Repair or Replace? How to Decide What Your Fence Actually Needs
A leaning section or a few damaged boards doesn't always mean you need a new fence. But sometimes patching a failing fence is throwing good money after bad. Here's how to think through it honestly.
Signs You Can Probably Repair
- 1–3 leaning posts — isolated post failures are usually repairable, especially if the rest of the fence is solid
- A few damaged boards or panels — wood boards and vinyl panels can be replaced individually
- A broken or sagging gate — gate hardware and hinges are almost always repairable
- Surface rot on wood boards (not posts) — board replacement is straightforward
- Fence is less than 8–10 years old — if it was properly installed, isolated damage is usually repairable
Signs You Should Probably Replace
- Multiple failing posts — if more than 20–25% of your posts are compromised, replacement often makes more economic sense
- Post rot at ground level throughout — this is a systemic problem, not an isolated one
- Fence is 15–20+ years old — you may be past the point of diminishing returns on repairs
- Widespread panel cracking or brittleness — vinyl becomes brittle over time in harsh sun; widespread cracking means the material has aged out
- You're selling your home soon — a patched fence can hurt curb appeal; a new fence adds value
The 50% Rule
A useful rule of thumb: if the cost to repair exceeds 50% of the cost to replace, replacement is usually the smarter long-term investment. You get a full warranty, new materials, and peace of mind for another 20+ years.
What We Do
When we come out for a free estimate, we'll give you an honest assessment — repair or replace. We're not going to push a full replacement if your fence just needs a post reset and a few boards. We also do repair work when it makes sense, and we'll tell you straight if it doesn't.
Not Sure What Your Fence Needs?
We'll take a look and give you an honest assessment. Free, no pressure.
Request a Free Estimate