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Best Fence Companies in San Diego, CA

Compare 1 certified fence installer serving San Diego — or tell us about your project and get free quotes.

Featured Fence Companies in San Diego

The featured spot for San Diego is open. Own a fence company serving San Diego? Be the first company homeowners see on this page — with your logo, a verified badge, and a direct link to your website. Claim the Featured Spot.

Free Directory Listings in San Diego

Local fence companies listed at no charge. Own one of these businesses? Upgrade to a featured spot to get a followed link to your website, your logo, and priority placement.

Fence Installation Costs in San Diego

Here's what fence installation typically starts at in the San Diego area, by material. Use these numbers to sanity-check quotes — not to replace them.

Fence TypeStarts at / ft150 ft project starts at
Wood (Cedar)$28$4,200
Chain Link$17$2,550
Vinyl / PVC$30$4,500
Aluminum$34$5,100
Wrought Iron$38$5,700
Composite$45$6,750

Estimates are regional starting points, not quotes. Final pricing in San Diego varies with your lot, fence height, gate count, and material grade — get quotes from local companies for real numbers.

Popular fence types in San Diego

Fence companies serving San Diego commonly install:

  • Wood Fences
  • Chain Link
  • Vinyl / PVC
  • Aluminum
  • Wrought Iron
  • Gates & Operators
  • Fence Repair

FAQs about fence companies in San Diego

How much does a fence cost in San Diego?

Most San Diego homeowners see wood (cedar) fencing start around $28 per linear foot installed, with chain link starting lower and composite or wrought iron costing more. That puts a typical 150-foot backyard project starting near $4,200 for wood. Your final price depends on height, terrain, gates, and material grade, so it pays to compare local quotes.

Do I need a permit to build a fence in San Diego?

Many cities require a permit for fences above a certain height, and San Diego may have its own height and setback rules for front and back yards. Check with the San Diego permitting office before you build — your installer can usually handle the paperwork for you.

How do I choose a fence company in San Diego?

Get at least three written quotes from San Diego installers and compare what each includes — post depth, concrete, hardware, and cleanup are where bids differ most. Check Google reviews and ask for proof of liability insurance and any license California or the city requires. A company that answers questions clearly and puts its warranty in writing is usually the safer pick.

How long does fence installation take?

Most residential fences go up in one to three days once materials are on site. The longer wait is usually before the crew arrives — quotes, permits, and material lead times can add one to four weeks, so plan ahead if you have a deadline like a new pool or a puppy.

Are the companies on Fence Certified vetted?

We list established fence companies serving San Diego and show their real Google ratings and review counts so you can judge their track record at a glance. We are a directory, not a contractor, so we still recommend verifying licensing and insurance directly before signing. Featured placement never changes a company's rating.

Hiring a fence company in San Diego: what to know

Getting and comparing quotes

Get three quotes minimum, and make sure each one itemizes materials, post depth and concrete, gates, haul-away, and the timeline. In San Diego, the cheapest bid often skips something — usually shallower posts or thinner pickets — so compare line by line, not just the bottom number.

Licensing & insurance questions to ask

Ask every San Diego installer for a certificate of general liability insurance and, if they have employees, workers' comp — a legitimate company will send both without hesitation. Requirements vary across California, so also ask whether the city requires a contractor registration and who is pulling any permit: you or them.

What affects your price

Beyond material choice, the big cost drivers are linear footage, fence height, the number of gates, and site conditions — slopes, rocky soil, tree roots, and tear-out of an old fence all add labor. Corner lots and long street-facing runs in San Diego can also trigger stricter height rules, which changes the design and the bid.

DIY vs hiring a pro

DIY can save roughly a third on a straightforward wood or chain-link run if you own the tools and can set posts plumb in concrete. Hire a pro for anything involving permits, property-line questions, slopes, or automated gates — mistakes there cost more to redo than the labor you saved, and a good San Diego installer warranties the work.

Fence Companies Near San Diego

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