£650
- Focused essentials
- Practical finishes

Estimates derived from UK trade benchmark data and regional labour indices, updated May 2026. Methodology →
Fence Installation in North West England varies city to city, but region-wide you will often see totals just under the UK average. We map our national guide onto that picture so you can compare apples to apples.
In North West England, city-centre quotes vary, but region-wide pricing often lands just under UK averages. For the full UK-wide baseline, compare with Fence Installation Cost UK.
Pick the path that fits where you are — running early numbers, or pressure-testing a quote you've already got.
Three planning tiers for fence installation in North West England, with scope and a representative figure for each. Run your own numbers in the calculator for a tailored range.
£650
£1,150
£2,500
| Item | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Timber panel fence (per m) | £50 – £50 |
| Featheredge / closeboard (per m) | £50 – £100 |
| Concrete posts (per post) | £0 – £50 |
| Gravel boards (per m) | £0 – £0 |
| Short run (10 m) | £400 – £850 |
Indicative range: £0–£50 per m².
Three quick inputs and we'll email you an indicative range. Run the full calculator for a postcode-adjusted estimate.
Use this checklist to spot missing scope before you sign — each item names what should be priced and what to ask for if it isn't.
Posts are the structural backbone of any fence. A fair quote names the post material (timber pressure-treated to BS 8417 use class 4, concrete, or galvanised steel), dimensions (at least 100mm × 100mm timber or 125mm concrete) and the burial depth (typically 600mm for a 1.8m fence, more on exposed sites).
Fair UK range: £18–£35 per post for materials. Concrete posts last 25+ years vs 8–12 for timber on most sites.
Ask: What posts are you using, what's the dimension, and how deep will they be set?
Panel type drives both cost and lifespan. A fair quote specifies the panel type (lap, closeboard, hit-and-miss), thickness (15mm minimum for closeboard), height, and how panels attach (slotted concrete posts, U-channels, or screwed to timber).
Fair UK range: £25–£90 per 1.83m panel depending on type and thickness. Cheap thin lap panels (£18–£25) often fail in 3–5 years.
Ask: Which panel range and thickness are you quoting, and how are they fixed to the posts?
Concrete posts and bases need actual concrete (Postcrete or mixed on site). For a 20m fence, that's 7–9 bags of Postcrete plus aggregate. Some quotes bundle this into 'materials'; a fair quote itemises it.
Fair UK range: £60–£120 in concrete materials for an average 20m fence run.
Ask: Is concrete itemised separately, and how many bags/m³ are you allowing for?
Lifting old posts (especially concreted-in stumps), breaking up the bases and disposing of the timber properly is real labour. Skip hire or waste transfer is a separate cost. This should never be hidden inside a 'preparation' line.
Fair UK range: £15–£40 per existing post to remove with concrete base; £80–£200 for a small skip if needed.
Ask: Is removal of the old fence and disposal of the waste itemised separately?
A fence without gravel boards rots from the bottom up within 5 years. Capping rails extend top-edge life. These add £8–£18/m but double the fence's useful life — they should be in the quote, not added later as 'extras'.
Fair UK range: £8–£15 per metre for concrete gravel boards; £4–£10 per metre for timber capping.
Ask: Are gravel boards and capping rails included, and what material are they?
Want this run on your actual fence quote? Upload it and our AI Quote Checker flags missing line items, overcharges and the questions worth asking.
UK-specific signals — each red flag explains why it matters and the question that surfaces the truth.
Why it matters: Pressure-treated timber posts typically last 8–12 years before rotting at ground level. Concrete posts last 25+ years for an extra £12–£15 each. On a 20m fence, that's £240 more upfront for 15+ years of extra life.
Ask: Why timber posts rather than concrete? What's the warranty if a post fails within 10 years?
Why it matters: Without a gravel board, the bottom panel sits directly on damp ground and rots 3–5 years before it should. A reputable fencer specifies concrete gravel boards as standard.
