Most “fence cost per foot” numbers are guesses dressed up as facts. Prices swing by material, height, region and the week you buy. A materials estimate built from your own supplier’s prices gives you a budget you can trust. Here is how to put one together.
1. Count the parts
Start with the quantities, which come straight from the run length and height: posts, rails, pickets or panels, bags of concrete, and a hinge-and-latch kit for each gate. If you have not counted these yet, the material guides walk through each one.
2. Use your own prices
Look up what your local yard charges for each item, a single post, a rail, a picket, a bag of concrete, a gate kit. Plug those in rather than relying on a national average. This is the part most calculators get wrong by quietly steering you to one retailer’s catalogue.
3. Add it up by line
Multiply each quantity by its unit price and total the lines. Seeing it itemised tells you where the money goes. On a tall privacy fence it is usually the pickets; on chain link it is the mesh and terminal posts.
4. Remember what is not included
A materials estimate leaves out:
- Labour: add the contractor’s quote if you are not building it yourself.
- Delivery and tax: both can be a noticeable slice on a big order.
- Tools and consumables: screws, post caps, concrete tube forms, gravel for the hole base.
5. Add a margin
Order a little extra cladding for waste and round concrete up. A 5 to 10 percent buffer beats stopping work for a second trip.
Price it your way
The fence cost estimator counts the parts and lets you type your own unit prices, so the total reflects what you actually pay. Sketch a whole yard in the fence drawing tool and the same costing follows the drawing.