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Find Gardeners in Sheffield

Sheffield has a claim that most cities can't match: more trees per person than any other city in Europe, and more than 150 woods and ancient woodlands within its boundaries. The city sits on seven hills, and the gardens here are rarely straightforward. Post your job on MyBuilder today and connect with local gardening services who understand Sheffield, from Ecclesall and Crookes to Hillsborough, Heeley, and everywhere in between.

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Some of our top rated gardeners in Sheffield

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Top rated Gardeners

Our Gardeners in Sheffield, are rated 4.7 out of 5 based on 86 reviews from customers like you.

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What makes gardeners in Sheffield different?

Sheffield's geology splits the city in two. The west, Fulwood, Dore, Ringinglow, sits on Millstone Grit: acidic, free-draining soil that suits heathers and rhododendrons but dries out quickly in summer.

The east shifts to Coal Measures clay - heavy, slow-draining ground that stays waterlogged in winter and cracks in a dry spell. Same city, completely different gardens.

Here's what shapes gardening in Sheffield:

Acidic gritstone soils in the west:

Gardens in Fulwood, Ringinglow, Dore, and up towards Ecclesall sit on or near Millstone Grit, producing thin, acidic soils that suit a specific range of plants and require different management to the clay-heavy ground further east. Lawns on gritstone drain well but need regular feeding to compensate for the low nutrient retention.

Gardeners who know the west of the city will plant accordingly rather than applying approaches that work elsewhere in Sheffield but not here.

Coal Measures clay in the east and Don Valley:

Move east into areas like Heeley, Nether Edge, Burngreave, and towards Attercliffe, and the soil becomes the heavy Coal Measures clay that's typical of South Yorkshire.

This ground drains poorly, compacts underfoot in wet conditions, and can become almost concrete-hard in dry summers. Managing it well requires soil improvement, thoughtful plant selection, and, for lawns especially, proper ground preparation before any turf goes down.

Sloped gardens:

Sheffield's hills mean that a large proportion of the city's gardens sit on sloped ground. Terraced gardens are common across the inner suburbs. The access constraints, drainage challenges, and soil erosion issues that come with sloped plots require specific experience.

A gardener who's worked across Sheffield's hills will have dealt with all of this regularly.

If you're looking for a particular gardening service in your postcode, just post your job on MyBuilder and hear from gardeners near you who know which part of Sheffield they're in, what the ground is likely to do, and how to get the best from it. 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 Sheffield?

Sheffield's variety of garden types, from steep terraced plots in the inner suburbs to large established gardens in Dore and Ecclesall, and the blank-canvas new-builds spreading out around Waverley and Chapeltown, means local gardeners tend to be adaptable by necessity.

The city's geology and topography make no two gardens quite the same.

The most common gardening services in Sheffield:

Terraced garden work and slope management: Sloped gardens across Walkley, Crookes, Hillsborough, and the inner south of the city need drainage management, retaining features, and planting that holds the bank rather than leaving it bare.

Lawn care and renovation: Sheffield's split geology means lawns here behave very differently depending on where in the city you are. Gritstone ground drains fast and dries out; Coal Measures clay holds water and compacts. Local gardeners assess the ground before recommending a course of action.

Garden maintenance and mowing: Regular upkeep across Sheffield's varied plots, from large established gardens in Dore and Ecclesall to smaller terraced backyards in the inner suburbs. Given the city's elevation and the exposed conditions in some parts, local gardeners understand how the season runs here.

Garden clearance: A consistent demand across the city, particularly in the inner suburbs where properties change hands frequently and gardens can go from well-maintained to significantly overgrown within a season or two.

Planting and border design: From acid-loving schemes in the west of the city, rhododendrons, pieris, heathers, to more clay-tolerant planting in the east, Sheffield gardeners who know the local geology can advise on what will genuinely thrive rather than what just looks good in the garden centre.

If you have larger trees or more involved tree work, you can also browse profiles for tree surgeons in Sheffield on MyBuilder to find the right support.

What are the hourly rates of gardeners in Sheffield?

Sheffield sits in South Yorkshire and prices accordingly - broadly comparable to other large northern cities, noticeably lower than Leeds or Manchester, and well below London rates. The city has a large number of gardeners working across its varied neighbourhoods, which keeps pricing competitive across most types of work.

On average, gardeners in Sheffield charge around £20 - £38 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 Sheffield:

  • Terraced garden or slope work: From £200 - £800+ depending on the extent of the work, the gradient, and whether any retaining structures or drainage are involved.
  • Lawn care and turfing: From £400 - £1,400+ for a full re-turf, depending on the size of the area and the ground preparation needed. Ongoing lawn treatment from around £50 - £100 per visit.
  • Routine garden maintenance: Around £80 - £200 for a standard visit covering mowing, weeding, and light pruning.
  • Garden clearance: Typically £120 - £400 depending on how overgrown the plot is and the size of the garden.
  • Planting and border work: From £150 - £650+ depending on the area, plants chosen, and whether soil improvement is needed first.

Prices vary depending on the job and the individual gardener, so getting a couple of quotes from local professionals is always worthwhile.

