To build a garden fence, plan layout, set posts in concrete, and attach mesh or boards sized to your pests and style.
If you want harvests that stay yours, a solid barrier beats wishful thinking. This guide walks you from plan to finish: sizing, layout, posts, stringers, and the right skin—wire, boards, or panels. You’ll see mistakes to dodge, cost cues, and care tips so your fence stays straight and tidy.
Pick A Design That Fits Your Garden
Start with the problem you’re solving. Rabbits? Go tight mesh near the ground. Deer? Go tall with strong corners. Pets and kids? Add a smooth top rail and a latched gate. Your budget, local rules, and tools round out the choice.
| Fence Type | Best Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Welded Wire On Wood Posts | General veggie beds | Fast, affordable; add a board at the base for stiffness. |
| Hardware Cloth Base + Wire Above | Rabbits, ground pests | 1/2–1 inch openings on bottom 24–36 in.; wire above saves cost. |
| Deer Netting On Tall Posts | Deer pressure | Height 7.5–8 ft with braced corners; add flagging for visibility. |
| Board Picket | Pets, curb appeal | Heavier; needs painting or stain; good with a wire liner. |
| Livestock Panels | Mixed pests, strength | Rigid, pricier; great for gates and corners. |
Check Rules, Utilities, And Site
Look up local fence height and setback rules, then mark utilities. In the U.S., you can call 811 before you dig to have lines located. Walk the line with a level and string; note slopes, soggy spots, and tight corners that need braces.
Materials That Last And Look Good
Use pressure-treated posts for ground contact or rot-resistant species like cedar. For wire, 14–16 gauge holds shape better than light netting. Hot-dip galvanized hardware fights rust. Exterior screws grip better than nails on rails and gates.
Building A Garden Fence Step By Step
Grab stakes, string, tape, level, post hole digger or auger, gravel, and concrete mix. Precut rails if you’re running boards, and keep wire ties or fencing staples ready. Aim for post spacing of 6–8 feet; closer in windy sites.
1) Lay Out Corners And Lines
Set sturdy corner stakes first. Stretch string tight between corners, then square the layout using the 3-4-5 method or a framing square. Mark post centers along the string at your chosen spacing.
2) Dig And Set Posts
Hole depth should be 1/3 of above-ground height, or at least 24–30 inches for garden runs. Drop 4–6 inches of gravel for drainage. Set each post plumb, pour concrete to grade, and crown the top so water sheds away from the post. Let it set until firm.
3) Add Rails Or Tension Wire
For wood-skinned styles, attach two or three horizontal rails with exterior screws. For wire-skinned styles, run a taut top wire to keep mesh crisp. Brace corners with diagonal boards or brace wire; that stops sagging over time.
4) Hang The Skin
Unroll welded wire or hardware cloth along the line. Start at a corner, pull tight, and staple every 6–8 inches along rails or posts. Keep the bottom tight to the grade; bury or pin it with landscape staples where animals try to push under.
5) Build A Solid Gate
Frame a rectangle with a diagonal brace from the latch side bottom to the hinge side top. Skin it to match the fence. Use two heavy strap hinges, a latch you can open with winter gloves, and a stop block so the gate closes the same way each time.
6) Finish For Longevity
Seal exposed wood with exterior stain or paint once the lumber dries. Cap pickets with a top rail to block water entry. Cover cut wire ends with crimp sleeves or bend them flat so nothing snags skin or clothing.
Smart Sizing For Pests And Pets
Match height and mesh to what’s raiding your beds. Deer push and jump, rabbits squeeze, and groundhogs dig. A liner of hardware cloth along the base stops most burrowers. For deer pressure, aim for tall posts and tight corners; a visible top edge helps animals see and avoid it. Research from Penn State points many gardeners to tall barriers in deer country; see their deer fence guidance.
Height And Mesh Guide By Pest
| Pest/Need | Height / Opening | Tips |
|---|---|---|
| Rabbits | 24–36 in. of 1/2–1 in. mesh | Bend 6–12 in. outward as an apron or bury 4–6 in. |
| Deer | 7.5–8 ft tall | Brace corners; add flagging for visibility; keep slack out. |
| Groundhogs | 36 in. base of 1 in. mesh | Bury 8–12 in. or pin to soil; add hot wire if needed. |
| Pets/Kids | 42–48 in. with smooth top | Self-closing latch; no sharp wire ends; tight gate gaps. |
Cost, Time, And Tool Checklist
Material prices swing by region and season, but a simple wire-on-wood build often lands in a friendly range per linear foot, with boards and panels rising from there. Keep safety front and center: gloves, eye protection, and a steady ladder make the day smoother.