Ask: Are gravel boards included? If not, why not — and can you add them?
Why it matters: Cheap 11mm lap panels (£18–£25) and quality 15–20mm closeboard panels (£45–£90) look similar from the kerb but have very different lifespans. Without spec, you can't compare quotes.
Ask: What's the panel thickness, brand or grade, and what use-class timber treatment?
Why it matters: For a defined fence run, a fair fencer quotes a fixed total. Day rates with no cap shift overrun risk to you — bad weather or harder ground becomes your problem.
Ask: Can you give a fixed price for the agreed length, with a stated allowance for unforeseen issues like buried obstacles?
Why it matters: Boundary fences are legally yours, your neighbour's, or shared depending on the deeds. Replacing without agreement causes disputes; building on the wrong line means rework. A reputable fencer asks about the boundary first.
Ask: Have we confirmed which side of the boundary the fence sits on, and is the neighbour aware?
Why it matters: A 1.8m fence needs posts buried at least 600mm (a third of the above-ground height) to resist wind loading. Shallower posts loosen and lean within 2–3 winters.
Ask: How deep will the posts be set? On exposed sites, can you go deeper?
Why it matters: Timber prices are volatile. Without a stated validity, the fencer can revise the price between quote and start, claiming 'material price rises'. Reputable fencers commit to their quote for at least 30 days.
Ask: How long is this quote valid for, and what happens to the price if I confirm in 2 weeks?
Spot a couple of these on your fence quote? Upload it for a full red-flag scan and fair-rate comparison.
A simple framework, a verbatim script you can paste into an email or text, and the topic-specific levers that move the price.
I've had three quotes for this fence and yours is competitive overall, but your panel cost is £X above the median I've received from two other ASFC-registered fencers, and your post cost is £Y above. The other quotes are using [brand/spec] panels at £Z each. Can you walk me through what's in your panel and post pricing that justifies the difference, or match the median if you're using comparable spec?
Want to know which line items on your fence quote are above market before you negotiate? Upload it for a fair-rate comparison.
Vet on competence, insurance, paperwork and process — not price alone. Each question spells out the answer you want and why.
Why it matters: ASFC members work to a code of conduct and are vetted on competence and insurance. Membership isn't legally required, but absence + no other credentials is a softer signal.
Why it matters: Recent local work lets you verify quality. Generic stock photos or 5-year-old portfolios are weak signals.
Why it matters: BS 8417 use class 4 is the right grade for ground-contact timber. A reputable fencer names a supplier (Birkdale, Forest Garden, Jacksons) and the treatment grade. Vague answers mean you may be getting under-treated wood.
Why it matters: Industry norm: 12–24 months on workmanship (separate from manufacturer's product warranty). Anything less than 12 months — or verbal-only — is sub-standard.
Why it matters: You want a stated extra-works rate ('£X per hour with prior approval before work over £100 proceeds'), not an open-ended T&M arrangement that can ratchet the bill.
Why it matters: Shallower posts loosen quickly. A reputable fencer either confirms 600mm minimum or explains why they're going deeper (exposed sites need 750mm+).
Why it matters: UK industry norm: small deposit (10–20%) for materials, balance on completion. Anything over 25% upfront is a structural risk.
Why it matters: Cash-only or no-invoice arrangements forfeit consumer protection and warranty enforcement. VAT registration is a meaningful filter.
Why it matters: UK norm: £1M minimum public liability for fencers (£2M for larger contractors). Damage to your property, neighbours' property, or services is what this covers. Ask to see the certificate.
Why it matters: Tipping old timber as a 'tradesperson' requires a Waste Carrier Licence. If not included, you'll either pay extra later or end up with a pile of old fencing in your garden.
Already chosen a fencer and got a quote? Run it through our Quote Checker before you commit.
Whether you're still scoping or already comparing builders, the next step is one click away.
See national cost ranges, scenarios and timelines without the regional adjustment.
Compare fence installation costs across the UK