How Much Does a Backyard Putting Green Cost? (2026 Guide)

Cost Guide · Updated March 2026

How Much Does a Backyard Putting Green Cost?

Pricing ranges based on industry research and contractor estimates across the US — covering every cost factor, regional differences, and hidden add-ons that affect your final number.

By the BackyardPutter.com Editorial Team · Reviewed by licensed installation contractors

The Short Answer

Most homeowners pay $5,000–$20,000 for a professionally installed backyard putting green. The full range spans $1,500 (small DIY-adjacent installations) to $40,000+ (large custom greens with full landscaping integration). Square footage is the primary driver — expect to pay $15–$40 per square foot installed, all-in.

Cost by Green Size

Size is the single biggest variable in putting green cost. Here’s what to expect at each tier, based on contractor estimates from across the US:

Green Size Sq Footage Typical Cost Range Holes
Small 50–200 sq ft $1,500–$6,000 1–2
Medium 200–400 sq ft $6,000–$14,000 2–4
Large 400–700 sq ft $14,000–$25,000 3–6
Premium / Custom 700+ sq ft $25,000–$50,000+ 4–9+

Ranges reflect regional variation and material grade differences. Costs in the Northeast, Pacific Coast, and Mountain West trend 15–25% higher than national averages. Figures based on industry pricing research and contractor estimates.

Cost Per Square Foot: What the Number Means

The industry standard metric for comparing quotes is cost per square foot installed, which includes all labor and materials for a complete installation. Here’s what different price points typically reflect:

Price Per Sq Ft What You’re Getting
Under $15/sq ft Budget polypropylene turf, minimal base prep, risk of early failure. Be cautious.
$15–$22/sq ft Standard installation with adequate base (4”). Mid-grade PE or nylon turf. Solid results.
$22–$32/sq ft Quality nylon turf, 5–6” compacted base, professional drainage engineering. The sweet spot.
$32–$50+/sq ft Premium nylon, custom contours, specialty infill, retaining walls, full landscape integration.

What Affects the Total Cost?

1. Turf Material Grade

Nylon turf costs 20–40% more than polypropylene but lasts 2–3x longer. On a 300 sq ft green, the turf material difference is typically $800–$2,500. For a permanent installation, nylon is almost always the right choice economically over a 10+ year horizon. See the full breakdown of putting green types and materials to understand what each tier delivers.

2. Base Preparation Complexity

A flat, clear yard with good soil drainage is the simplest (cheapest) scenario. Complications that add cost:

  • Existing concrete, pavers, or hardscape to remove: $500–$3,000
  • Heavy clay soil requiring additional drainage: $300–$1,500
  • Tree root interference: $200–$1,000
  • Significant slope requiring grading: $500–$3,000
  • Retaining walls (slopes or level changes): $1,500–$8,000

3. Contours and Shaping

A flat green is the most affordable. Each undulation, slope feature, or elevation change requires additional base shaping work. Complex multi-break greens with 3+ intentional contours typically add $1,000–$5,000 to the base cost depending on complexity. Understanding how base shaping works is covered step-by-step in the installation guide.

4. Add-Ons and Features

Optional features that increase the total project cost:

  • Additional hole cups (beyond standard 2–3): $50–$150 each
  • Fringe / rough area: $800–$2,500
  • Chipping or approach area: $1,500–$5,000
  • Synthetic sand bunker: $1,000–$4,000
  • Landscape border edging (timber, concrete, or metal): $500–$2,000
  • Outdoor lighting: $800–$3,000
  • Irrigation removal (if existing sprinklers conflict): $300–$1,000

5. Geographic Location

Labor costs vary significantly by region. Here’s an approximate regional index relative to the national average:

Region vs. National Average Notes
Pacific Coast (CA, OR, WA) +20–35% High labor costs; strong installer market
Northeast (NY, NJ, MA, CT) +15–25% Seasonal demand spikes; shorter install season
Mountain West (CO, AZ, NV) +5–15% High demand; established installer base
Southeast (FL, GA, TX, SC) At average to +10% Year-round install season; competitive market
Midwest & South Central At average to −10% Lower labor costs; fewer specialist installers

What’s Typically Included vs. Not Included

Usually Included Usually Extra
  • Excavation and grading
  • Crushed aggregate base (4–6”)
  • Drainage layer
  • Weed barrier
  • Turf installation and seaming
  • Trimming and edging
  • 2–3 standard hole cups
  • Flags and pins
  • Site cleanup
  • Retaining walls
  • Concrete or hardscape demo
  • Tree root removal
  • Irrigation removal
  • Outdoor lighting
  • Fringe / rough area
  • Chipping or hitting area
  • Sand bunker
  • Decorative landscape borders
  • Permits (where required)

DIY vs. Professional Cost Comparison

DIY materials for a 300 sq ft green run approximately $1,500–$4,000, compared to $7,000–$12,000 for professional installation of the same size. The gap is real. But DIY greens typically last 5–8 years versus 15–20 for professional installations, and improperly compacted base (the most common DIY failure point) can require expensive rework. Over 15 years, the cost difference often narrows significantly.

→ Read the full DIY vs. Professional comparison

Is a Putting Green Worth the Cost?

For golfers who play regularly, the math is often compelling:

  • Eliminate $1,500–$5,000+/year in range fees, green fees, and club memberships
  • Recover 50–75% of installation cost in home value (in golf-friendly markets)
  • 15–20 year useful life on a quality installation

A golfer spending $3,000/year on golf-related fees who installs a $12,000 green recoups the cost in approximately 4 years — and still has the green for another 11–16 years. Beyond the financial math, the ability to practice any time, in any weather, with no travel or fee adds recreational value that’s genuinely difficult to price.

How to Get an Accurate Quote for Your Project

Online pricing guides (including this one) give you ballpark ranges — but your actual quote will depend on your specific site conditions, local labor rates, and your installer’s materials. To get a number that actually reflects your project:

  1. Get at least 3 written quotes from installers who specialize in putting greens
  2. Ensure each quote specifies: base material and depth, turf brand and product name, infill type, and warranty terms
  3. Compare apples to apples — a $6,000 quote for polypropylene turf and a 3” base isn’t the same as a $10,000 quote for nylon with a 6” base
  4. Ask each installer what site conditions they observed that affect their number

Frequently Asked Cost Questions

How long does a putting green last?

A professionally installed nylon green lasts 15–20 years. Polypropylene 5–8 years. The aggregate base is permanent and reusable when turf eventually needs replacing.

Can I finance a putting green?

Yes — many installers offer financing through GreenSky, Synchrony Home, or similar lenders. HELOCs are also commonly used. Ask about financing options when you receive quotes.

Does a putting green add to home value?

Generally yes — most real estate professionals estimate 50–75% cost recovery in golf-friendly markets. Results vary by neighborhood and market demographics.

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