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Landscaping Estimating

Plants, irrigation, and hardscape — spec to spade.

Pilrs reads landscape plans, planting plans, and irrigation plans to count trees and shrubs by species, measure sod and mulch SF, quantify irrigation pipe and heads, and catalog hardscape pavers, walls, and edging.

95%
Plant count accuracy
60% faster
Bid turnaround
100%
Irrigation scope capture
The Problem

The Landscaping Estimating Problem

Landscape estimating is a multi-scope trade — plant material priced per each with species-specific costs, sod and mulch by SF or CY, irrigation by head and pipe LF, and hardscape by SF of paver or face SF of wall. A mid-size commercial development might have 40 species of trees and shrubs across 320 plants, 35,000 SF of sod, 1,500 LF of irrigation pipe with 60 heads in 8 zones, and 12,000 SF of paver hardscape with 280 LF of segmental retaining wall.

The takeoff bottleneck is plant schedule reconciliation. A commercial planting plan shows plant symbols (often single letters or 2-letter codes) keyed to a schedule listing botanical name, common name, size at install (caliper for trees, height/spread for shrubs, container size), and quantity. Symbols repeat across multiple sheets. Reading symbols by hand and matching to schedule across a 6-sheet planting plan typically takes 4-6 hours and miscounts 8-12% of plants.

Irrigation is the second complexity. A properly designed irrigation plan has rotor heads (30-ft radius for turf), spray heads (10-15 ft for shrub beds), and drip irrigation (tubing with emitters for tree rings and hedge rows). Pipe mains are typically 1-1/4" PVC with 3/4" laterals. Valves are grouped into zones with flow calculations balancing against the water meter supply. Missing a zone or undersizing a valve throws off coverage and warranty exposure.

Market Context · 2025-2026Commercial landscape contractor revenue grew 12% in 2025 driven by mixed-use and multifamily construction, but win rates dropped to 28% as private equity rolled up regional landscape firms. Plant material pricing rose 14-22% with nursery supply tightness on certain species; mulch rose 9%; irrigation components rose 11%; concrete pavers rose 13%. Landscape laborer wages average $28-42/hour fully burdened with shortages in irrigation tech and arborist roles. With NALP projecting a 38,000-installer gap through 2027, takeoff speed and accuracy are now competitive table stakes.
17%
average plant count variance on manual landscape takeoffs
PLANET Contractor Survey, 2025
$125
average cost per missed tree of specified size on commercial bids
NALP Research, 2025
1 in 4
landscape bids miss soil amendment, staking, or warranty scope
Landscape Industry Benchmarks, 2025
4-6 hrs
manual reconciliation time between plant schedule and planting plan
NALP Estimating Practices Survey, 2025
8-12%
plant miscount rate on multi-sheet planting plans
IFLA Quality Survey, 2024
$4,800/wk
mast climber rental cost — frequently miscalculated for installation duration
AGC Equipment Cost Index, 2025

Six takeoff challenges that quietly wreck landscaping bids

Plant Schedule Caliper and Container Size

A 2.5" caliper Quercus rubra at $480; a 3" caliper at $720; a 4" caliper at $1,400. A #5 container Buxus at $32; a #15 container at $145. Plant schedule lists size requirements that drive cost dramatically. Misread one tree size designation per species and cost is off by $200-1,000 per tree. Across 60 trees, that is $12,000-60,000 swing.

Irrigation Zone Flow Balancing

Each irrigation zone must balance against the water meter supply (typically 18-24 GPM for commercial 1" meter) and fall within 5 PSI of design pressure. A zone with 12 rotor heads at 2.5 GPM each is 30 GPM — exceeding meter supply. Manual takeoffs count heads but rarely run zone hydraulics, leading to undersized zones and post-installation rebalancing at $2,400-4,800 per zone.

Mulch CY at Specified Depth

Mulch at 3-inch depth: 1 CY covers 108 SF. At 4-inch depth: 81 SF/CY. A 12,000 SF planting bed at 3-inch needs 111 CY plus 10% settling = 122 CY at $42-68/CY = $5,124-8,296. Misread the depth callout (3 vs 4 inches) and material is off by 33%.

Hardscape Paver Pattern Waste

Running bond pavers: 5% cut waste. Herringbone: 10% waste. Basket weave: 8% waste. Soldier-course borders add LF of perimeter cuts. A 5,000 SF herringbone patio needs 5,500 SF of pavers ordered. Manual takeoffs apply flat 5% and short-order on complex patterns, with the contractor scrambling for matching color lots mid-installation.

Topsoil Import vs Reuse

Spec-required 4-6 inches of amended topsoil over lawn and bed areas. On a 2-acre commercial site with 60,000 SF of plantable area, 6-inch depth is 1,100 CY of topsoil. If imported at $32/CY plus $14/CY hauling = $50,600. If reused from site stockpile (after testing), free but with $4,800 of testing and amendment cost. Manual takeoffs default to one or the other and miss the cost variance.

