
Leaning posts and rotted boards are more than an eyesore. We remove your old fence completely and install a new one built to handle Palmdale's sandy soil, desert heat, and Antelope Valley wind.

Fence replacement in Palmdale means removing your old fence completely - posts, rails, and all - then installing a new one from the ground up, with most standard residential jobs completed in one to two days on-site.
This is not a patch job. The crew pulls out the old posts, hauls away the debris, digs new post holes to the right depth for Palmdale's shifting soil, sets posts in concrete, and builds the fence back to its full height and length. If the condition of your fence has reached the point where boards are soft, posts are leaning, or sections have come down in a wind event, replacement is almost always more cost-effective than continued repairs. If you are not sure whether repair or replacement is the right call, we will give you an honest assessment of both options - including pricing for each. You can also read more about when targeted fixes make sense on our fence repair page.
We respond within 1 business day. Call (661) 450-6304 or submit a request online and we will schedule a free, no-obligation on-site estimate.
If sections are tilting, bowing, or separating from the posts that hold them, the structure has been compromised. In Palmdale this commonly happens because the expansive soil has shifted the posts over time or they were not set deep enough to begin with. Once a fence starts leaning significantly, repairs rarely hold for long.
Press gently on the wood near the base of the posts. If it feels soft, spongy, or crumbles under light pressure, it has rotted from moisture trapped at ground level. In Palmdale's desert climate this happens faster than homeowners expect because the soil dries and re-wets repeatedly, which accelerates decay at the post base.
The Antelope Valley sees strong wind events regularly. A fence that has already lost panels or had posts knocked loose is telling you the structure is no longer sound. Patching individual panels after wind damage is often a short-term fix - if the posts themselves shifted or cracked, the whole line may need to come out and be rebuilt.
Most wood fences in the high desert have a realistic lifespan of 10 to 15 years, even with occasional maintenance. If your fence was original to a home built in the 1980s or 1990s and has never been replaced, it is worth a close inspection. Age combined with any of the other signs above usually means replacement is the right call.
We replace fences in a range of materials so you can choose what fits your property, your budget, and how much maintenance you want to commit to over the next decade. Wood fencing - cedar, redwood, or pressure-treated pine - is our most popular choice for residential replacements because it is affordable, familiar, and looks great when maintained. If you want low upkeep, vinyl holds up well in Palmdale's UV exposure and never needs painting or staining. For security and permanence, wrought iron or welded steel gives you a fence that will still be standing long after wood would have needed replacing. After we complete your replacement, we can also coordinate the first application of UV-resistant stain or sealer - see our fence staining and sealing service for details on what that involves.
Every replacement includes removal and disposal of your old fence materials, new post holes dug to the correct depth for Palmdale's soil, posts set in concrete, and a complete rebuild of rails and boards to the full fence line. We handle the city permit process when one is required, and we are familiar with HOA approval requirements in Palmdale's many master-planned communities. Before any work begins you will have a written quote spelling out exactly what is included - materials, labor, permit fees, and debris removal.
Cedar, redwood, or pressure-treated pine - the most popular option for Palmdale homeowners balancing cost, appearance, and durability.
A low-maintenance choice that holds color and shape through years of desert heat and UV without painting or staining.
For homeowners who want maximum durability, security, and a fence that can handle Antelope Valley wind loads without shifting.
Palmdale sits in the Mojave Desert at roughly 2,700 feet elevation, and the conditions here are not what most contractors are used to in the rest of Southern California. The soil is sandy and expansive - it swells when wet and contracts when dry, putting constant stress on fence posts that are not anchored correctly. Caliche, a hard calcium-rich layer found in much of the Antelope Valley, can make digging post holes harder than expected and requires the right equipment. Fences built to standard coastal California specs often fail within a few years here because the posts were not set deep enough for these soil conditions. We set every post to the depth and concrete spec this area demands - not the minimum that would pass elsewhere. We have completed replacements throughout Lancaster and surrounding communities and know firsthand what Palmdale's soil and wind do to a fence over time.
Permit requirements and HOA rules are also part of the local picture. The City of Palmdale Building and Safety Division oversees fence permits, and many of Palmdale's newer residential neighborhoods - particularly around Quartz Hill and the master-planned communities built in the 1990s and 2000s - are governed by HOAs with rules about fence height, material, and color. We know this process and can help you navigate both the city permit and the HOA approval before work begins. For more on permit requirements, the City of Palmdale Building and Safety Division publishes the current rules on their website.
We respond within 1 business day. Tell us how long your fence line is and what material your current fence is made of - that is all we need to start the conversation.
We walk your fence line, measure the total length, check soil and ground conditions, and ask about HOA requirements. You receive a written quote covering materials, labor, permit fees, and old fence disposal - no surprises.
If your project requires a city permit or HOA sign-off, this happens before any work begins. We handle the permit application. Permit processing in Palmdale typically takes a few days to a couple of weeks.
The crew removes your old fence, digs new post holes, sets posts in concrete, and builds the new fence from the ground up. Most standard jobs are done in one to two days. We do a final walkthrough before we leave and haul away all old materials.
Written quote, no obligation. We respond within 1 business day and walk your property before pricing anything.
(661) 450-6304Palmdale's expansive, sandy soil shifts with the seasons, and posts that are not anchored deeply enough in concrete will lean or heave within a few years. We set every post to the depth and concrete specification this area requires - not the minimum that would pass a permit inspection in a less demanding climate.
The Antelope Valley sees sustained winds and gusts that knock down fences not built to handle the load. We space posts correctly, select materials appropriate for the wind exposure in this area, and build every fence to stand up to the conditions here - not just look good on the first day.
Navigating Palmdale's city permit process and HOA approval at the same time is one of the most common headaches homeowners face. We are familiar with both and handle the paperwork so you are not spending evenings on the phone with the city or your property management company.
Every fence replacement starts with a written quote that lists materials, post depth, fence length, permit fees, and what happens to your old fence. The American Fence Association recommends written scopes as the standard for any fence project - and we agree. The price you agree to is the price you pay.
Palmdale's soil, wind, and climate conditions are real factors in how a fence holds up over time. Experience with those specific conditions is what separates a replacement that lasts a decade or more from one that needs attention again in a few years.
Cedar, redwood, and pressure-treated options installed from scratch on a new or cleared fence line.
Learn MoreWhen only part of the fence is damaged, targeted repairs can restore it without a full replacement.
Learn MoreSpring wind season is coming - get your new fence set and anchored before the next big gust rolls through the Antelope Valley.