About Plano Fence Company
Plano’s fence market is not short on contractors. What it is short on is contractors who understand why a homeowner in a deed-restricted community on the north tollway corridor and a homeowner replacing a 35-year-old cedar fence in south Plano are making entirely different decisions — and who know how to serve both without defaulting to the same answer for every property.
The north Plano buyer is navigating an HOA covenant that governs the material, the height, and sometimes the stain color before a contractor is ever called. The south Plano buyer is dealing with posts that have been working their way out of Collin County clay soil for three decades and a fence that has finally crossed the line from maintenance project to replacement project. Getting either one right requires knowing which situation you are actually in — and that assessment is what every estimate starts with.
Plano Fence Company was built for homeowners and property managers across Plano’s HOA communities and established neighborhoods — and holds the same standard across Allen, McKinney, Richardson, Frisco, and Wylie.
We serve homeowners, property managers, and businesses across the full range of Plano fence work — from a board replacement and post reset to a full ornamental iron fence installation that requires HOA architectural review and a city permit — with over a decade of experience in this specific market and the same standard on every job regardless of scope or zip code.
How the Covenant Shapes Every Plano Fence Project
In Plano’s HOA communities, good fence work starts before the first post is set. It starts with reading the covenant. A fence installed in the wrong material, at the wrong height, or in a style the architectural review committee has not approved creates a compliance problem that is expensive to correct after the fact — and one that a contractor who pulled the covenant before the estimate would have prevented entirely.
It continues with an honest post assessment. Plano’s clay soil is expansive — it moves with every wet and dry season, and it has been moving against fence posts in the city’s established neighborhoods for 25 to 35 years. A post that was set too shallow, or without adequate concrete, has been losing ground to that soil movement for years. A fence that looks like a board replacement job from the surface is sometimes a full replacement job once the posts are assessed at the ground line. We tell homeowners which situation they are actually in, not which one produces the larger invoice.
And it ends with the same standard on every job — the permit pulled before work begins, the post set to the depth Plano’s soil conditions require, and the site left in better shape than we found it. Fence repair covers the post assessment process that determines whether repair or replacement is the right call on any Plano property.
The Plano Market
Plano’s fence market runs in two directions simultaneously, and understanding both is what makes this service area different from the rest of the Metroplex.
The first direction is replacement. The subdivisions built across south and central Plano from the late 1970s through the early 1990s put a generation of cedar privacy fences in the ground at the same time. Those fences are now 30 to 40 years old. The posts have been through hundreds of wet-dry cycles in Collin County’s expansive clay soil. The boards have been through years of North Texas UV exposure without adequate staining. And the homeowners who live in those neighborhoods — many of them long-tenure owners who have been watching the fence slowly lose its line for years — are now making replacement decisions. Not because something went wrong. Because the timeline ran out.
The second direction is compliance. Plano has one of the highest concentrations of HOA-governed residential communities in North Texas. The deed restrictions that govern fence material, height, style, and maintenance standards in those communities create a fence conversation that starts with the covenant, not with a contractor quote. Homeowners in Plano’s deed-restricted neighborhoods are not choosing a fence from a blank slate — they are navigating an approval process that requires the right material specification before the first post goes in the ground.
We work across both directions every week. The knowledge that comes from that breadth of work in this specific market informs every estimate — regardless of which community the property is in or what the project looks like.
How We Work on Every Project in Plano
A covenant review before any material is specified. In Plano’s HOA communities, the covenant governs the project. We pull and read the relevant HOA documentation before quoting any material or style — so the fence that gets installed passes architectural review the first time.
A post assessment before any replacement is recommended. The decision between repair and full replacement in Plano’s established neighborhoods is a post condition question, not a board condition question. Every estimate includes a real assessment of post condition at the ground line before a replacement recommendation is made.
A free on-site estimate with no pressure and no obligation. Every project gets a real look at the property. We do not quote from a phone call or a satellite image. The conditions on the ground are what the estimate needs to reflect — and that information is always free.
No work begins without your sign-off on a written estimate. The final invoice reflects what was quoted. If something changes during the project that affects cost, we discuss it before we proceed — not after.
The Plano Homeowners and Properties We Serve
- Homeowners across Plano, Allen, McKinney, Richardson, Frisco, and Wylie — from a single board replacement to a full perimeter installation with automatic gates.
- Long-tenure homeowners in Plano’s established neighborhoods whose original cedar fence has reached the end of its service life and who want the replacement specified correctly from the start.
- HOA community homeowners navigating deed restriction requirements who need a contractor that understands the covenant review process and specifies the right material before the permit application is filed.
- Homeowners dealing with storm damage who need an accurate damage assessment, insurance documentation, and a replacement estimate on a timeline that works with their claim process and their HOA compliance deadline.
- First-cycle buyers in Frisco, McKinney, and Allen whose original fence is entering its first replacement cycle and who are making material decisions that will hold for the next 20 to 30 years.
- Property managers and HOA boards who need commercial-grade chain link, ornamental iron, or common area fencing that meets city code and the community’s architectural standards.
If your project involves fencing anywhere in our service area — we would like to hear about it. Free estimates. Every project. Every property.
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PLANO, TEXAS