A reputable contractor should always stand behind their work with written warranties. For Utah projects, one year of coverage is common for plants, since establishment is most critical in the first growing season. Hardscaping, such as patios, walls, or irrigation systems, often carries multi-year warranties that protect against workmanship defects. These terms should be included in your contract before work begins. If an issue arises, a professional contractor responds quickly, documents the fix, and follows through without argument. Refusal to provide warranty terms or reluctance to put them in writing is a red flag. Ask for specifics: how long the warranty lasts, what it covers, and what maintenance is required to keep it valid. Keep copies of all documents and photos of the finished work. A contractor willing to put their commitments in writing and honor them is one you can trust to protect your investment.
Will a landscape contractor stand behind their work?
Related FAQs
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Should a landscape company add fertilizer or soil amendments?
Yes—based on testing and plant needs, not guesswork. In Salt Lake and Davis Counties, many sites have alkaline, clay-heavy soils…
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What’s likely to go wrong first with new landscaping?
The first year is the most fragile for new landscapes in Utah. Plants may fail if irrigation isn’t adjusted correctly…
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Will I regret choosing a particular landscape company?
If they’re licensed/insured, gave a clear bid tied to drawings, communicate weekly, and document changes, regret is unlikely. If you’re…
