Landscaping is a visual sale. A homeowner picturing a new patio, a reworked front yard, or a tidy weekly lawn wants to see projects you have finished before they request a quote. Your website needs strong before-and-after galleries, clear service pages for everything from mowing to design-and-build, a way to push seasonal offers like spring cleanups and snow removal, and a fast quote form. The right WordPress theme makes all of that quick to build and easy to refresh each season.
These nine themes pair a clean, photo-forward look with the speed and lead capture a landscaping company needs. They lean toward design depth, because project galleries close the deal, while staying fast enough to load on a phone in someone's backyard.
1. Divi
PremiumBest for: design-led landscaping sites
Divi's visual builder shines when before-and-after galleries and a polished, high-end look carry the sale, which fits design-and-build and hardscaping work especially well. Its layout packs include service-business and portfolio sections you can remix per service, and visual editing lets you fine-tune every gallery. Optimize your images, since galleries add weight.
2. Astra
Free + paid upgradeBest for: fast landscaping sites that still look sharp
Astra pairs a lightweight core with clean Starter Templates that look professional out of the box, and it works with Elementor or the block editor for gallery and quote sections. It stays fast even with a stack of service-area pages, which is where landscapers win local search. The free version covers most companies.
3. OceanWP
Free + paid upgradeBest for: ready-made service and portfolio demos
OceanWP ships a deep demo library with service-business and portfolio layouts you can adapt into a maintenance-versus-design-build structure, plus extensions for galleries and a sticky estimate bar. A practical head start when you want a proven layout to drop your own project photos into.
4. Kadence
Free + paid upgradeBest for: DIY landscapers who want quotes and seasonal offers
Kadence's header builder makes a sticky request-a-quote button and a seasonal announcement bar easy to set up, and Kadence Blocks let you build service grids and project galleries without a separate page builder. Fast and friendly for an owner-operator updating the site between jobs.
5. GeneratePress
Free + paid upgradeBest for: speed-first sites with many service-area pages
Landscapers who target a lot of nearby towns end up with many service-area pages, and GeneratePress keeps all of them fast because it ships almost no bloat. Add GenerateBlocks for tidy estimate forms, service grids, and review sections. The speed-first benchmark.
6. Blocksy
Free + paid upgradeBest for: modern block-editor builds
Blocksy's generous free tier includes a header builder and a flexible announcement bar, handy for flipping the site between a spring-cleanup push and a fall or snow-removal message as the season turns. A modern, fast pick for landscapers who work in the block editor.
7. Neve
Free + paid upgradeBest for: a guided first landscaping site
Neve is fast, mobile-first, and ships an AI-assisted builder that drafts a starting layout from a prompt, so a solo landscaper can stand up a gallery, a services list, and an estimate form without hiring a designer. A sensible entry point for a first site.
8. Avada
PremiumBest for: an all-in-one contractor design system
Avada bundles prebuilt websites for trades and contractors, the Fusion Builder, and extensive gallery and callout options, including the service and estimate sections landscaping sites lean on. Heavier than the lightweight themes, but complete out of the box.
9. Purpose-built landscaping themes
PremiumBest for: a trade-specific design with no setup
For a layout designed for gardening and landscaping, with project galleries, service grids, and quote widgets already in place, browse the landscaping and gardening category on ThemeForest. Confirm the theme is actively maintained and well-reviewed before you buy, since trade-specific themes are sometimes abandoned.
Landscaping searches surge as soon as the weather turns in spring, and your project galleries are full of large, high-detail photos, so the site has to stay quick when the planning-season rush hits. A managed WordPress host with strong caching and a built-in CDN keeps those galleries loading fast on mobile while you handle estimates, not servers. Kinsta and Cloudways both absorb seasonal traffic spikes comfortably.