Oxford, England

Fencing Prices in Oxford

10 fence types from £8

Price Snapshot

Fencing Prices in Oxford

Prices include VAT and installation. Boundary fences — responsibility is usually defined by title deeds (check the "T" marks).

From

£8

Fence Types

10

Data

National

Fence TypeFromAverageUp to
🪵Fence Panel (Lap/Overlap)

Standard 6x6ft overlap panel supply & fit

£40/panel£60/panel£90/panel
🏗️Close Board Fence

Close board (featheredge) fence per metre

£60/m£85/m£120/m
🏡Picket Fence

Timber picket fence per metre

£30/m£48/m£70/m
🌿Trellis / Topper

Trellis panel on top of existing fence

£15/panel£25/panel£40/panel
🧱Concrete Post & Panel

Concrete slotted post with timber/concrete panel

£50/panel£70/panel£100/panel
🔗Chain Link Fence

Chain link with posts per metre

£15/m£25/m£40/m
🔩Metal Railings

Decorative metal railings per metre

£80/m£130/m£200/m
🚪Garden Gate

Single garden gate supply & fit

£100/each£200/each£350/each
🚗Driveway Gate

Double driveway gate (manual or electric)

£500/each£1,200/each£2,500/each
🗑️Old Fence Removal

Remove and dispose of old fence

£8/m£12/m£20/m

Fencing in Oxford: boundary lines, closeboard pricing, and UK planning realities

Fencing quotes in Oxford are usually straightforward only when the boundary is clear, the line is level, and the job is a simple run of closeboard, overlap, or panel fencing. In the UK, costs rise when the fence doubles as a retaining edge, the ownership of the boundary is disputed, access for materials is awkward, or the front elevation sits in a conservation-sensitive setting.

Boundary ownership and neighbour agreement matter more in the UK than many buyers expect

Before comparing prices in Oxford, make sure the boundary responsibility is clear. Title plans and property information forms do not always show who owns every fence, and installers are rightly cautious about replacing a boundary line that is disputed.

Planning, highway visibility, and site levels are the main reasons a UK fence stops being a simple per-metre product

A standard rear-garden fence in Oxford is usually the easiest comparison point, but front boundaries, corner plots, and anything tied into retaining work can be more complicated. Height restrictions, visibility splays near highways, listed-building sensitivity, and estate covenants can all affect what is sensible to build.

How to compare UK fencing quotes sensibly

A worthwhile quote for Oxford should say what is happening to the old fence, what type and size of posts are being used, whether gravel boards are included, and whether the price assumes hand-dug or machine-dug holes. Ask whether staining or treatment is included for timber. Ask whether gates, trellis toppers, or planting clearance are extra.

UK Buying Guide

How to budget and compare fencing quotes in Oxford

When is the cheapest time to book fencing in Oxford?

Late autumn and winter are often the cheapest time to book standard fencing in Oxford because landscaping demand softens and installers have fewer decorative garden projects competing for labour. Straight boundary replacements can come in roughly 5% to 12% below spring pricing if the ground is workable and the site is not waterlogged or frozen.

When does UK fencing get more expensive?

Spring is usually the peak season. Households rush to tidy gardens, replace tired panels, and finish outdoor works before summer use, which pushes up labour demand and lead times. Prices also move up after major storm periods when emergency panel and post replacement takes priority over planned jobs.

Typical lead times to expect

For a normal domestic job in Oxford, allow around 1 to 2 weeks in quieter months and 3 to 5 weeks in spring. Custom gates, composite systems, and projects needing organised neighbour access or skip placement on the road usually need longer.

UK quote checklist

  • - Fence style named clearly: overlap panel, closeboard, featheredge, picket, composite, or mesh
  • - Post and gravel-board specification shown, including whether concrete or timber is being used
  • - Old fence removal, spoil removal, and skip arrangements explained in writing
  • - Boundary ownership, neighbour access, and who is responsible for hedge cutting confirmed
  • - Any planning permission, conservation-area, highway-visibility, or Building Regulations issue flagged early

What usually changes the real price

In Oxford, labour rises fastest when crews have to break out old concrete, carry materials through the house or a narrow alley, organise a road-side skip, or rebuild a line that is acting like a small retaining structure. Those are the details that separate a realistic quote from a teaser rate.

Best value for most rear and side boundaries

Closeboard or featheredge fencing is usually the practical benchmark in Oxford. It copes better with wind and daily wear than the cheapest panel systems, and it is easier to compare on an apples-with-apples basis when labour, post spacing, and gravel boards are shown properly.

Where decorative panels make sense

Decorative panels and premium front-boundary products are worth considering only when appearance is genuinely part of the brief. They can look better, but they also raise replacement cost if a single panel is damaged later, so they should be chosen deliberately rather than sold as a default upgrade.

What usually sits outside the base rate

In Oxford, the base per-metre rate often excludes stump grinding, major root cutting, brick pier repairs, retaining work, painting or staining, and difficult waste handling. Those extras are normal, but they should be itemised instead of buried inside vague wording about site contingencies.

FAQ

Fencing FAQ for Oxford

Quick answers on material choice, timelines, and what usually pushes fencing quotes up or down.

Fencing in Oxford starts from £8/panel for basic options. The most popular choice averages £60/panel. Prices include VAT and installation. Boundary fences — responsibility is usually defined by title deeds (check the "T" marks).

In Oxford, basic overlap panels and chain-link style mesh are usually the lowest-cost starting points. Where the boundary needs privacy and a longer service life, closeboard timber fencing with concrete posts and gravel boards is normally the best-value upgrade because it balances materials, labour, and maintenance better than decorative front-boundary products.

A straightforward 20-30 metre garden-boundary replacement in Oxford usually takes 1-3 days once materials are on site. Extra time is common if old concrete posts need breaking out, access is through a terraced house, the fence line is stepped across levels, or the job includes gates, trellis, or retaining elements that need more detailed setting out.