Fence pricing in Regina is usually quoted per linear foot, but the real cost depends on the style, the post setting, the gates, and how the yard actually lays out. This guide breaks down realistic 2026 ranges so homeowners know what moves the number before they start collecting quotes.
Send over rough measurements, a photo of the yard and the style you have in mind and we will give you a real number to work with.
Typical 2026 fence ranges
A standard 6-foot treated privacy fence in Regina usually lands in the $55 to $85 per linear foot range once posts, rails, boards and labour are included. A modern horizontal-style fence using better-grade material typically runs $95 to $140 per linear foot depending on board spec and detail level. Cedar or premium builds move higher from there.
Gates are priced separately. A standard 4-foot walk gate is usually $450 to $800, and a double drive-through gate runs higher depending on hardware, size and how square the opening is.
What affects the final number
Style. Traditional vertical-board privacy fence is the most economical. Horizontal fences, board-on-board, or decorative tops take more material and more time to build clean.
Post setting. Proper concrete-set posts at the right depth cost more than a shallow set, but they are the difference between a fence that stays straight and one that leans in three winters.
Board material. Pressure-treated pine, cedar, and composite all come in at different price points. Board thickness and grade matter more than most people realize on a long run.
Gates. Gate count, width and hardware quality all move the total. A solid gate that still swings true in year five is worth scoping properly.
Site conditions. Grade changes, access, removing an existing fence, rock, tree roots and buried services can all affect labour. A flat yard with clean access builds faster than a sloped yard with tight gates and an old fence to pull.
Why one quote can look a lot lower than another
Cheaper fence quotes usually cut corners on the things that matter most long-term. Shallow post holes. Skipping concrete. Thinner boards. Cheap gate hardware. Wider post spacing than the structure really wants.
A fence built that way will look fine in year one and start leaning by year three. The fence that lasts gets its cost from post depth, post spacing, proper hardware and build time — not from flashy finishes.
How to budget smarter
Measure the run honestly and add in any gates up front. Decide on the style before pricing — switching from vertical to horizontal mid-project moves the number significantly.
If the budget is tight, keep the style simple and spend the money on post setting and gate hardware. Those are the parts you feel every time you use the yard.
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Common questions
Is fencing priced per foot or as a full project?
Per linear foot is the quickest way to size it up, but the written quote gives a real total that includes gates, removal, access and any site-specific work.
Do you remove the old fence?
Yes. Removal and disposal of the old fence can be scoped in as part of the project when needed.
How long does a typical fence build take?
Most residential fences are built over a few working days once materials are on-site. Post setting and concrete cure is planned into the schedule.
Do you build horizontal and custom-style fences?
Yes. Horizontal privacy fences are common and the scope can include custom gate details to match the style.