There is no clean per-acre number for landscape design-build, and anyone who hands you one over the phone is guessing. An acre of native planting and a thin gravel path is a different animal than an acre with a pool deck, an outdoor kitchen, retaining walls, and a regraded drainage plan. The lot size barely moves the price. The scope does.
This is the wheelhouse of LandWorks, the design-build department of Johnson Ranch Landscape. (Our maintenance side, Estate Enhancement, handles the recurring care once the build is done — that is a separate conversation.) Below is honest general-market framing so you can budget before you ever talk to a contractor. Then we will tell you how to get a real number for your actual property.
Why acre-plus work is priced by scope, not by the acre
On a quarter-acre suburban lot, landscaping is fairly predictable. On an acre or more in Bulverde, Spring Branch, or out in gated ranch country like Cordillera Ranch, the property starts dictating terms. Caliche outcrops. Slope sheds water toward the house. The driveway is three hundred feet of decomposed granite. Mature live oaks you cannot disturb sit right where the patio wants to go. None of that scales with acreage — it scales with what is under the surface and what you want to build on top of it.
That is why design-build is sold as a designed scope, not a rate card. The honest way to think about budget is by scope tier, not square footage.
General market ranges by scope tier
The figures below are broad regional estimates for an acre-plus Hill Country property. They exist to set expectations and help you decide where you land. They are not a quote, and they are not our prices.
| Scope tier | What's typically in it | General market range |
|---|---|---|
| Foundation | Native planting, basic beds, gravel paths, cleanup, light grading | $15k–$45k |
| Functional | Above plus irrigation, a modest patio, drainage correction, sod or turf zones | $45k–$100k |
| Outdoor living | Hardscape patios, retaining walls, pergola or fire feature, planting, lighting | $100k–$250k |
| Estate | Pool deck, outdoor kitchen, water feature, engineered walls, full-property design | $250k+ |
Another rough sanity check the industry uses: a full landscape design-build on a high-end property often lands somewhere in the range of 5–15% of the home's value, depending on how far you take the outdoor living program. Use it as a ceiling check, not a quote.
The design-fee-then-build model
Serious design-build starts with a paid design phase. You pay a design fee for a real plan — site survey, grading and drainage strategy, plant palette, hardscape layout, phasing map. That fee is typically a small fraction of the eventual build, and it is the most valuable money you will spend, because it is what keeps the build from going sideways. On a project that may run six figures, designing blind is the expensive mistake. A good plan also lets you bid the build honestly and phase it on your own timeline.
The cost drivers that actually move the number
When a number swings on an acre-plus property, it is almost always one of these:
- Scope and phasing. How much you build, and whether you do it all at once or in stages. Phasing spreads cost but can add mobilization. A master plan keeps the phases from fighting each other.
- Hardscape vs. planting mix. Planting is the affordable part. Stone, concrete, walls, and decking are where budgets climb. A planting-heavy acre and a hardscape-heavy acre are not close in price.
- Drainage and grading on caliche. Hill Country rock does not dig like dirt. French drains, swales, and regrading through caliche mean rock saws and hauling — real excavation cost that a flat lot never sees.
- Water features. Pools, ponds, fountains, and pool surrounds carry their own engineering, plumbing, and equipment. They are a category, not a line item.
- Outdoor living. Kitchens, pavilions, fireplaces, and lighting bring utilities — gas, water, electrical — and finish work that pushes labor up.
- Access on large lots. Long driveways, narrow ranch gates, slope, and protected trees decide whether a skid steer reaches the work zone or the material gets carried. Hard access is real money.
- Design and engineering. Retaining walls over a certain height, drainage tied to a structure, and HOA-reviewed plans may need engineered drawings. It protects you, and it is a line item.
How the real workflow runs
We do not price over the phone, and we do not guess. The process is the same every time:
- Site walk. We come out, read the soil, slope, drainage, sun, access, and existing trees, and listen to what you want the property to do.
- Design. We build the plan and scope for the full property — even if you intend to build in phases — so grading, drainage, and irrigation are sized once, correctly.
- Phased build. You build in stages that make sense for your budget and timeline, against one plan, with the same in-house crew every phase. See the full LandWorks design-build services for what each phase covers.
That sequence is why the ranges above are only a starting point. The number that matters is the one written against your site, your soil, and your scope — itemized, in writing, before a shovel moves.