Landscaping Services Listings
The listings compiled on this page connect property owners and facility managers across the United States with verified sprinkler and irrigation repair providers. Coverage spans residential lawns, commercial properties, and HOA-managed common areas, reflecting the full range of scenarios where an irrigation system requires professional attention. Understanding how these listings are structured, what each entry contains, and how to use them alongside technical reference material makes the search for a qualified contractor faster and more reliable.
How Currency Is Maintained
Directory listings decay without active maintenance. A contractor that was licensed and operational in one season may have changed ownership, shifted service areas, or allowed a required state irrigation license to lapse by the next. To address this, each listing in this directory is subject to a structured review cycle that checks for three categories of change: license and certification status, service area accuracy, and contact information validity.
Licensing requirements differ by state — as of the sprinkler repair licensing and certification reference page notes, at least 30 states regulate irrigation contractors through dedicated license classifications. A listing that passes currency review in one jurisdiction may not meet the threshold for another, so geographic scope is tracked at the state level, not as a single national flag.
Contractors listed here are cross-referenced against publicly available state licensing databases where those records are accessible. Where a state does not publish a searchable contractor database, verification relies on direct confirmation from the listed business. Listings that cannot be verified within a defined review window are marked inactive rather than removed, so the historical record is preserved while active searchers are not directed to unconfirmable entries.
How to Use Listings Alongside Other Resources
A directory entry answers the question of who — it identifies a business, its service area, and the categories of work it performs. It does not answer the question of what a given repair should involve or how to evaluate whether a contractor's diagnosis is sound. Those answers live in the technical and decision-support pages that accompany this directory.
Before contacting a listed provider, reviewing common sprinkler system problems gives a grounding in the likely failure modes a contractor will reference. The questions to ask a sprinkler repair company page provides a structured checklist that works directly alongside any listing — the questions there are calibrated to the specific service types covered here. For longer-term planning, the sprinkler repair vs. replacement decision page establishes the decision criteria that determine whether a repair quote is appropriate or whether a full system assessment is warranted.
Using listings in isolation, without reference to those surrounding resources, increases the chance that a property owner enters a contractor conversation without the vocabulary or benchmarks to assess what is being proposed.
How Listings Are Organized
Listings are organized along two primary axes: service type and property class.
By service type, the directory segments contractors according to the specific repair and maintenance categories they cover:
- Component repair — sprinkler heads, valves, controllers, backflow preventers, and lateral lines. These correspond to discrete part-level failures.
- System-level diagnostics — zone troubleshooting, pressure problem diagnosis, leak detection, and coverage adjustment. These involve evaluating system-wide behavior rather than replacing a single part.
- Seasonal services — winterization and blowout, spring startup, and post-landscaping-work inspections. These are time-sensitive and often governed by regional climate schedules.
- Upgrade and efficiency services — smart controller installation and repair, drip irrigation conversion, and water-efficiency retrofits.
By property class, listings are divided across three segments:
- Residential — single-family and multi-unit properties with privately owned irrigation systems
- Commercial — office parks, retail properties, and institutional campuses where system complexity and uptime requirements differ materially from residential installations
- HOA and common area — shared irrigation infrastructure that involves third-party management contracts and often multi-zone systems covering turf, planting beds, and hardscape perimeters
A contractor listed under commercial services may also hold a residential listing, but the two segments are not assumed to overlap. Property class drives different expectations around service agreements, response time, and documentation — topics addressed in the sprinkler repair service agreements reference page.
What Each Listing Covers
Each directory entry includes a defined set of fields, structured consistently across all listings:
- Business name and primary contact information — phone, address, and website where publicly listed
- Service area — defined at the city, county, or metro-region level; not represented as statewide unless confirmed
- License and certification notation — the state license classification held, where applicable, and any manufacturer or industry certifications such as those issued by the Irrigation Association
- Service categories covered — drawn from the taxonomy described above, cross-referenced against the specific service pages in this resource (for example, a contractor offering drip irrigation repair or backflow preventer repair will have those categories flagged explicitly)
- Property class eligibility — residential, commercial, HOA, or a combination
- Emergency availability notation — whether the contractor offers after-hours or same-day response, consistent with the criteria described in emergency sprinkler repair services
- Last verified date — the most recent date the listing was confirmed accurate through the currency process described above
Fields are populated only when information can be confirmed. Listings with incomplete fields are published with visible gaps rather than placeholder text, so searchers can identify exactly what has and has not been verified for any given contractor.
References
- U.S. Legal Information Institute — Express and Implied Warranties (UCC § 2-313 to 2-315)
- USC Foundation for Cross-Connection Control and Hydraulic Research
- USC Foundation for Cross-Connection Control and Hydraulic Research (USC FCCCHR)
- University of California Cooperative Extension — Drip Irrigation in the Home Landscape
- University of Florida IFAS Extension – Establishing a Lawn from Sod
- University of Florida IFAS Extension — Drip Irrigation for Landscape Plantings
- University of Florida IFAS Extension — Irrigation System Auditing
- Arizona Registrar of Contractors