How Do Pros Price Irrigation Jobs in 2026? Labor, Materials, Markups, and How to Quote
If irrigation quoting feels like a coin flip—win the job but lose money, or price it right and lose the customer—you’re not alone. Most contractors aren’t struggling because they “don’t know irrigation.” They’re struggling because irrigation quotes have more hidden variables than people expect.
This guide breaks down a clean way pros quote jobs in 2026: labor, materials, markups, and a repeatable checklist you can use on every estimate.
The real problem: irrigation quotes fail when they’re built on guesswork
Irrigation is one of the easiest services to underprice because the work looks simple on paper:
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trench
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pipe
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heads
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controller
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test
But in real life, profit disappears in the details:
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access issues (tight side yards, fences, hardscape)
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trenching conditions (roots, rock, compacted soil)
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pressure/flow surprises
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zone complexity
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post-install tuning (where callbacks are born)
Homeowners don’t see those variables. They just see a number. So if your quote isn’t structured and defendable, you either discount too early or spend time explaining the wrong things.
What to do instead: quote irrigation like a pro (simple, repeatable structure)
The goal is a quote that:
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covers your real costs
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protects margin
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is easy to explain
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reduces callbacks
Here’s the structure that works.
1) Build labor as a scope, not a guess
Labor is your biggest lever and your biggest risk.
Instead of one blob (“Install irrigation system”), break it into phases:
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site prep + layout
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trenching
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pipe + valves
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heads + adjustments
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controller setup
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testing + tuning
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customer walkthrough
This does two things:
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you stop forgetting time sinks
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the customer sees professionalism (not “a number we made up”)
2) Materials: list what matters, bundle what doesn’t
Customers don’t need 40 line items. But they do need clarity.
Best practice:
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show major components clearly (controller, valves, heads)
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bundle the rest into a clean “materials package”
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include allowances for fittings and incidentals
This keeps the quote readable without hiding the real cost drivers.
3) Markups: protect margin without apologizing
A lot of contractors treat markup like something to defend.
Don’t.
Markup is what covers:
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procurement time
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job risk
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warranty exposure
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overhead
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unbillable service time
If you don’t price for reality, you’ll “win” jobs that punish your schedule.
4) Add a complexity factor (this is how pros stay profitable)
Two yards can be the same square footage and completely different installs.
Add a clear complexity adjustment for:
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slopes
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dense landscaping
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hardscape crossings
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limited access
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long trench runs
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multiple turf types (turf + beds + new sod)
This is where most contractors lose margin. Not because they’re greedy—because they didn’t price the yard they actually walked.
Template-style quoting checklist (use on every estimate)
Use this checklist on site walks to quote faster and miss less:
Yard + access
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side yard access width
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fences / gates / pets / obstacles
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hardscape crossings
Water supply
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tie-in location
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static pressure + flow check (if possible)
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backflow requirements (local)
Zones
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turf vs beds
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shade vs sun
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new sod areas
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slopes / runoff risk
Install
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trenching conditions (roots/rock)
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controller placement
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testing + tuning time included
Who this is a fit for
This pricing model is a fit if you:
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install irrigation or want to add it
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are tired of “gut-feel” quoting
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want to sell premium outcomes (not lowest price)
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want fewer callbacks and cleaner installs
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want a repeatable process your team can follow
What changes in your business
When you quote irrigation with a repeatable structure:
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your close rate improves (quotes feel professional)
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your margin stabilizes (less surprise labor)
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your schedule becomes more predictable
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callbacks drop because tuning is built into scope
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you can train estimators faster
Customer objections (and how to answer)
Objection: “That seems expensive.”
Answer: “Irrigation is part design, part install. The price reflects even coverage, correct zoning, and a system that won’t need constant fixes.”
Objection: “Can you just match the cheaper quote?”
Answer: “We can adjust scope, but we don’t cut corners on coverage and zoning—those are what prevent dry spots and overwatering.”
Objection: “I don’t want my yard torn up.”
Answer: “We stage installs to reduce disruption. The cleanest installs are planned around sod and landscaping.”
Objection: “Why not traditional sprinklers?”
Answer: “Traditional installs often create uneven coverage and ongoing adjustment. We price for results, not just parts.”
Irrigreen’s approach: premium quoting is easier when the product story is clear
When you sell irrigation, you’re selling peace of mind.
Irrigreen’s brand promise is simple: your yard, always ready—even green without the homeowner constantly managing it.
For contractors, that translates into a clean sales story:
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visible precision (less dry spots, less overwatering)
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quiet control (simple phone adjustments, fewer support calls)
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premium differentiation you can attach to premium outdoor projects
A clearer product story makes quoting easier—because you’re not defending a number. You’re explaining an outcome.
FAQs
Should I quote irrigation as one price or itemized?
Itemize what matters, bundle the rest. Too much detail confuses customers and slows approvals.
What’s the biggest mistake pros make when quoting irrigation?
Underestimating labor—especially tuning, adjustments, and access constraints.
How do I price for slopes and hardscape crossings?
Use a complexity factor or allowances so your base pricing stays clean.
How do I avoid losing jobs to low bids?
Sell scope and outcome. Many low bids skip zoning, overlap, or tuning—customers pay later.
Do smart systems change how I should quote?
They can. The value is in results and usability, not just hardware. Quote for the outcome you’re delivering.
How do I train someone else on quoting?
Use a checklist-based workflow and standardized line items (labor phases + materials package).
Next step: Download the quoting template
If you want irrigation to be profitable, quoting needs to be consistent.
Download the quoting template to get a repeatable structure for labor, materials, and complexity—so you can price confidently, protect margin, and reduce callbacks.


