Landscaping and Lawn Care: Authority Industry Reference for Homeowners

Landscaping and lawn care encompass a broad range of exterior property services — from routine grass maintenance to full-scale site design and hardscape installation. This page defines the industry's scope, explains how professional services are structured and delivered, identifies the most common homeowner scenarios, and outlines the decision boundaries that separate DIY-appropriate tasks from work requiring licensed or certified professionals. Understanding these distinctions reduces cost overruns, liability exposure, and substandard outcomes.

Definition and scope

Landscaping and lawn care are frequently treated as interchangeable terms, but they represent distinct service categories with different licensing implications, equipment requirements, and contractor qualifications.

Lawn care refers to ongoing maintenance of turf and plant health: mowing, edging, fertilization, aeration, overseeding, weed control, and pesticide application. In the United States, pesticide and herbicide application is regulated at the state level under frameworks derived from the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. §136 et seq.), which is administered nationally by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Any contractor applying restricted-use pesticides must hold a state-issued pesticide applicator license — a credential requirement that exists in all 50 states.

Landscaping encompasses design, installation, and structural alteration of outdoor spaces: grading, drainage systems, irrigation installation, hardscape construction (patios, retaining walls, walkways), planting of trees and shrubs, and landscape architecture services. Landscape architecture is a licensed profession in all 50 U.S. states and territories (Council of Landscape Architectural Registration Boards, CLARB), requiring passage of the Landscape Architect Registration Examination (LARE). General landscaping installation work carries separate licensing requirements that vary by state — some states require a contractor's license for any project exceeding a defined dollar threshold, often $500 to $1,000 depending on jurisdiction.

The industry also intersects with water management regulation. Irrigation system installation frequently requires plumbing permits and, in drought-affected regions, compliance with local water authority rules on sprinkler output and runoff. The EPA WaterSense program certifies irrigation professionals and products meeting efficiency benchmarks, providing homeowners a verifiable credential to look for when hiring.

How it works

Professional landscaping and lawn care services are typically structured across 3 delivery models:

  1. Recurring maintenance contracts — Scheduled visits (weekly, biweekly, or monthly) covering mowing, edging, blowing, and basic turf treatment. These are the most common arrangement for residential clients and are priced per visit or on an annual contract basis.
  2. Project-based installation work — One-time engagements for defined scopes: installing a patio, planting a tree line, constructing a retaining wall, or redesigning a planting bed. These jobs require a written contract specifying materials, timeline, and payment schedule.
  3. Specialty service visits — Targeted applications such as aeration, overseeding, fertilization programs, pest treatment, or tree trimming. These are often performed on a seasonal cycle tied to regional climate and turfgrass type.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook classifies the majority of field workers in this sector under "Landscaping and Groundskeeping Workers" (SOC 37-3011), a category that encompasses equipment operation, planting, and maintenance but does not imply licensure. Supervisory and design roles carry additional credential requirements.

Quality service delivery depends on correct identification of turfgrass type, soil conditions, and regional climate zone. The USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map divides the continental U.S. into 13 zones based on average annual minimum winter temperature; a professional applying fertilizer or selecting plant species should be working from zone-appropriate recommendations.

For homeowners navigating the range of service providers available, the home services industry categories resource provides a structured breakdown of how landscaping fits within the broader home services sector.

Common scenarios

Homeowners most frequently engage landscaping and lawn care professionals for the following situations:

Decision boundaries

The central question for homeowners is determining which tasks are within DIY scope and which carry enough technical, legal, or physical risk to warrant professional engagement. The following framework identifies where the boundary typically falls:

DIY-appropriate tasks (low regulatory risk, standard consumer equipment):
- Mowing on lots under 1 acre with standard riding or push mowers
- Hand-pulling weeds and applying pre-emergent granules labeled for homeowner use
- Mulching garden beds
- Basic pruning of shrubs below 8 feet

Professional engagement recommended (skill threshold, equipment, or regulatory requirement):
- Any pesticide or herbicide application beyond homeowner-labeled general-use products — restricted-use pesticides require a licensed applicator under FIFRA
- Tree trimming or removal, particularly for trees over 15 feet tall or near power lines; the ISA recommends certified arborists (ISA Certified Arborist credential) for any work involving canopy access
- Retaining wall construction above 4 feet — structural failure risk and permit requirements apply
- Irrigation system installation — backflow preventer code compliance and permit requirements in most municipalities
- Grading or drainage alteration — improper grading can redirect stormwater toward foundations, creating liability and structural damage risk
- Landscape design for projects above the applicable contractor license threshold in the homeowner's state

The contrast between recurring maintenance contractors and design-build landscaping firms is especially important for project scoping. A maintenance contractor who also installs hardscape may not carry the contractor's license required for that installation work. Before signing any project contract, homeowners should verify license status through their state's contractor licensing board — a process covered in detail at home-services-contractor-licensing-by-trade.

For projects involving pesticide application specifically, the EPA's pesticide applicator licensing lookup and state environmental agency directories provide verification pathways. The national home services regulatory landscape page covers how these state-level regulatory regimes operate in parallel with federal oversight frameworks.

Homeowners evaluating the full range of home maintenance responsibilities — of which landscaping represents one component — can find a structured starting point at the Authority Industries Home Services network overview.

References