Post your job on MyBuilder today and gardeners in Sheffield can get in touch to discuss your project.

For a more detailed breakdown, take a look at our gardener cost guide.

Find a gardener in Sheffield with MyBuilder

Sheffield is a big city with a lot of gardeners working across it, which sounds helpful until you're trying to work out who actually covers your area, who's available, and who has done work similar to yours before. MyBuilder cuts through that. Post your job once, and gardeners who work in your part of Sheffield and are available for the work come to you. Here's how it works:

Step 1: Post your gardening job on MyBuilder

Tell MyBuilder what you need - regular maintenance, a one-off clearance, a sloped garden overhaul, or anything else. Once posted, your job is shared with our directory of verified gardeners in Sheffield who can register their interest.

Step 2: Compare local gardening services in Sheffield

Once gardeners respond, review their MyBuilder profiles, browse photos of completed work, and read reviews from other Sheffield homeowners. Ask about availability and request quotes before committing to anything.

Step 3: Hire a Sheffield 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 Sheffield gardeners before hiring?

Sheffield's geology, topography, and the sheer variety of garden types across the city mean there are some questions worth asking here that you wouldn't necessarily think to raise elsewhere.

Can you show me reviews or photos from gardens in Sheffield that are similar to mine?

Many Sheffield gardeners upload photos of completed work to their MyBuilder profiles. Look for jobs that match yours in scale, condition, or soil type, not just ones that look impressive in a different context.

A before-and-after from a sloped Walkley terrace tells you far more than a beautifully photographed flat garden in a different city.

Have you worked on sloped or terraced gardens before?

Worth asking specifically in Sheffield, where sloped plots are so common that any experienced local gardener will have dealt with them regularly. Ask how they manage drainage on sloped ground, whether they've built retaining walls or terraced sections before, and what they'd do with your garden's specific gradient.

For steep plots especially, the approach matters as much as the end result.

What does the written quote actually cover - and what might change it?

Sheffield gardening jobs, particularly on sloped ground or on gardens with unknown soil conditions, can reveal more than they appeared to from a quick look over the fence.

Ask for a written breakdown of labour, materials, and waste removal, and ask directly what circumstances might require the quote to be revisited. A gardener who's honest about this is much easier to work with than one who surprises you at the end.

How do you handle the Sheffield weather - specifically late springs and wet autumns?

Sheffield sits higher than most English cities and the weather can run a few weeks behind lower-lying towns further south.

Springs arrive later, autumns can be wet and unpredictable, and gardens in exposed parts of the city, Crookes, Walkley, the western edges, can stay cold well into April. A gardener who plans their maintenance schedule around Sheffield's actual climate rather than a generic UK calendar will manage your garden more effectively through the year.

If you'd like more guidance before you hire, our guide on hiring a landscape gardener covers the key things to look for.

FAQ: common questions about gardeners in Sheffield

Why do Sheffield gardens have such different soil conditions from one part of the city to another?

It comes down to geology. Sheffield sits on the boundary between two very different rock types, Millstone Grit to the west and Coal Measures to the east.

Gritstone produces thin, acidic, free-draining soil that suits heathers, rhododendrons, and plants that prefer leaner conditions. Coal Measures produce heavy clay, sticky in winter, hard in summer, and prone to waterlogging if drainage isn't managed.

The boundary runs roughly through areas like Crookes, Walkley, and Broomhill, which is why soil conditions can vary from one street to the next in some parts of the city. A gardener who knows this will work with your specific soil rather than assuming everything in Sheffield is the same.

Can Sheffield gardeners deal with steep or terraced gardens?

Yes. And in Sheffield, most experienced gardeners will have worked on sloped plots regularly enough that it's second nature. The city's hills mean terraced rear gardens are common across the inner suburbs, and managing them well involves more than just cutting the grass on a slope. Drainage, soil erosion, access for equipment, retaining structures, and choosing plants that hold a bank - all of this is part of the job.

Sheffield is known for its trees, does that cause problems for gardens?

Sometimes. The mature street trees across Sheffield's older residential areas create shade and root competition for nearby gardens, which affects what can be planted and how lawns perform.

If you have trees within your own boundary that need attention, MyBuilder also has tree surgeons in Sheffield who can help with that side of things separately.

How do I find a gardener in Sheffield who covers my specific area?

Post your job on MyBuilder with your postcode and a description of what you need. Gardeners who cover your part of the city and are available for the work will respond directly, you're not searching a directory and cold-calling people who may or may not work in S10 or S6 or S2.

Once you have responses, you can browse their profiles, read reviews from other Sheffield homeowners, and compare before making any decision.

What time of year is best to get a garden in Sheffield back under control?

Late summer and early autumn tend to work well for larger projects, clearances, lawn renovations, replanting, because demand eases off from the spring peak and gardeners have more availability.

Ground temperatures in Sheffield stay warm enough into October for new turf to establish, and autumn planting gives shrubs and perennials a chance to get roots down before winter.

Spring is the busiest time, so if you're planning something substantial it's worth posting your job on MyBuilder a few weeks earlier than you think you need to.

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