A landscaping website's job is gallery-first. The homeowner already knows what landscaping is; they're trying to figure out if your work matches what they want their yard to look like. A wall of text about your services does not answer that question. A grid of twelve photos from your last twelve jobs does.
Inside the gallery: hardscape projects, residential lawn programs, native-plant gardens, retaining walls, drainage solutions. Each photo tells a homeowner whether you can do the project they're picturing, and that's the only question that matters before they click "Request an estimate".
InstantPage generates landscaping sites that lead with photos — sized for retina screens, lazy-loaded, organized by project type. Plus the structural pieces a converting landscaping site needs: a seasonal-services page, a free-estimate form, a service-area map, and the certifications and insurance line that closes the more design-conscious clients.
Three example sites our AI would generate. Yours uses your real business name, services, and contact info — generated from a single sentence.
Twelve to forty of your best project photos, organized by category — hardscape, lawn, plantings, drainage. The homepage filter lets visitors find work that matches their yard.
Six-field form (name, address, project type, photos, timeline, budget range). Pre-screens leads so you stop driving out to estimates that were never going to convert.
Spring cleanup, summer mowing, fall leaf removal, winter snow — each season's offering on its own block with the pricing language landscapers use.
Two service pages, two different customer mindsets. Hardscape clients want a portfolio; weekly-lawn clients want a price. The AI builds for both.
An actual map with your service ZIP codes outlined, plus a list page for each. Beats a comma-separated list of town names for both SEO and trust.
Visible in the footer and the about block. "Licensed, insured, $2M general liability" is what separates a $40 mow from a $4,000 redesign job.
$99 per year. Custom domain, hosting, AI rebuilds, edits, and visual editor. No add-ons. Cancel any time.
Build my landscaping site →Yes — and you should. The AI starts with a clean default layout, but the moment you upload your real project photos (drag the folder into the visual editor) the homepage rebuilds around them. Your photos beat any stock landscaping image for both conversion and authenticity.
When you describe your business at signup, mention both. The AI generates two service pages — a hardscape portfolio with project case studies, and a lawn-care page with seasonal pricing. The homepage links into whichever section the visitor clicked.
It can. The default form asks for project type, square footage, and a budget range. Budget-range field alone screens out tire-kickers — leads that select "under $500" for a hardscape job get a different auto-response than a $5k+ inquiry. You can edit the form fields anytime.
Yes. The gallery is a folder you control. Drop in new photos when the work changes; the homepage grid updates the next time you publish. Plus a Rebuild in the dashboard regenerates the whole site with the new season's photos in the hero.
Yes. List your towns and ZIP codes at signup and the AI generates a separate landing for each — "Landscaping in [Town]" with relevant copy. That structure is what wins the local-three-pack on Google for landscaping searches, far better than a single page listing twenty towns.
Tell the AI you do both residential and commercial and you get a separate Commercial page with the language property-management companies look for: COI on file, after-hours response, route-density discounts. Different lead form too, focused on property count and contract length.