middle Tennessee
- Frequency, weekly accounts often price slightly lower per visit than one-off cuts
Fescue Fall Aeration and Overseeding
This is the line item that surprises newcomers. Tall fescue does not spread to fill itself in the way Bermuda does, so in the transition zone it has to be core-aerated and overseeded every fall to stay thick. Skip it for a couple of years and the lawn thins out and weeds move in. Budget $200 to $500 per year depending on lot size, this is the single most important investment in a healthy Nashville fescue lawn and is unique to cool-season transition-zone turf.
The overseeding line item follows University of Tennessee Extension’s math: tall fescue is seeded at 5 to 8 pounds per 1,000 square feet, ideally between August 20 and September 15. Source: UT Extension PB1576.
Full-Service Monthly Maintenance Plans
Homeowners who want one predictable bill usually move to a monthly plan:
| Plan Level | Monthly Cost | Typically Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Basic | $150 – $200 | Weekly mow, edge, blow |
| Standard | $200 – $325 | Mowing plus bed maintenance, light pruning, weed control |
| Premium | $325 – $450+ | Above plus fertilization, fall aeration/overseed, mulch refresh, irrigation checks |
Premium plans that fold in the fall aeration-and-overseed cycle are the best value for fescue lawns, because they keep the turf on schedule automatically.
Seasonal Cleanups
Nashville’s heavy deciduous tree canopy means fall leaf cleanup is a bigger job here than in many markets, and spring storm cleanup follows the high winds and hail that roll through Middle Tennessee. A seasonal cleanup, hauling leaves and debris, cutting back perennials, refreshing beds, typically runs $250 to $700 depending on how much material comes off the property.
Nashville Landscaping Project Costs
Beyond maintenance, most homeowners eventually take on one-time projects. These are priced by material and square footage, so the ranges are wider.
Sod and Lawn Installation
New sod is common after a hot, dry Middle Tennessee summer thins a lawn. Installed pricing runs $1.25 to $2.25 per square foot, including soil prep, depending on the grass and whether you want a cool- or warm-season lawn:
| Grass Type | Installed Cost / sq ft | Nashville Fit |
|---|---|---|
| Tall fescue | $1.25 – $1.85 | The transition-zone standard, green most of the year, needs fall overseeding |
| Bermuda | $1.40 – $1.90 | Full sun, heat- and traffic-tough, browns in winter |
| Zoysia | $1.60 – $2.25 | Dense, lower input, slow to establish, browns in winter |
For a typical 1,500-square-foot front yard, that works out to roughly $1,900 to $3,400 installed. On full-sun lots, a warm-season Bermuda or Zoysia lawn can lower long-term water and overseeding cost; in shade, fescue is usually the only good option.
Mulch, Beds, and Planting
- Mulch installed: $55 to $90 per cubic yard, hardwood mulch is the Middle Tennessee standard
- Flower bed install or refresh: $300 to $1,200 depending on size and plants
- Native and perennial plantings: priced per plan; natives like coneflower, black-eyed Susan, switchgrass, and oakleaf hydrangea handle Nashville’s clay and humidity well
Irrigation and Sprinkler Systems
Even in a wetter climate, irrigation matters for establishing sod and carrying a lawn through the dry late-summer stretch:
| System | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New 4–6 zone system | $3,000 – $5,000 | Standard suburban yard |
| Larger 7+ zone system | $5,000 – $6,500+ | Bigger lots, mixed turf and beds |
| Drip for beds | $1,500 – $4,000 | Efficient for shrub and perennial beds |
| Repair / tune-up | $150 – $500 | Heads, valves, controller |
A weather-based smart controller is worth the small upcharge, and Metro Water Services rules on watering and backflow should be factored into any new install.
Plan controller schedules around the utility’s numbers: during peak summer demand, Metro Water Services asks residents to water no more than three days each week and only between 7 p.m. and 4 a.m., according to Metro Water Services. Actively growing fescue needs roughly 1 to 1.5 inches of water per week, about 630 to 945 gallons per 1,000 square feet, according to University of Tennessee Extension, which is the demand a properly zoned system is sized to deliver.
Drainage Solutions
This is a Nashville reality the dry-climate cities never deal with. Middle Tennessee’s heavy clay drains slowly, and the area sees roughly four feet of rain a year, so standing water, soggy lawns, and erosion are common, and fixing them is a real budget line:
| Drainage Work | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| French drain | $1,500 – $3,500 | Routes subsurface water away from the home |
| Surface drains / regrading | $1,200 – $4,000 | Corrects pooling and runoff |
| Downspout extensions & dry creek | $800 – $3,000 | Manages roof runoff on clay |
Getting drainage right also protects everything else, hardscape, beds, and the foundation, from Middle Tennessee’s wet clay.
Hardscape: Patios, Walkways, and Walls
Local Tennessee fieldstone and limestone give Nashville hardscape its character:
| Hardscape | Installed Cost / sq ft | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gravel / decomposed granite path | $6 – $12 | Affordable, good drainage on clay |
| Concrete paver patio | $14 – $28 | Durable, many styles |
| Tennessee fieldstone / flagstone | $20 – $40 | Premium local stone look |
| Retaining wall (face) | $25 – $55 | Common on Middle Tennessee’s rolling, rocky lots |
A 300-square-foot paver patio typically lands between $4,200 and $8,400, while the same patio in natural fieldstone can run $6,000 to $12,000. On clay, proper base prep and drainage are what keep that hardscape from heaving.
