Outdoor Cost Guide

Backyard Remodel Cost in San Diego: What You'll Actually Pay in 2026

A full backyard remodel in San Diego costs between $25,000 and $150,000+, depending on how many features you're combining. A basic refresh — new pavers, turf, some planting — starts around $25K. Add a pergola and it's $40K–$60K. Layer in an outdoor kitchen and you're at $60K–$100K. Go premium with everything — pavers, pergola, outdoor kitchen, retaining wall, fire feature, lighting, landscaping — and you'll land at $100K–$150K+.

Most homeowners underestimate backyard remodel costs because they price each feature in isolation. A paver patio is $22–$26/sqft. An outdoor kitchen is $15K–$40K. A pergola is $10K–$20K. But when you combine them, there are shared costs — demolition, drainage, grading, delivery, clean-up, permits — that push the total beyond what you'd expect from adding up individual estimates.

Here's the real cost breakdown for every component, and three fully priced scenarios that show how totals add up.


Component Costs at a Glance

FeatureTypical SD Price RangeDetailed Guide
Paver patio (500 sqft)$11,250 – $26,000Paver Patio Cost Guide
Outdoor kitchen$15,000 – $75,000+Outdoor Kitchen Cost Guide
Pergola/patio cover$10,000 – $32,000Pergola Cost Guide
Retaining wall (40 lnft × 3ft)$6,600 – $14,400Retaining Wall Cost Guide
Artificial turf (500 sqft)$7,500 – $12,500Coming soon
Landscape lighting$3,000 – $8,000
Fire pit (built-in)$3,000 – $6,000
Landscaping and planting$3,000 – $15,000
Fencing (50 lnft cedar)$11,250 – $14,250
Demolition + site prep$3,000 – $8,000

Click the links above for full line-item breakdowns of each feature. This guide focuses on how they combine and what the shared costs add.


Shared Costs That Apply to Every Remodel

These costs hit every backyard remodel regardless of which features you choose:

Demolition

Most backyards have something that needs to come out first — old concrete, dying turf, a rotting fence, an outdated patio cover.

ItemCost
Concrete demo (with new hardscape going in)$4/sqft
Old patio cover demo$20/sqft
Lattice pergola demo$12/sqft
Wall/footing demo$12.25/sqft
Tree removal (6–12 ft)$750 each
5-yard demo dumpster$1,050
10-yard demo dumpster$2,450
Dirt hauling$300/yard

A typical demolition for a full remodel — removing 500 sqft of old concrete, pulling out a dying lawn, and clearing an old fence: $3,000–$5,000 including dumpster.

Drainage

When you add hardscape (pavers, concrete, structures), you're changing how water moves through your yard. San Diego's DS-560 stormwater rules may require drainage improvements.

ComponentCost
French drain$25.50/lnft
Solid drain pipe$18.50–$25.50/lnft
Channel drain$100/lnft
Drain grates$30–$40 each
Pop-up emitter$55 each

A typical drainage system for a full remodel: $1,500–$3,000.

Delivery and Logistics

ItemCost
Material delivery (per vendor)$395
Site One delivery (1–6 cu yards)$260
Site One delivery (7–12 cu yards)$500
Project clean-up$650
Portable restroom$400

A full remodel typically involves 2–3 material deliveries from different vendors (pavers, block, plants) plus clean-up: $1,500–$2,200.

Permits

Permit TypeCostWhen Required
Building permit (structural)$500–$1,500Retaining walls over 3ft, pergolas over 300 sqft
Electrical permit$200–$500Outdoor kitchen, pergola lights, landscape lighting
Plumbing/gas permit$300–$800Outdoor kitchen with sink or gas grill
Engineering plans$1,500–$4,000Retaining walls over 3ft

A remodel with a permitted pergola, gas outdoor kitchen, and retaining wall: $2,500–$5,000 in permits and engineering.


Three Real San Diego Scenarios

The Basic Refresh

Normal Heights · 400 sqft patio + turf + lighting · Old concrete out

This is a homeowner who wants a clean, functional backyard without the bells and whistles. Rip out the old concrete, put in pavers, add turf for the dog, install some pathway lights.

Demolition
Concrete demo (400 sqft × $4)$1,600
5-yard dumpster$1,050
Hardscape
Paver patio Option 1 (400 sqft × $22.50)$9,000
Paver sealing$1,000
Melville curb border (80 lnft × $30)$2,400
Turf
Artificial turf (300 sqft × $15)$4,500
Drainage
French drain (30 lnft)$765
Lighting
LED path lights (8 × $250)$2,000
Transformer and wiring$800
Logistics
Material deliveries (2)$655
Project clean-up$650
Project total$24,420

About $61/sqft of usable outdoor space for a clean, modern backyard with a 10-year surface life.

The Entertaining Backyard

Carmel Valley · 700 sqft patio + pergola + basic outdoor kitchen + fire pit

This is the homeowner who loves hosting and wants their backyard to function as an outdoor living room. Full patio, covered dining area, grill station, fire pit for evening gatherings.

Demolition
Concrete demo (700 sqft × $4)$2,800
10-yard dumpster$2,450
Hardscape
Paver patio Option 2 (700 sqft × $24.50)$17,150
Paver sealing$1,750
In-lay border (100 lnft × $35)$3,500
Paver steps — straight (8 lnft × $75)$600
Pergola
Alumawood insulated 3" (200 sqft × $45)$9,000
Attached posts and footings (2)$1,928
LED lights (4) + dimmer + hookup$2,050
Electrical trenching (15 lnft)$450
Outdoor Kitchen
CMU BBQ island (8 lnft structure)$3,205
Fabricated countertop (16 sqft)$1,664
Grill cutout + install$831
Stucco finish (45 sqft)$720
Gas line (20 lnft) + permit$1,100
Fire Feature
Built-in fire pit (structure + burner + gas)$4,200
Drainage
French drain (40 lnft) + grates$1,080
Lighting
LED path lights (6) + transformer$2,300
Logistics
Material deliveries (3)$1,050
Project clean-up$650
Permits (pergola + electrical + gas)$1,200
Pergola site inspection$400
Project total$60,078

About $86/sqft of outdoor space. The pergola, outdoor kitchen, and fire pit add roughly $23,000 on top of what would be a $30K patio-only project. But you're building an outdoor room, not just a surface.

