Fencing in Bolton
Fence installers for gardens: fencing supplied and fitted, from single panels to full perimeters, straight and solid the first time. Around eight miles from our Leigh base.
Fencing for Bolton Gardens
Fencing in Bolton has to respect the weather. With the West Pennine Moors just north of town, plots on rising ground around Heaton, Ladybridge and Hunger Hill take far more wind than a sheltered Leigh garden, so we spec accordingly, concrete posts, gravel boards, and on the most exposed runs we’ll suggest hit-and-miss or slatted panels that let gusts pass through instead of acting like a sail.
We cover Bolton and the surrounding area: Deane, Daubhill, Ladybridge, Hunger Hill, Middle Hulton and beyond (BL1, BL3, BL5, BL6).
Get a Free Bolton Quote
What’s Included
The housing stock sets the rest of the job. Behind the terraces of Deane and Daubhill it’s close-board runs along back alleys, where damp ground and tight access shape how we work. On the estates of Ladybridge and Over Hulton it’s mostly panel fencing between neighbours, and on the bigger Lostock plots, longer runs where straight lines and consistent heights really show.
- Close-board, panel and picket fencing
- Concrete or timber posts, set properly
- Gravel boards to stop rot at ground level
- Garden gates made to match
- Old fencing removed and disposed of
- Storm damage fence repairs and panel swaps
How It Works
Fencing in Bolton, FAQs
Concrete posts and gravel boards as a minimum, and on genuinely exposed plots, hit-and-miss or slatted panels. The gaps let wind through, so the fence takes a fraction of the load a solid panel does. It’s the difference between replacing panels every winter and not thinking about the fence at all.
Yes, it’s standard work around Deane and Daubhill. We work from the alley where access allows, set gravel boards to keep timber off the damp ground, and make sure gates still swing clear.
It depends on the length, height and style. As a rough guide, panel fencing works out cheaper than close-board, and timber posts cheaper than concrete. We quote per job after a free site visit, so you get an exact written price before anything starts.
Most domestic fencing jobs take one to two days. A single 6ft panel or post swap is usually done in a morning; a full garden perimeter with old fence removal might run to two or three days.
Concrete posts last decades and never rot, but timber looks softer and costs less up front. In exposed gardens we usually recommend concrete posts with gravel boards, because that combination survives the wettest winters.