Top Landscaping Services in Miami Beach, FL,  33109  | Compare & Call

Miami Beach Landscaping

Miami Beach Landscaping

Miami Beach, FL
Landscaping Services

Phone : (888) 524-1778

Need yard work done fast? Miami Beach Landscaping serves Miami Beach, Florida with lawn care, mulching, sod install, and seasonal cleanups.
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Kitchen Door Landscaping

Kitchen Door Landscaping

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (1)
Miami Beach FL 33139
Landscaping, Landscape Architects or Designers

Kitchen Door Landscaping in Miami Beach, FL, is a full-service landscaping company specializing in sustainable design and construction. Led by Miami City Manager Andrew Schnell, who brings a backgroun...

Miami Beach Lawn and Landscaping Services

Miami Beach Lawn and Landscaping Services

Miami Beach FL 33139
Lawn Services, Tree Services, Irrigation

Miami Beach Lawn and Landscaping Services Inc. is a trusted, established provider dedicated to enhancing the outdoor spaces of homes and businesses across Miami Beach. We offer a comprehensive range o...

Gan Eden Landscaping

Gan Eden Landscaping

★★★★☆ 3.7 / 5 (6)
445 W 40th St Unit 403491, Miami Beach FL 33140
Landscaping, Tree Services, Irrigation

Gan Eden Landscaping has been a trusted, locally-owned landscaping company serving Miami Beach and surrounding areas since 1986. We provide comprehensive landscaping, tree services, and irrigation sol...

JovanCare

JovanCare

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (1)
Miami Beach FL 33139
Lawn Services

JovanCare is a Miami Beach lawn care service dedicated to helping your outdoor space thrive. We listen to your vision and provide personalized services, from regular mowing and fertilization to custom...

Arc'Scape

Arc'Scape

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (1)
Miami Beach FL 33139
Landscape Architects or Designers, Gardeners, Landscaping

Arc'Scape is a Miami Beach landscape architecture and design firm dedicated to transforming outdoor spaces into personalized, functional, and beautiful extensions of the home. We specialize in a compr...

Mr Christmas Lights

Mr Christmas Lights

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (3)
1508 Bay Rd Ste 1029, Miami Beach FL 33139
Landscaping, Electricians, Home Decor

Since the mid-2000s, Mr Christmas Lights has been Miami Beach's go-to for professional holiday lighting, growing from a local passion project into a trusted seasonal service for the greater Miami area...

Daniel Bini Landscaping

Daniel Bini Landscaping

7009 Trouville Esplanade, Miami Beach FL 33141
Landscaping

Daniel Bini Landscaping is a trusted local landscaping company serving Miami Beach, FL. We specialize in comprehensive landscape maintenance and solutions tailored to the unique coastal environment. O...

Palm Pros305

Palm Pros305

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (1)
Miami Beach FL 33109
Landscaping

Palm Pros305 is a Miami Beach-based landscaping company specializing in transforming outdoor spaces with durable, high-quality California Medjool Palm Trees and comprehensive landscape services. We fo...

Manny The Plant Guy

Manny The Plant Guy

Miami Beach FL 33140
Landscaping

Manny The Plant Guy is a Miami Beach-based landscaping company specializing in creating and maintaining vibrant, healthy outdoor spaces. We understand the unique challenges of our local climate, inclu...

Permawheel

Permawheel

Miami Beach FL 33141
Gardeners, Landscaping, Landscape Architects or Designers

Permawheel is a Miami Beach-based landscaping and gardening company founded by Samuel, who brings a unique international perspective to local outdoor spaces. Growing up in the lush French Caribbean is...

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Q&A

How can we keep a St. Augustine lawn healthy with only two days of watering per week?

Phase 1 water restrictions require precise management. The solution is an ET-based smart irrigation controller paired with in-ground moisture sensors. This system calculates evapotranspiration daily and irrigates only when soil moisture drops below a programmed threshold, skipping scheduled cycles if recent rainfall suffices. For St. Augustine cultivars like Floratam, this delivers deep, infrequent watering that promotes drought-tolerant root growth while staying strictly within the weekly allocation, conserving hundreds of gallons monthly.

Our patio floods during heavy rains and king tides. What's a durable solution that also manages runoff?

Saltwater intrusion and tidal flooding exacerbate drainage in our alkaline, low-permeability soils. Replacing solid surfaces with permeable Oolitic Limestone or permeable concrete pavers is the recommended approach. These materials allow stormwater to percolate into a prepared gravel base, reducing surface pooling and mitigating salt accumulation. This system often meets the City of Miami Beach Building Department's updated standards for onsite stormwater management, addressing both the symptom and the regulatory requirement.

Do we need a permit to regrade our small backyard, and what should we verify about a contractor?

Yes, any significant regrading on a 0.12-acre lot typically requires a permit from the City of Miami Beach Building Department to ensure proper drainage flow and compliance with floodplain regulations. More critically, you must verify the contractor holds a current license from the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) for the correct scope of work, such as 'Landscaping' or 'Specialty Structure.' Unlicensed grading can lead to improper slopes that direct water toward foundations or neighboring properties, creating liability.

My yard soil is compacted and drains poorly. Is this common for homes built around the 1960s in South Beach?

Yes, this is a direct consequence of construction practices from that era. Homes built in 1967, like many in South Beach, are now nearly 60 years old. The original, shallow layer of topsoil was often lost or compacted during construction, leaving the underlying Oolitic Limestone and sandy alkaline base exposed. Over decades, this subsoil has become a dense, low-permeability layer that resists water infiltration and root growth, necessitating core aeration and the addition of organic compost to rebuild soil structure.

We want to reduce constant mowing and blowing. Are there lower-maintenance, native alternatives to turf?

Transitioning to a layered native landscape is the most effective long-term strategy. A matrix of drought-tolerant groundcovers like Beach Sunflower and Coontie, understory plants such as Saw Palmetto, and canopy trees like Gumbo Limbo and Sea Grape, creates a self-sustaining ecosystem. This approach drastically reduces mowing frequency, eliminates the need for gas-powered blowers ahead of tightening noise ordinances, and provides superior habitat value, aligning with 2026 biodiversity and resilience goals.

We have a last-minute HOA compliance notice for overgrown vegetation. What's your fastest response time from the South Beach area?

For an emergency cleanup in South Beach, we can dispatch an electric, low-noise crew from our staging area near Lummus Park. The route uses the MacArthur Causeway to I-95, allowing a 45-60 minute arrival during typical peak congestion. Our electric equipment operates within strict local decibel limits, enabling work during broader daytime hours to meet urgent deadlines without violating noise ordinances.

Is limestone or composite wood better for a new deck in our coastal zone?

Oolitic Limestone or permeable pavers are superior for longevity in Miami Beach. While composite wood resists rot, it can degrade under intense UV and salt spray. Natural limestone is inherently resistant to salt corrosion, fire—a consideration even in a Low Fire Wise Rating coastal zone—and requires no sealing. It also mitigates the urban heat island effect better than synthetic materials. For a 0.12-acre lot, limestone provides permanent, low-maintenance structure that integrates with the local geology.

We see invasive vines taking over a hedge. How do we treat them without using restricted fertilizers?

Invasive species like Brazilian Pepper or Skunkvine require immediate mechanical removal, followed by a targeted, systemic herbicide applied directly to cut stems—a technique known as cut-stump treatment. This minimizes chemical drift. Crucially, this treatment can and should be performed outside the local fertilizer blackout period (May 15 to Oct 31) to avoid any conflict with ordinances. Post-removal, amending the soil with compost, not synthetic fertilizer, helps desired plants outcompete any regrowth.

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