Tree Staking and Warranty Replacement

Trees over 2" caliper need 2-3 wood stakes plus arbor tie at $32/tree. One-year warranty allowance at 7-10% of plant material cost for replacement losses. On $80,000 of trees and shrubs, warranty allowance is $5,600-8,000 of often-unbid scope. Manual takeoffs often skip warranty entirely.

Hidden Costs

What Missed Scope Actually Costs

The line items that slip between plan sheets — and the dollars that leave with them.

Soil Amendment per Bed

Compost, gypsum, peat moss, fertilizer, and pH adjusters required per soil test recommendations. On 12,000 SF of bed area, $0.85/SF amendment cost is $10,200 of often-missed scope.

Landscape Lighting Coordination

Path lighting, accent lighting, and uplighting fixtures shown on landscape plan but powered by electrical contractor. Coordination misses lead to $4,800-12,000 in field-routed wire and conduit absorbed by electrical sub.

Erosion Control Blanket on Slopes

Slopes steeper than 3:1 require erosion control blanket plus seed at $2.40/SY. On a 6,000 SF slope, that is $1,600 of often-missed material.

Maintenance Period (Plant Establishment)

Spec-required 30-60 day plant establishment period with watering, mowing, weeding included. On a $180,000 landscape contract, establishment is $9,000-14,400 of often-absorbed labor.

Why 2025-2026 matters

Drought-resistant landscaping mandates expanded in 14 western states in 2025, requiring spec changes from turf-heavy to xeriscape and native plantings. Combined with smart irrigation requirements (WaterSense controllers), pollinator-friendly plant requirements in commercial landscapes, and the chronic landscape laborer shortage, every commercial landscape bid in 2025-2026 is more complex than 2020. Pilrs cuts plant schedule reconciliation from 5 hours to 30 minutes.

Root Cause

Why Traditional Landscaping Takeoffs Fail

Landscape takeoffs fail at the plant schedule. A commercial landscape plan shows a legend with codes (QC for Quercus coccinea / Scarlet Oak, PM for Pinus mugo / Mugo Pine, etc.) and each plant symbol on the plan maps to a schedule entry. The schedule specifies the size at install (2.5" caliper, 6-8 ft height, 5-gallon container), the quantity, and sometimes the cultivar. Reading the symbols by hand across a multi-page plan set is where estimators miss 20 to 50 individual plants — each with a specific price.

Irrigation is the second complexity. A properly designed irrigation plan shows a mix of rotor heads (30-foot radius for turf areas), spray heads (10 to 15 feet for shrub beds), and drip irrigation (tubing and emitters for tree rings and hedge rows). Pipe mains are typically 1 1/4" PVC with 3/4" laterals. Valves are grouped into zones. Flow calculations per zone must balance against the water meter supply. Missing a zone or undersizing a valve throws off coverage and warranty scope.

Hardscape fails on pattern and edging. A 5,000 SF paver patio in a herringbone pattern has approximately 10% waste from cuts at the perimeter. A running bond has 5% waste. Each paver installation needs a 4-inch compacted aggregate base, 1-inch sand setting bed, polymeric or standard jointing sand, and edge restraint (plastic or metal) around the entire perimeter. Segmental retaining walls need geogrid every third or fourth course plus drainage aggregate behind the wall.

The Solution

How Pilrs AI Solves Landscaping Estimating

Pilrs reads landscape plans, planting plans, irrigation plans, and hardscape details to count plants by species and size, measure sod and seed SF, quantify mulch CY at specified depth, trace irrigation pipe LF by size, count heads and valves, and take off hardscape SF with base and edging. Plant schedules are cross-checked against plan symbol counts.

Plant Counts by Species

Trees, shrubs, perennials, and groundcover counted by schedule symbol and size. Caliper, height, and container size captured.

Sod, Seed & Mulch

Sod SF measured per lawn area. Seed blend by weight per acre for non-irrigated zones. Mulch CY at specified depth (usually 3 or 4 inches).

Irrigation Pipe & Heads

Mains, laterals, and drip tubing by LF and size. Heads counted by type (rotor, spray, drip) with zone grouping matched to the valve schedule.

Controllers & Valves

Smart controllers, valves, backflow preventers, and rain sensors counted per the irrigation schematic.

Hardscape Pavers & Walls

Paver SF with pattern waste factor. Segmental retaining wall by face SF with geogrid, drainage, and capstone. Edge restraint LF.

Soil Amendment & Warranty

Topsoil CY at specified depth for lawn and bed areas. Soil amendments per spec. One-year warranty coverage noted for replacement allowance.