The Premium Transformation

Rancho Santa Fe · Full estate backyard · 1,000 sqft patio + pergola + full kitchen + retaining wall + turf + fencing + lighting

This is the complete backyard transformation for a premium property. Every feature, premium materials, full engineering, HOA-ready design.

Demolition
Full demo (concrete, old structures, grading)$8,500
Hardscape
Porcelain paver patio Option 2 (1,000 sqft × $38)$38,000
Paver sealing (1,000 sqft)$2,500
Decorative border + curbs$5,200
Paver steps — radius (12 lnft × $128)$1,536
Retaining Wall
CMU 8" wall (200 sqft face) with stone veneer$25,000
Engineering + permits$4,200
Pergola
Alumawood insulated 4" (300 sqft) freestanding$24,500
Full electrical (lights, fan, outlets, TV mount)$5,200
Outdoor Kitchen
L-shaped island with premium finishes$28,000
Premium appliances (homeowner purchase)$15,000
Full plumbing + gas + electrical$6,500
Fire Feature
Custom fire pit with seating wall$8,500
Turf
Premium artificial turf (400 sqft)$7,200
Fencing
Cedar horizontal fencing (60 lnft × $225)$13,500
Landscaping
Drought-tolerant planting + boulders + mulch$12,000
Lighting
Full landscape lighting package$6,500
Drainage
Comprehensive drainage system$4,500
Logistics
Deliveries, clean-up, permits, inspections$6,500
Project total~$222,836

This is an extreme example — most homeowners don't build every feature at premium tier. But it shows how quickly costs compound when you go all-in on a large property. The patio alone is $38K. The retaining wall with stone veneer adds $29K. The outdoor kitchen with appliances adds $49K. Each feature is reasonable on its own. Together they're a major capital investment.


The Phasing Question: All at Once or Staged?

All at once is almost always better. Here's why:

Cost savings. Mobilization (crew setup, equipment rental, material staging) costs $1,500–$3,000 per phase. Doing 3 phases means paying that 3 times. Deliveries multiply. Dumpster runs multiply. Clean-up multiplies.

Construction logistics. Building a patio, then coming back to build an outdoor kitchen on top of it, risks damaging the patio during construction. Building them simultaneously means the crew plans for both from the start.

Drainage integration. The single biggest reason to do it all at once. Drainage needs to be designed as a system — not bolted on feature by feature. A drainage plan that accounts for the patio, the pergola gutters, and the retaining wall drain can be 30% cheaper than three separate drainage installations.

One permit cycle. Getting permits once (4–8 weeks) is better than getting them three times.

The exception: if budget forces phasing, build hardscape first (patio + retaining wall + drainage), then structure (pergola + outdoor kitchen), then soft features (turf + planting + lighting). This sequence ensures each phase doesn't disrupt the previous one.


What Makes San Diego Different

Year-round use. Every feature you build gets used 10–12 months. The cost-per-use on a $60K backyard in San Diego is dramatically lower than the same build in Chicago where it sits under snow for 4 months.

Stormwater requirements. San Diego's DS-560 checklist applies to most hardscape projects. Larger remodels may trigger permeable paver requirements or engineered drainage.

Neighborhood value alignment. A $100K backyard remodel makes sense on a $2.5M home in Carmel Valley. It doesn't make sense on a $750K home in Santee — you'd over-improve relative to comparable sales. Check your neighborhood's home values before committing to a premium scope.

HOA and coastal considerations. Rancho Santa Fe Art Jury, Carmel Valley HOA, Del Mar Coastal Overlay — depending on your location, plan for additional review time and potentially modified designs.


Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a backyard remodel cost in San Diego?

$25,000 to $150,000+ depending on scope. A basic refresh (pavers, turf, lighting) runs $25K–$45K. A mid-range remodel (pavers, pergola, basic outdoor kitchen) runs $50K–$85K. A premium transformation with all features runs $100K–$150K+.

How long does it take?

Basic: 2–3 weeks. Mid-range: 4–8 weeks. Premium: 8–16 weeks of construction plus 2–8 weeks for permits, engineering, and approvals before work begins.

Do I need a permit?

Depends on scope. Pavers at grade usually don't. Retaining walls over 3 feet, pergolas over 300 sqft, and outdoor kitchens with gas/electrical all need permits. Most full remodels involve at least one permitted element.

What gives the best ROI?

Paver patio (70–80% return), professional landscaping (100–200% return), and outdoor kitchen (60–80% return) in San Diego's year-round climate. Avoid over-improving relative to your neighborhood.

All at once or in phases?

All at once saves money on mobilization, delivery, permits, and drainage integration. Phase only if budget requires it, and build in this order: hardscape → structure → soft features.


Pricing based on San Diego County materials and labor as of March 2026. Your actual cost will depend on scope, site conditions, access, material selections, and project complexity. Individual feature costs detailed in linked guides.

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Pricing based on San Diego County materials and labor as of 2026-03-25. Your actual cost will depend on site conditions, access, material selections, and project complexity. Ranges include standard installation on a properly prepared base.