Landscaping in Rochester Hills, MI
Mowing, mulching, planting, and cleanups by a local crew that treats your yard like the front of a magazine.
Here's what you actually get.
Mowing, beds, mulch, and seasonal cleanups that keep your property looking handled.
- Weekly or biweekly mowing, edging, and blowoff
- Spring and fall cleanups (leaf haul-off included)
- Mulch refresh and bed redefinition
- Annual and perennial planting
- Shrub trimming and small tree pruning
- Lawn fertilization and weed control programs
From first call to a lawn the neighbors notice.
- 01
Free walkthrough
We meet at your property, listen to what's bugging you, and measure what we need.
- 02
Written estimate
Flat-rate visits or a season package — your choice. No upsell scripts, no pressure.
- 03
Scheduled service
We hold a recurring weekday slot for your property. You'll know when we're coming.
Honest, on-paper pricing.
Weekly mowing typically starts at $55 for standard suburban lots. Cleanups and bed work are quoted on-site after measuring.
Common landscaping questions.
If your situation isn't here, just call — most answers don't survive a property walk-through anyway.
Landscaping in Rochester Hills, MI and nearby Oakland County.
One crew. Bundle it and save a phone call.
Window Cleaning
Streak-free interior and exterior glass, screens, and tracks.
Learn moreGutter Cleaning
Hand-cleaned, flushed, and downspout-checked — no shortcuts.
Learn morePermanent Architectural Lighting
App-controlled, year-round LED that lives in your roofline.
Learn moreHoliday Light Installation
We install, maintain, and take down your Christmas lights.
Learn moreMore on landscaping
Specifics on pricing, timing, and the questions homeowners ask before booking.
Mulch vs. rock landscaping in Michigan: which is better?
For Michigan's clay soil, mulch beats rock in plant beds — it feeds the soil and improves drainage, while rock raises soil temps and worsens clay compaction. When rock still makes sense.
Read postWhen should you overseed your lawn in Michigan?
Overseed Michigan lawns from late August through mid-September — warm soil, cool nights, and weeks of recovery before frost. Why fall beats spring and how to pair it with aeration.
Read postWhen should you start mowing your lawn in Michigan?
Start mowing in Michigan when soil hits 50°F and grass is actively growing — usually late April, not March. Mowing wet March soil compacts it. The first-cut height and timing that protect your lawn.
Read postLandscaping — independent sources
Third-party references on landscaping standards, safety, and best practices.
Ready to book landscaping?
Get a free, fixed-price quote in under 48 hours.