Bracing, Corners, And Slopes
Every force finds the weak point. Corners take the load when mesh is stretched or when wind hits a long side. Use longer posts at corners, set deeper, and add a horizontal brace with a diagonal tie. On slopes, step the rails or run them to follow grade; avoid gaps at the base where small animals sneak through.
Gates That Don’t Sag
A gate fails when weight beats the joints. Keep the rectangle square, glue and screw the frame, and hang it on heavy hinges spaced far apart. A diagonal brace from bottom latch to top hinge fights gravity. A wheel on wide gates saves strain on the post.
Finishes, Rust Control, And Wood Care
Moisture wins unless you plan ahead. Pick fasteners labeled exterior or hot-dip galvanized. Back-prime boards before hanging. Keep soil off wood by adding a kick board or a gravel strip below the fence line. Where sprinklers hit, use a water-repellent stain and refresh on a rhythm.
Maintenance And Quick Fixes
Walk the line once a season. Tighten a staple here, clip a snag there, and retension a sagging run with a come-along. Patch small holes with a wire square and hog rings. Keep vegetation trimmed along the base so vines don’t pull the mesh out of shape.
Common Mistakes To Avoid
- Posts too shallow: wind and frost heave win.
- No brace at corners: gate gaps grow, mesh loosens.
- Mesh too loose: animals push through low tension spots.
- Ignoring grade: gaps under panels invite raids.
- Skipping layout: crooked lines show forever.
Sample Bill Of Materials
Here’s a starter list for a 30 × 40 ft rectangle with one 4 ft gate. Adjust counts to your size and spacing.
Parts You’ll Likely Need
- 16–20 posts (4 in. round or 4×4), ground-contact rated
- 8–10 bags of concrete mix (80 lb)
- 8–12 2×4 rails (or tension wire for a wire-only build)
- 150–200 ft of welded wire mesh or deer netting
- 1 roll of 1/2–1 in. hardware cloth for the base
- 1 prehung or site-built 4 ft gate with hinges and latch
- Exterior screws, staples, wire ties, and gate hardware
- Gravel for post holes; stain or paint if finishing wood
Safety Notes Worth Heeding
Flag the work zone, chock wheelbarrows on slopes, and keep hands clear of the staple crown. Fresh cuts and scrapes happen around wire and lumber; clean wounds and seek care when needed. Keep tetanus shots current per medical guidance if you’re overdue and you’re handling soil-exposed metal or wire.
Soil, Footings, And Frost Heave
Soils shift. Clay swells and shrinks, sand drains fast, and loam sits in the middle. In wet clay, dig a touch deeper and widen the base so the concrete forms a bell that resists lift. In sand, line holes with a bit of landscape fabric to hold shape while you pour. Where frost hits hard, keep posts deeper than the frost line and slope the top of the concrete away from the post.
Wind, Snow, And Load Planning
Solid boards act like a sail in storms. If your site gets strong gusts, leave small gaps between pickets or pick a wire-skin design that lets air through. In snowy regions, raise the bottom edge so drifts don’t lean on the mesh. Extra braces at long stretches spread the strain and keep lines straight.
Seasonal Panels And Removable Sections
Some gardens need access for tillers, compost deliveries, or small tractors. Build one side with removable panels hung on cleats, or use carriage bolts and wing nuts so a section comes off in minutes. Label hardware and keep a small parts bin clipped to the fence inside the gate so the kit stays with the fence.
Smart Sourcing And Budget Tips
Buy posts in bundles for better pricing, and check farm stores for heavy mesh at lower cost than big-box rolls. Mix concrete in the hole to save on tubs. A manual post driver is affordable and speeds T-post work if you’re lining the inside of a wood frame with wire. For tidier cuts, use aviation snips on hardware cloth and a cut-off wheel on rigid panels.
You’re set. A straight, tight fence protects plants, defines space, and tidies the whole plot. Pick a style that suits your garden, follow the steps, and enjoy produce that stays where you grew it.
