It can be. A very low bid often means the contractor left out important items, plans to use inferior materials, or expects to charge for “extras” later. While it’s possible for an efficient company to be legitimately more affordable, most of the time the lowest bid signals corner-cutting. In landscaping, quality materials and skilled labor have real costs, and a professional company cannot operate far below market rates and remain sustainable. For example, a $20,000 project quoted at $10,000 should raise serious questions: What’s missing? Are the plants smaller? Is irrigation excluded? Will they warranty their work? In Utah, licensed contractors are required to spell out scope and pricing in writing. If a landscaper can’t provide a detailed breakdown, assume the price won’t hold. The best way to protect yourself is to treat the lowest bid as a conversation starter, not an automatic win. Ask them to explain exactly how they arrived at that number.
Is the lowest bid a trap from a landscaper?
Related FAQs
-
Is my project truly finished, or is the company just saying it’s done?
“Done” should be verifiable. Use a closeout checklist: 1) scope items installed to spec (plant counts/sizes, paver borders, edge restraints);…
-
Who fixes sprinkler heads damaged by snowplows?
Responsibility usually depends on who managed the snow removal. If you hired a plow service directly, that company is generally…
-
What happens if something goes wrong after the project is finished?
Problems can arise even after installation — plants may fail, irrigation parts can break, or pavers might shift. A reputable…
