Fence Cost Calculator: Materials, Posts, and Labor by Linear Foot

Estimate total fence installation cost for wood, vinyl, chain link, aluminum, or composite fencing. This tool calculates post count, concrete footing needs, gate pricing, and labor cost side by side so you can compare DIY and contractor-installed budgets before buying materials.

Updated June 2026 Free, No Signup Required Sources Cited No Data Stored or Transmitted Reviewed by site author

Fence Project Inputs

ft
Enter total linear footage of fence run, not perimeter of an odd-shaped yard.
ea
ea

Planning note

This calculator separates material, labor, posts, concrete footings, and gates so you can see exactly what drives your total and compare contractor pricing against a DIY material-only budget.

Fence Pricing Snapshot by Material

Material Installed Cost per Linear Foot Typical Post Spacing Lifespan
Chain link $10 to $28 10 ft 25 to 40 years
Wood (pine or cedar) $20 to $50 6 to 8 ft 15 to 25 years
Vinyl $25 to $60 8 ft 30 or more years
Aluminum $25 to $55 6 to 8 ft 40 or more years
Composite $25 to $60 8 ft 25 to 30 years

Ranges reflect 2026 national contractor pricing surveys and vary by region, fence height, and site conditions.

What This Calculator Accounts For

Post count and spacing

Posts are calculated from total fence length divided by material-specific spacing, rounded up, plus one closing post. Wood and aluminum typically use 6 to 8 foot spacing, while chain link commonly uses 10 foot spacing between line posts.

Concrete footings per post

Each post footing is priced using a default of 2 bags of 50 lb concrete mix. Footing depth should reach at least one-third of the post's above-ground height, or extend below the local frost line in cold climates per IBC 2024 Section 1809.5.

Gates and hardware

Walk gates and drive gates are priced separately from linear footage because gate hardware, framing, and latch systems cost more per foot than standard fence panels.

Terrain adjustment

Sloped or rocky terrain increases labor time for post holes and panel leveling. This calculator applies a labor multiplier when terrain is set to sloped or rocky.

For post-specific concrete needs, the fence post concrete calculator and post hole concrete calculator provide a deeper breakdown of bags needed per hole diameter and depth.

Sample Fence Budgets

Scenario 1

150 ft wood privacy fence, 6 ft tall, one walk gate

Length: 150 ft

Posts (8 ft spacing): ceil(150/8) + 1 = 20

Material rate: $30/ft installed

150 ft x $30/ft = $4,500 material and labor

20 posts x 2 bags x $5.50 = $220 footings

1 walk gate at $275 = $275

Estimated total: $4,995

This falls inside the $4,200 to $7,500 national range reported for 150 ft wood privacy installs in 2026.

Scenario 2

200 ft chain link, 4 ft tall, no gates, DIY labor

Length: 200 ft

Posts (10 ft spacing): ceil(200/10) + 1 = 21

Material rate: $12/ft material-only

200 ft x $12/ft = $2,400 material

21 posts x 1.5 bags x $5.50 = $173.25 footings

Labor: $0 (DIY)

Estimated total: $2,573.25

Removing labor from a chain link job often cuts total cost by 40% to 50% compared to contractor installation.

Scenario 3

120 ft vinyl fence, 6 ft tall, one drive gate, sloped yard

Length: 120 ft

Posts (8 ft spacing): ceil(120/8) + 1 = 16

Terrain: Sloped, 15% labor increase applied

120 ft x $42/ft = $5,040 base install

Sloped terrain labor adjustment: +$189

1 drive gate at $650 = $650

Estimated total: $5,879

Sloped and rocky terrain rarely change material cost but reliably increase labor hours per foot.

Mistakes That Skew Fence Estimates

Measuring perimeter instead of fence run

Corner lots and irregular yards often need fencing on only part of the property line. Measure the actual planned fence run, not full lot perimeter.

Forgetting gate hardware costs

Gates are commonly priced per linear foot by mistake. Hinges, latches, and frame reinforcement push gate cost well above standard panel pricing per foot.

Skipping frost depth in cold climates

Shallow post footings can heave out of the ground during freeze-thaw cycles. Check local frost line depth before finalizing post hole depth.

Ignoring old fence removal cost

Demolition and haul-away of an existing fence is a separate line item that many quotes omit until after the contract is signed.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a fence cost per linear foot in 2026? +

Fence installation typically runs $10 to $75 per linear foot depending on material. Chain link falls around $10 to $28 per foot, wood privacy runs $20 to $50 per foot, and vinyl runs $25 to $60 per foot installed, based on 2026 national contractor pricing surveys.

How many fence posts do I need for 100 feet of fence? +

At standard 8-foot post spacing, 100 linear feet requires 13 posts (100 divided by 8, rounded up, plus 1 for the closing end). Wood fences often use 6 to 8 foot spacing while chain link commonly uses 10 foot spacing between line posts.

How deep should fence post footings be? +

A common rule of thumb sets post depth at one-third of the post's above-ground height, with a minimum of 24 inches in most residential soil. In frost-prone regions, footings should extend below the local frost line per IBC 2024 Section 1809.5 to prevent frost heave.

Is it cheaper to install a fence yourself? +

DIY installation typically saves 40% to 60% of total project cost since labor often makes up close to half the installed price. Material costs stay the same either way, so savings come entirely from skipping contractor labor rates.

How much does a fence gate add to the total cost? +

A standard walk gate typically adds $150 to $450 to a project depending on material and hardware, while a drive gate can add $300 to $1,200 or more. Gate cost is separate from per-foot fencing cost and should be budgeted individually.

Does fence cost vary significantly by region? +

Yes. Texas and the Southeast often run 20% to 30% below national averages because of competitive labor markets and easier digging conditions, while the Northeast and West Coast frequently run 20% to 40% above the national average.

What is included in a professional fence installation quote? +

A complete quote should separate materials, labor, post concrete footings, gate hardware, permit fees where required, and site prep such as grading or old fence removal. Estimates that bundle everything into one number are harder to verify.

Sources and Methodology

Post spacing and concrete footing defaults reflect common residential fencing practice, not a single universal code requirement. Verify local permit and setback rules before installation.

Disclaimer This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes. For permitted structural work, foundations, multi-story construction, retaining walls over 4 feet, and commercial projects, calculations must be verified by a licensed structural engineer per IBC 2024 Section 1604. ConcreteCalculate.com is not liable for structural decisions made from these estimates.
Calculations run in your browser and on our server only to process your request. No project data is stored or transmitted to third parties.