Homeowners with a leaning, damaged, or rotting fence want to know if repair is worth it versus full replacement, and what caused the failure in the first place. A website with honest repair-vs-replace guidance and real before-and-after photos earns the repair call. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Fence Repair in KC

Web Design for Fence Repair Companies in Kansas City

Fence repair customers typically discover the problem after a KC windstorm drops panels, after noticing a post leaning at the property line, or when wood rot reaches the point where the fence no longer functions. The first question is always repair vs. replace: a few leaning posts can be reset in concrete and last another decade, while a fence where the posts have rotted at grade level throughout needs full replacement. Kansas City's clay soil is hard on fence posts — clay retains moisture at the base of posts and accelerates rot in untreated wood. The most common repair scenarios are post reset or replacement (a leaning post pulled, new concrete poured, reset plumb), picket or panel replacement (matching existing style and height), gate repair (sag, broken hinges, latch alignment), and storm damage repairs where multiple panels or sections came down. Wood privacy fence is the most common residential material in KC — cedar and pressure-treated pine are the standard options. Chain link repairs involve post replacement, tension wire, and mesh patching. Vinyl fence repair requires color and style matching — original manufacturer panels are preferred but compatible aftermarket parts exist for common profiles. A fence repair website that explains the repair vs. replace decision honestly, shows material options for replacement sections, and has storm damage response prominently featured earns the homeowner who is calling the day after the storm.

What homeowners look for in a fence repair company

  • Repair vs. replace — honest assessment of when repair makes sense vs. full replacement being the right call
  • Post failure — why posts lean or rot at grade, what KC clay soil does to untreated wood posts
  • Storm damage — same-day or next-day response, temporary fixes, insurance documentation if needed
  • Material matching — wood, vinyl, chain link — whether repair sections will match the existing fence
  • Gate repair — sag correction, hinge replacement, latch adjustment, self-closing hardware options

What your fence repair website would include

  • Repair vs. replace guide — what makes a fence repairable vs. when full replacement is the right answer
  • Common repairs — post reset, panel replacement, gate sag, storm damage — process and what to expect
  • Material expertise — wood (cedar, pressure-treated), vinyl, chain link — how we handle each
  • Storm damage response — fast turnaround, temporary fencing if needed, insurance photo documentation
  • Before and after — repaired fences, storm damage recovered, gate straightening, post replacements
  • Quote form with fence material, length of damage, repair type, storm damage or planned, timeline

What clients say

“After a bad storm KC gets a wave of fence calls and the first contractor people find online is the one who gets the work. Without a website I was getting nothing from search — referrals only, and those dry up fast after a big event. The new site with our storm damage section, our before-and-after photos, and our honest repair vs. replace guide meant we showed up when people were searching the morning after. First storm season with the site was the busiest we had ever had.”

— T. Ramos, fence repair contractor, Raytown, MO

Simple pricing

A fence repair site with before-and-afters, repair vs. replace guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with storm damage section, material guide, and gate repair page is $425–$750. One storm response job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

Ready to get started?

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(816) 520-5652