Get a Scottsdale-adjusted cost estimate for your fencing project. Our calculator starts from national averages and applies a local cost index for Scottsdale, Arizona based on labor market data and cost-of-living indices.
Local context for Scottsdale
Scottsdale permits are issued by the Planning and Development Services Department through Scottsdale SPUR (Smart Planning, Use and Regulations), which launched January 6, 2026, replacing the previous eServices portal. Arizona Registrar of Contractors licensing applies, and Scottsdale has active Environmentally Sensitive Lands (ESL) and hillside overlay regulations that constrain grading, lot coverage, and lighting in the McDowell and Sonoran foothill areas.
Permits filed through City of Scottsdale Planning and Development Services Department · official portal
These figures are estimates derived from national cost data and a local cost-of-living multiplier. They are not quotes. For a firm price, use the calculator below and then get 3+ written bids from licensed local contractors.
Tip: Average backyard fence is 150-200 linear feet
Several local factors push Scottsdale fencing pricing above or below the national baseline:
What is the Scottsdale SPUR portal?
SPUR (Smart Planning, Use and Regulations) replaced eServices in January 2026 as the single customer portal for plan review, permits, inspections, planning, and records. All development and construction submissions go through SPUR.
Does north Scottsdale have extra regulations?
Yes. The Environmentally Sensitive Lands ordinance layers on hillside, desert vegetation, lot coverage, dark-sky lighting, and grading rules in foothill and desert areas. A small addition in ESL often needs much more review than the same addition in a flat-lot subdivision.
City of Scottsdale Planning and Development Services Department handles fencing permits in Scottsdale. Fees, inspection schedules, and code amendments vary by project scope.
Visit the official Scottsdale permit portal ↗For 150 linear feet installed in Scottsdale, most homeowners pay between $2,200 and $8,800 in 2026. In most cities, fences 6 feet or under in the backyard do not require a permit. Fences over 6 feet, front yard fences, and fences in historic districts usually do. Check our fence permit guide for your area.
Permit requirements in Scottsdale follow Arizona state building code plus local amendments. Vinyl: 20-30 years. Cedar: 15-20 years. Pressure-treated wood: 15-20 years. Chain link: 15-25 years. Wrought iron: 50+ years. Wood fences last longest when stained and sealed every 2-3 years. See our Arizona permit guide for specifics.
It is not legally required in most places, but it is strongly recommended. Your neighbor may agree to split the cost of a shared boundary fence. Also check your property lines — building even a few inches on their property creates legal problems.
Chain link is cheapest at $15-$20 per linear foot installed. Wood picket fencing runs $18-$25 per linear foot. Vinyl and composite start at $30+ per linear foot but require virtually zero maintenance.
Not always required, but highly recommended. A property survey ($300-$800) confirms your exact property lines and prevents disputes. If you build on your neighbor property, they can legally require you to remove it at your expense.
SPUR (Smart Planning, Use and Regulations) replaced eServices in January 2026 as the single customer portal for plan review, permits, inspections, planning, and records. All development and construction submissions go through SPUR.
Yes. The Environmentally Sensitive Lands ordinance layers on hillside, desert vegetation, lot coverage, dark-sky lighting, and grading rules in foothill and desert areas. A small addition in ESL often needs much more review than the same addition in a flat-lot subdivision.