Landscaping Services Providers
The landscaping services providers on this provider network cover irrigation repair contractors and related service providers operating across the United States. Each provider entry connects property owners, facility managers, and landscape professionals to qualified contractors by service type, system category, and geographic region. Understanding what these providers contain — and what they deliberately omit — helps users match their project requirements to the right resource without wasted effort.
What providers include and exclude
Providers in this network are scoped specifically to irrigation repair and irrigation-adjacent landscaping services. A provider entry typically contains the contractor's service category, primary geographic coverage area, and the system types the contractor services. Entries are not general landscaping profiles; a contractor who only provides lawn mowing, tree trimming, or landscape design without any irrigation repair capacity does not qualify for inclusion.
Included service types:
- Residential irrigation repair — covering sprinkler systems, drip lines, and zone-based layouts for single-family and multi-family properties (see Irrigation Repair for Residential Landscaping)
- Commercial irrigation repair — large-volume systems for office parks, retail centers, sports fields, and municipal landscapes (see Irrigation Repair for Commercial Landscaping)
- Specialty system repair — smart controllers, backflow preventers, wiring diagnostics, and pressure correction (see Smart Irrigation System Repair Services)
- Seasonal service providers — contractors offering spring startup and fall winterization with repair components (see Seasonal Irrigation Startup and Shutdown Repair)
Excluded from providers:
The boundary between included and excluded is based on primary service function. A general contractor who offers irrigation repair as one of 12 unrelated services is assessed differently than a firm whose core revenue derives from irrigation system maintenance and repair.
Verification status
Provider entries in this network reflect publicly available business information. No provider constitutes an endorsement, a license verification, or a certification of workmanship quality. The irrigation repair contractor qualifications page outlines what credentials property owners should independently confirm before hiring — including state licensing requirements, bond status, and insurance minimums.
Verification tiers used in this network:
- Claimed provider — business information submitted or sourced from public records; no independent review performed
- Cross-referenced provider — business name and service category confirmed against at least 2 independent public sources (state license board databases, BBB records, Google Business Profile)
- Documented provider — contractor has provided documentation of active license and insurance, reviewed at point of entry
The majority of entries in the current index are claimed or cross-referenced. Property owners should treat all providers as starting-point references, not vetted recommendations. Licensing requirements for irrigation contractors vary by state; finding irrigation repair contractors nationally covers the state-by-state licensing landscape in more detail.
Coverage gaps
The provider network does not provide uniform coverage across all 50 states. Contractor density in rural areas, mountain west states, and parts of the upper Midwest is thinner than in high-growth Sun Belt markets such as Arizona, Texas, Florida, and California — where irrigation infrastructure density and contractor populations are substantially higher.
Known coverage gaps as of the most recent index update include:
- Drip irrigation specialists in the Northeast — urban and suburban drip system repair is underrepresented relative to spray-head contractors
- Irrigation wiring and electrical repair — contractors with dedicated low-voltage irrigation wiring capability are sparse outside major metros; the irrigation wiring and electrical repair page documents this specialty in detail
- Backflow preventer repair — regulatory requirements for licensed backflow testers vary by municipality, creating patchwork coverage; see Irrigation Backflow Preventer Repair for a breakdown of where certified testers are required
- Post-freeze emergency contractors in states that experience freeze events infrequently — coverage in the Deep South and parts of Texas reflects lower baseline contractor density for freeze-related work (see Irrigation Repair After Freeze Damage)
Users in underserved regions should cross-reference national contractor networks and state landscape contractor association networks to supplement providers found here.
Provider categories
Providers are organized by primary service category. Each category maps to a specific repair discipline rather than a contractor type, which means a single contractor may appear under multiple categories if their documented service range spans more than one discipline.
Primary provider categories:
| Category | Representative Page |
|---|---|
| Sprinkler head repair and replacement | Sprinkler Head Repair and Replacement |
| Irrigation valve repair | Irrigation Valve Repair Services |
| Drip system repair | Drip Irrigation Repair Services |
| Controller and timer repair | Irrigation Controller Troubleshooting and Repair |
| Pipe and main line repair | Broken Irrigation Pipe Repair |
| Leak detection | Irrigation Leak Detection Services |
| Zone repair and balancing | Irrigation Zone Repair and Balancing |
| Pressure problem diagnosis | Irrigation Pressure Problems Repair |
The distinction between a valve repair contractor and a zone balancing specialist is meaningful in practice. Valve repair addresses the electromechanical component — solenoid failure, diaphragm wear, debris obstruction. Zone balancing addresses flow distribution, head-to-head coverage, and pressure regulation across a multi-zone layout. These are related but distinct competencies, and the common irrigation repair problems by system type page provides a diagnostic map that helps users identify which category their problem falls into before engaging a contractor.
For context on how this provider network fits within the broader resource structure, the page outlines the editorial criteria and update schedule governing all provider entries.