2026 Price Guide
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How much does a landscaping project cost in Newfoundland and Labrador?

A landscaping project in Newfoundland and Labrador typically runs about $85,000, with most projects landing between $69,000 and $126,000. Where you land comes down to the finish you choose, how hard your site is to work in, and where in the province you build.

Typical range · NL · 2026
$69,000$126,000
Most land near $85,000.
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What decides your number

Two yard projects the same size can land thousands apart. Three things move the total more than anything else, and the first one does most of the work.

1 · Finish level: the biggest lever

TradesMetrics prices every job at one of four finish levels. This single choice is what stretches the range above from $69,000 to $126,000.

Basic

$69–84k
Entry-finish yard. Grading, sod, basic planting beds and a simple path.

Standard

$76–94k
Mid-range design with patio, planting, irrigation and lighting.

Premium

$88–110k
Semi-custom landscape, hardscape features, mature plantings, water feature.

Luxury

$101–126k
Full custom. Premium hardscape, outdoor living spaces, mature trees, full irrigation.

2 · Site access

An easy ground-floor yard with parking is cheaper to work in than a tight upper-floor space with stairs and no loading. Difficult access adds labor hours for moving materials and debris.

3 · Where in NL

Local trade wages and material costs set the baseline, and Newfoundland and Labrador's larger metros run higher than its smaller cities. The same yard costs more in St. John's, Mount Pearl or Corner Brook than in Conception Bay South, Paradise or other cities in NL.

Where the money goes

Here is a standard-finish, normal-access Newfoundland and Labrador yard. Ballpark figures for planning, not a line-item quote.

CategoryShareCost
Plumbing & electrical5%$3,300
Labor (install + trades)95%$66,700
Total cost of work100%$70,000

That $70,000 is what the work costs, before your markup and a contingency reserve. Here is how it becomes the price a client pays.

If you are pricing the job

Markup is not margin

Here is that same $70,000 priced the way you bid it: each cost type marked up, plus a 10% contingency. What you keep is smaller than the markup looks, and that gap is where bids lose money.

Cost elementYour costMarkupClient price
Labor (own crew)$2,20040%$3,100
Materials$8,00010%$8,800
Equipment$13,00010%$14,300
Subcontractors$46,80010%$51,500
Permits & fees$00%$0
Contingency (10% reserve)$7,0000%$7,000
Total$77,000+$7,700$84,700
  • Total cost: $77,000
  • Price to client: $84,700
  • Profit: $84,700$77,000 = $7,700
  • Markup = profit ÷ cost = $7,700 ÷ $77,000 = 10%
  • Margin = profit ÷ price = $7,700 ÷ $84,700 = 9%

Same $7,700, two different numbers. You put 40% on your own labor, but it is a small slice; subs and materials carry only 10% and dominate the job, so the blend lands at 10% markup and just 9% margin. Inside TradesMetrics you set these per cost type and watch the margin move as the job changes.

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Common questions

How much does a landscaping project cost in Newfoundland and Labrador in 2026?
Most Newfoundland and Labrador yard remodels run between $69,000 and $126,000, with a typical project around $85,000. An entry-finish, full-scope build comes in lower, while a luxury custom build with layout changes runs higher.
What is the difference between basic, standard, premium and luxury?
Basic is a full-scope yard build at entry finish: budget materials and standard fixtures, same layout. Standard steps up to mid-range materials and finishes with minor changes. Premium is semi-custom with high-end finishes and some layout change. Luxury is full custom: reworked layout and top-tier materials throughout.
How much does a landscaping project cost per square foot?
Most yard projects are priced by scope rather than by the square foot.
Why does the price vary so much?
For a Newfoundland and Labrador yard, finish level is the biggest driver, then site access and where in the province you build. Trade wages vary by region, and larger metros run higher than smaller cities.
Is this an estimate or a quote?
It is an estimate: a planning range built from regional cost data and your finish level. A quote is a firm price a contractor gives after seeing the site and final selections. Use the estimate to set a budget, then get a quote to lock it in.
How much should I budget for surprises?
Add a 10 to 20 percent contingency on top of the estimate for hidden conditions like outdated wiring or plumbing found once the work opens up.
What is the difference between markup and margin?
On a standard yard priced with TradesMetrics default markups, plus a 10 percent contingency reserve, the job costs you $77,000 and the client pays $84,700. That $7,700 difference is a 10 percent markup over cost but only a 9 percent margin of the price, because the low-markup subs and materials dominate the job.
What is the real cost of labor on a job?
Base wage is not the real cost. Once you add payroll taxes, workers comp, benefits and paid time off, a worker costs 35 to 50 percent more than their hourly wage. Estimating off base wage is a common way to lose money.
These figures come from current regional trade and material costs (June 2026), scaled by finish level and site access, the same engine TradesMetrics uses to build estimates. Treat them as a planning range, not a quote. Scope-driven projects like decks, landscaping, and pools vary too widely to show a single typical. For an exact, line-item estimate, run the job in TradesMetrics.