What makes gardeners in Harrow different?
Harrow is in outer London, but the gardens aren't like London.
The suburban housing stock here means most residents have a proper front and rear garden rather than a courtyard or roof terrace, and that shapes what local gardeners are asked to do on a daily basis.
Here's what shapes gardening in Harrow:
Metro-land semi plots across Rayners Lane and Kenton:
Harrow's 1930s housing, built as part of the Metro-land expansion along the Metropolitan line, accounts for a huge proportion of the borough's residential streets.
These bay-fronted semis have modest, standard-sized front and rear plots that are straightforward to maintain but often fall behind between owners.
Established gardens in Pinner and Hatch End:
The residential streets of Pinner and Hatch End contain some of the most established private gardens in the borough. Deeper plots, mature trees, original hedgerows, and planting that has been in place since the streets were first developed in the early twentieth century.
Larger grounds in Stanmore:
Stanmore sits at the northern edge of the borough and has the most spacious private gardens in Harrow. The 1930s detached and larger semi-detached properties here typically come with wider lawns, significant trees, and more scope for planting and landscaping work.
New-build developments around the borough's edges:
Gardeners who've worked these plots understand what needs to happen before a new-build garden can properly establish. With soil improvement, sometimes drainage work, and realistic expectations about what will and won't perform in the first couple of years.
Whatever gardening service you need, post your job on MyBuilder and hear from gardeners near you who know Harrow's different areas and what each one tends to involve. You can review their profiles, browse photos of completed work, read customer feedback, and compare quotes before deciding who to hire.
What types of services are offered by local gardeners in Harrow?
Harrow gardeners work across a wide range of jobs. The variety of garden types across the borough, from compact Metro-land semis to larger Stanmore grounds, means most local gardeners are used to moving between very different starting points.
The most common gardening services in Harrow:
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Lawn care and turfing: Lawns in Harrow vary enormously depending on the age of the property and how they've been looked after. Neglected 1930s semi lawns often need scarifying, moss treatment, and reseeding before regular mowing can resume.
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Garden maintenance and mowing: London's growing season is long, and Harrow gardens can get ahead of you quickly through late spring and summer. Regular visits keep lawns, hedges, and borders from becoming a problem.
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Garden clearance: Harrow sees a steady flow of clearance work, driven by properties changing hands and gardens that have been left unattended through extended periods of neglect.
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Planting and border design: Many Harrow residents want more than basic upkeep - adding seasonal colour, establishing new borders, or restoring front gardens that have been paved and are now being returned to planting. Local gardeners can advise on what performs well in Harrow's urban conditions and the specific light and soil conditions of individual plots.
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Hedge trimming and boundary work: Established privet, laurel, and conifer hedges are common across Harrow's older residential streets. Proper seasonal management, cut at the right time, to the right depth, keeps them in good shape.
If you have significant trees on your property, you can also browse profiles for tree surgeons near you on MyBuilder to find the right support.
What are the hourly rates of gardeners in Harrow?
Harrow is outer London, which means gardening rates are higher than in most of the UK but generally below central London pricing.
On average, gardeners in Harrow charge around £25-£45 per hour, with rates varying depending on the type of work, the condition of the garden, and how regularly you need them.
Here's a quick cost breakdown for common gardening services in Harrow:
- Routine garden maintenance: Around £80-£180 for a standard visit covering mowing, weeding, and light pruning, depending on plot size.
- Garden clearance: Typically £300-£800+ depending on how overgrown the plot is, the size of the garden, and whether skip hire or waste removal is needed.
- Lawn care and turfing: From £350-£1,200+ depending on the size of the area and whether soil preparation or drainage work is needed first.
- Hedge trimming: Usually £80-£200, depending on height, length, and how accessible both sides are.
- Planting and border work: From £200-£600+ depending on the size of the area, the plants chosen, and any ground preparation required.
Labour in outer London typically runs 15-25% higher than equivalent work outside the M25 - something worth bearing in mind when comparing quotes from Harrow gardeners with prices you might see quoted elsewhere.
For a more detailed breakdown, take a look at our gardener cost guide.
Find a gardener in Harrow with MyBuilder
Asking around for a gardener in a London borough takes time and rarely gives you much to compare. MyBuilder works differently - post your job once and gardeners who work in Harrow and are available for the work will come to you. Here's how it works:
Step 1: Post your gardening job on MyBuilder
Tell MyBuilder what you need, whether that's regular maintenance, a one-off clearance, a new lawn, or something more involved.
Once posted, your job is shared with our directory of verified gardeners in Harrow who can register their interest.
Step 2: Compare local gardening services in Harrow
Once gardeners respond, take time to review their MyBuilder profiles, browse photos of completed work, and read reviews from other Harrow homeowners. You can ask about availability and request quotes before committing to anything.
Step 3: Hire a Harrow gardener with confidence
Once you have the information you need, you can make a confident, informed decision about who to hire, without any pressure.
All tradespeople on MyBuilder undergo checks at registration - such as ID documents, company details, certifications for regulated jobs and skill assessments - allowing you to hire with confidence.
What to ask Harrow gardeners before hiring?
The questions worth asking before you hire a gardener in Harrow are more specific than the standard checklist. These are the ones worth raising upfront.
What experience do you have with gardens in this part of London?
Harrow has a wider range of garden types than most outer London boroughs, compact 1930s semis in Wealdstone, established period gardens in Pinner and Hatch End, larger grounds in Stanmore, and newer plots on the outskirts.
A gardener who's worked across several of these will come with realistic expectations about what each type involves. Ask what kinds of jobs they've done locally, and if possible ask to see photos or reviews from similar gardens to yours.
How do you approach a garden that's been left for a while?
Neglected gardens in Harrow come in different forms. Some have been left by tenants, some have changed hands without anyone addressing the overgrowth, and some have simply accumulated years of natural growth in the background.
Ask how they'd approach yours, what they'd assess first, how they'd prioritise the work, and whether they'd recommend a one-off clearance or a phased approach.
What would you flag about my specific garden before starting?
Worth asking during the initial visit. A gardener who knows Harrow will look at the soil condition, any trees with potential TPO status, the state of boundary hedges, and whether any drainage issues are likely to emerge once the ground is worked.
A specific answer based on what they've actually seen is a better sign than a generic one.
How do you handle jobs where the scope turns out to be bigger than expected?
Clearances and restoration jobs in Harrow regularly reveal more than they appeared to from the outside, particularly on older properties where original landscaping has been left untouched for decades.
Ask how they handle this: whether they stop and discuss it before continuing, how they'd adjust their quote, and what the process looks like.
Are you insured, and do you hold a waste carrier licence?
Worth asking every gardener. Public liability insurance covers you if something goes wrong on your property during the work. A waste carrier licence means green waste is being disposed of legally. Both are straightforward questions that a good gardener won't hesitate to answer.
If you'd like more guidance before you hire, our guide on hiring a landscape gardener covers the key things to look for.