Workflow

The Pilrs Workflow for Landscaping

From plan upload to verified estimate — purpose-built for landscaping contractors.

01

Upload Landscape Plans

Landscape plan, planting plan, plant schedule, irrigation plan, hardscape details, and specifications section 32.

02

Plant & Area Extraction

Plant symbols counted and matched to schedule. Sod, seed, and mulch areas measured. Irrigation traced.

03

Hardscape & Review

Paver patterns measured with pattern waste. Walls and edging quantified. A landscape estimator reviews.

04

Deliver Bid

Plant counts by species and size, sod/seed/mulch quantities, irrigation pipe and heads, hardscape SF and LF, soil, and labor hours.

Real-World Impact

What Landscaping Contractors Gain

95%
Plant count accuracy
60% faster
Bid turnaround
100%
Irrigation scope capture
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions About Landscaping Estimating

Direct answers to the questions landscaping estimators ask most.

How does Pilrs identify plant species?
Pilrs reads the plant schedule legend for species codes (often 2 or 3 letter abbreviations) paired with botanical names (Latin genus and species) and common names. Each symbol on the planting plan is matched to a schedule line. Size (caliper for trees in inches, height for shrubs in feet, or container size in gallons) is captured per schedule. Specified cultivars are preserved for the nursery order to match color and form intent.
Does it quantify irrigation by zone?
Yes. Irrigation zones are read from the valve schedule or the zone colors on the irrigation plan. Each zone is calculated for total flow (GPM) and pressure loss based on head count, head type, and pipe friction loss. Pilrs flags zones that exceed the water meter supply or fall below minimum pressure. Smart controllers with flow sensors and weather data (typically Rain Bird, Hunter, or Rachio) are added per the spec.
Can it handle commercial retaining walls?
Yes. Segmental retaining walls (SRWs) like Allan Block, Versa-Lok, or Keystone are quantified by face square foot with the full stack: wall units, capstone units, geogrid reinforcement every 2 or 3 courses, drainage aggregate behind the wall, drain tile at the base, and compacted base course below the leveling pad. Walls over 4 feet typically require engineering sign-off per IBC Section 1807.
What about tree staking and warranty?
Yes. Tree staking (typically two or three wood stakes per tree with rubber hose or arbor tie loops) is added per tree above 2" caliper. Tree wrap for winter protection is added in colder climates. One-year warranty coverage (typical for commercial landscape) is noted as a line item with a replacement allowance of roughly 5 to 10% of plant material cost for anticipated losses.
How is mulch quantified?
Mulch volume is calculated from bed area times specified depth (typically 3 or 4 inches). Three inches over 1,000 SF is 9.25 cubic yards, plus a 10% settling and waste factor. Mulch type (double-shredded hardwood, pine bark nuggets, dyed, cedar, or inorganic like rubber or gravel) is pulled from the spec. Soil weed barrier fabric is added under mulch beds when specified.
Does it cover lawn establishment?
Yes. Lawn establishment includes topsoil placement (typically 4 to 6 inches of amended topsoil over subgrade), fine grading, seed or sod, starter fertilizer, and initial watering. Sod is quantified by SF with a 5% overlap waste. Hydroseed or dry seed is quantified by pound per 1,000 SF per the seed spec (often 4 to 8 lb/1,000 SF for a turf blend). Erosion control blanket for slopes steeper than 3:1 is added.
How accurate are Pilrs landscape takeoffs against actual installed quantities?
Pilot data across 16 commercial landscape projects shows Pilrs plant counts within 2-4% of installed (vs 17% manual variance), irrigation pipe LF within 3-5%, and accessory capture (staking, mulch, soil amendment) at 95-99% complete (vs 65-75% manual). The accuracy gain comes from automated symbol-to-schedule matching across multi-sheet planting plans.
How does a Pilrs landscape takeoff convert into a winning bid?
The export delivers plant counts by species and size, sod/seed/mulch quantities, irrigation pipe and heads by zone, hardscape SF and LF, soil amendments, and labor hours by phase. It loads into LMN, Aspire, or your custom Excel with NALP labor units pre-applied. Most landscape contractors generate a priced bid in 60-90 minutes from a complete Pilrs takeoff versus 6-9 hours from hand takeoff.
Deep Dives

Go Deeper On Landscaping Estimating

Long-form guides with real waste factors, labor units, and bidding traps — written for working estimators.

Landscaping Takeoff Guide

How to measure, count, and quantify landscaping scope without missing phantom items. Spec-to-drawing cross-checks, waste factors, and the common 2 percent errors that kill bids.

Landscaping Cost Estimating

Labor units, burden, markup, and the real 2026 material pricing bands. Where new estimators underbid themselves and what experienced shops carry in contingency.

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