Landscaping Services Listings

The listings assembled on this resource cover irrigation and sprinkler system contractors operating across the United States, organized to help property owners, facilities managers, and landscaping professionals identify qualified service providers in their region. Each entry is drawn from publicly verifiable business information and mapped against the service categories documented throughout this site. Understanding how these listings are structured — and what standards govern inclusion — makes the directory more useful for comparing providers, scoping project requirements, and verifying credentials before engaging a contractor.


What each listing covers

Every provider entry in this directory is aligned to at least one defined service category within the sprinkler and irrigation landscape. The primary categories tracked include new system installation, seasonal maintenance (both winterization and spring startup), system design and zoning consultation, repair and troubleshooting, and smart controller retrofits.

Entries are not generic business listings. Each one is mapped to a functional service scope. A contractor appearing under installation, for example, is indexed against that category specifically — not assumed to offer diagnostics or service agreements unless those appear as separate mapped entries. This categorical separation matters when a property owner needs a specialist rather than a general landscaping firm that handles irrigation as a secondary offering.

Service scope is further segmented by property type where data permits:

  1. Residential — single-family and multi-unit residential installations, including in-ground systems, drip configurations, and zone expansions
  2. Commercial — larger-footprint properties requiring pressure-rated distribution systems and code-compliant backflow assemblies
  3. Municipal and institutional — parks, athletic fields, and HOA-managed common areas operating under separate regulatory requirements
  4. Agricultural and specialty — drip and micro-irrigation for horticultural or nursery contexts, distinct from turf-focused sprinkler systems

Contractors indexed under commercial work are distinguished from residential-only providers because commercial projects frequently require licensed irrigation contractors with specific bond minimums and permit-pulling authority, as detailed in sprinkler system licensing and certifications.


Geographic distribution

Listings span all 50 states, with the highest provider density concentrated in the Sun Belt, Pacific Coast, and Great Plains regions where irrigation demand is structurally higher due to precipitation deficits and extended growing seasons. States such as California, Texas, Arizona, Florida, and Colorado each have distinct regulatory environments governing irrigation contractors — licensing thresholds, backflow tester certification requirements, and local water authority mandates vary significantly. The US regional sprinkler system considerations page documents these state-by-state variations in detail.

In lower-population states and in regions with high annual rainfall (portions of the Pacific Northwest and the Northeast), the provider pool is smaller, and listings reflect that proportionally. Rural ZIP codes may return fewer than 3 active providers within a 25-mile radius; the directory surfaces this gap rather than padding results with adjacent-market entries that cannot realistically serve a given location.

Geographic tagging is applied at the service area level, not the business address level. A contractor headquartered in a suburban county but advertising service across a 75-mile radius is indexed across that full footprint, provided the service area claim is supported by verifiable information such as a published service area map or licensed territory documentation.


How to read an entry

Each listing displays a structured data block. The fields, in order of appearance, are: business name, primary service category, secondary service categories (if applicable), geographic service area, license or certification status (where publicly verifiable), and any noted specialty such as smart controller integration or drip irrigation systems.

License status is not verified in real time by this directory. The notation "licensed" reflects the state at the time of indexing. Property owners should independently confirm active licensure with the relevant state contractor licensing board before executing any service agreement.

Ratings or review scores are not displayed. This directory does not aggregate consumer review data or weight entries by customer sentiment. The rationale is structural: review aggregation introduces selection bias and can disadvantage newer providers with legitimate credentials. Credential and scope data are more reliable proxies for contractor suitability than aggregated star ratings for irrigation work.

Entries that include a service agreement offering are flagged separately from transactional-only providers, since ongoing maintenance contracts carry different evaluation criteria than one-time installation bids.


What listings include and exclude

Included:
- Licensed irrigation and sprinkler contractors with a documentable US business address and service area
- Providers offering at least 1 of the 4 mapped service categories (installation, maintenance, repair, design/consultation)
- Contractors with verifiable state or municipal licensing where the jurisdiction requires it
- Specialty providers covering niche applications such as sports turf irrigation or sloped landscape systems

Excluded:
- General landscaping companies for whom irrigation represents less than a secondary offering with no dedicated crew or equipment
- Unlicensed handyman services operating in jurisdictions where irrigation contractor licensing is mandatory
- Equipment retailers, wholesalers, and distributors not offering installation or service labor
- Providers operating outside US jurisdiction

The exclusion of general landscapers deserves specific attention. A landscaping company that mows, plants, and also "does sprinklers" is categorically different from a dedicated irrigation contractor who designs zone layouts, pulls permits under local code requirements, and services backflow preventers. This directory indexes the latter. The distinction matters most for commercial and municipal buyers where liability, warranty terms, and code compliance are non-negotiable project requirements. For further context on evaluating contractor qualifications before making contact, the hiring a sprinkler system contractor page outlines the credential and scope questions worth asking at the vetting stage.

References