Buyer guidance

Fence project decision guide for Southern Maine and nearby New Hampshire.

Use this page to turn fence research into a practical quote conversation. The goal is not more keywords; it is a clearer scope, better photos, fewer surprises, and a faster path to the right fence.

Start here

Choose the real project goal first.

A fence quote gets easier when every choice connects to the reason the fence is being built.

1

Privacy or screening

Think through which views need to be blocked, whether every side needs privacy, and how patios, hot tubs, decks, roads, and neighbors affect sightlines.

Privacy fence guide
2

Pets and kids

For dogs, mention digging, jumping, visibility triggers, small gaps, and gate habits. For kids, think through yard access, play areas, and latch convenience.

Dog fence planning
3

Repair or replacement

Loose posts, storm impact, gates that will not latch, and repeated panel failures may need repair triage before material decisions.

Repair planning
4

Pool or safety boundary

Pool fencing needs careful layout and local requirement checks. Bring gate, latch, height, access, and deck-opening questions into the first conversation.

Pool fence planning
5

Gates and openings

Gates affect daily use, mower access, parking, pets, hardware, and the final look. Decide where people, equipment, or vehicles need to pass through.

Gate planning
6

Business or security

Commercial scopes should explain users, access, traffic, equipment, dumpster areas, storage yards, snow clearance, and work-hour constraints.

Commercial fence planning
When to call

You do not need a perfect plan before contacting MJ Fence ME.

Call or text when you can describe the goal, town, rough area, preferred material if you have one, and whether the job is installation, repair, replacement, or gates. A simple first message is enough when it includes the details that affect scope.

  • Town or ZIP.
  • Project type and reason for the fence.
  • Approximate length or area.
  • Gate count or driveway openings.
  • Existing fence or removal needs.
  • Timeline and urgency.
Photos to send

Photos make the first estimate conversation more useful.

Send wide photos first, then close-ups. The best photo set shows the whole yard, corners, access, obstacles, slopes, gate locations, damaged areas, and anything that has to be removed or matched.

The fastest path: stand in each corner of the planned fence area, take wide photos toward the next corner, then add close-ups of gates, damage, slopes, utilities, trees, and existing posts.

Open the full photo guide
Quote quality

Cost factors to discuss before comparing numbers.

Price depends on scope. These are the details most likely to change the conversation.

FactorWhy it mattersWhat to send or mention
Linear footageLonger runs need more material, posts, and labor.Rough measurement, sketch, or property-photo markup.
Material and heightWood, vinyl, chain link, post-and-rail, and privacy styles solve different problems.Preferred look, privacy needs, pets, maintenance expectations.
GatesGates affect posts, hardware, daily use, access, and durability.Gate count, width, swing direction, mower or driveway needs.
Removal or repairOld fence, broken posts, roots, and storm damage can add time and disposal work.Photos of existing fence, post bases, damaged panels, and access.
Ground and accessSlope, ledge, trees, driveways, tight spaces, and wet areas can change installation details.Wide yard photos, slope photos, wooded edges, and access routes.
Common mistakes

Avoid the quote problems that create back-and-forth.

Most confusion comes from missing gates, unclear property lines, unclear removal expectations, or choosing a material before the project goal is clear.

Skipping property-line questions

Know whether you have a survey, pins, neighbor agreement, or an unresolved boundary question before final layout decisions.

Forgetting gate access

Think about trash barrels, mowers, trailers, deliveries, emergency access, pets, and where people naturally walk.

Comparing vague quotes

A useful comparison covers material, height, gates, removal, cleanup, hardware, timeline, and communication—not just a total.

Waiting for perfect measurements

Rough measurements and photos are enough to start. Details can be confirmed after the first scope conversation.

Ready for a cleaner estimate?

Send the project goal, photos, and gate notes.

Call or text (207) 432-2943, email MJFenceME@gmail.com, or use the quote-prep page to assemble the details.

Before you reach out

A few photos can make the first fence quote conversation easier.

Text your town, rough fence length, gate count, timeline, and wide photos of the yard or damaged area. MJ Fence ME is based in Lebanon, ME and serves Southern Maine and nearby southern New Hampshire.

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