Landscape Design
A standalone design plan, scaled drawings, plant lists, and a phasing plan, runs $300 to $2,500 depending on lot size and detail. Many Nashville homeowners roll the design fee into a larger design-build project, where it is credited back against the work.
Tree Care
Nashville’s mature hardwood canopy, oaks, maples, hackberries, is a real asset that needs upkeep:
- Trimming / pruning: $150 to $650 per tree
- Large heritage hardwood: $500 to $1,500+
- Removing storm-damaged limbs and deadwood is common after Middle Tennessee’s spring storm season
What Drives Landscaping Cost in Nashville?
Two similar-looking yards can carry very different price tags. Here is what actually moves your Nashville landscaping cost.
Lot Size and Terrain
Square footage is the first lever, but terrain matters just as much. Middle Tennessee is rolling, and many lots have slope, rock, and limited access that add labor and equipment time, especially in the hillier suburbs around Brentwood, Forest Hills, and the Harpeth ridges.
Soil
Nashville sits on the Central Basin, and the soil shapes nearly every project:
Middle Tennessee Clay
Heavy, slow-draining clay that holds water and runs sticky when wet. It grows fescue well but cracks hardscape that is not set on a proper base, and it makes drainage planning a routine part of larger projects.
Limestone and Rocky Ground
Much of the area sits on shallow soil over limestone bedrock, with rocky cedar-glade ground in places. Digging for irrigation lines, footings, or planting beds is slower where rock is close to the surface, and beds often need imported soil and amendment, both of which add to the bill.
The Transition-Zone Climate
Nashville straddles the line between cool-season and warm-season grass country, which makes turf choice a genuine cost decision. Tall fescue gives near year-round green but needs the annual fall aeration-and-overseed cycle. Bermuda and Zoysia are lower-input on full-sun lots but go dormant and brown all winter. The grass you choose shapes your spending, and your curb appeal, for years.
Nashville sits in USDA plant hardiness zone 7b on the 2023 USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map, up from 7a, which widens the plant palette without changing the fescue-first turf math. Source: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map.
Rain, Drainage, and Water Rules
With around 47 inches of rain a year on slow-draining clay, drainage is a cost driver in Nashville that drier markets simply do not have. Metro Water Services also sets the rules on irrigation and backflow prevention. Building drainage in from the start is cheaper than fixing a soggy, eroding yard later.
Cost-Saving Tips for Nashville Homeowners
- Stay on the fescue schedule. Annual fall aeration and overseeding is far cheaper than renovating a thinned-out lawn that weeds have taken over.
- Match grass to sun. Fescue in shade, Bermuda or Zoysia in full sun, planting the wrong grass for the exposure is the most expensive lawn mistake in the transition zone.
- Fix drainage early. Correcting water flow up front protects beds, hardscape, and your foundation from Middle Tennessee’s wet clay.
- Lock in a recurring plan. Weekly accounts usually price better per visit, and a maintained lawn avoids costly recovery work.
- Phase big projects. A design plan lets you build drainage, hardscape, beds, and irrigation in stages without losing the overall vision.
Nashville Landscaping Cost FAQ
How much does lawn mowing cost in Nashville?
Most Nashville lawns are mowed for $45 to $95 per visit, scaling with lot size. Small lots in the urban core run $45 to $55, while larger suburban lots in Brentwood and Belle Meade reach $75 to $95. Weekly service usually prices slightly lower per visit than one-time cuts.
Why does my Nashville fescue lawn need aeration and overseeding every fall?
Tall fescue does not spread to fill itself in the way Bermuda does, so in the transition zone it must be core-aerated and overseeded every fall to stay thick and crowd out weeds. Budget $200 to $500 per year, it is the most important investment in a healthy Nashville lawn.
How much does it cost to install sod in Nashville?
Sod installation runs $1.25 to $2.25 per square foot installed. Tall fescue is the transition-zone standard, while Bermuda and Zoysia suit full-sun lots. A typical 1,500-square-foot yard costs roughly $1,900 to $3,400.
How much does drainage work cost in Nashville?
Drainage solutions typically run $1,500 to $5,000, with a French drain in the $1,500 to $3,500 range. Middle Tennessee’s heavy clay and high rainfall make drainage a common and worthwhile project that protects the rest of your landscape.
Should I choose fescue or a warm-season grass in Nashville?
It depends on sun and how much input you want. Fescue gives near year-round green with annual fall overseeding and tolerates shade; Bermuda and Zoysia are lower-input on full-sun lots but brown in winter. We recommend the grass that matches your property rather than a one-size schedule.
Is a full landscape makeover worth it in Nashville?
A complete makeover ranges from $5,000 to $40,000+, but well-designed landscaping suited to Middle Tennessee’s soil and climate, with drainage handled correctly, adds curb appeal and resale value while lowering ongoing maintenance headaches. Phasing the work keeps it manageable.
Get an Exact Nashville Landscaping Quote
These ranges are a planning tool, your real cost depends on your lot, soil, drainage, and goals. For a precise, no-obligation written estimate built around your property and Middle Tennessee’s climate, reach Nashville Pro Landscape at (615) 334-9088 for a free quote.
Nashville Landscaping Services
For the latest local numbers, see our 2026 Nashville Landscaping Price & Demand Report.
Middle Tennessee Turf Pros