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Fence Repair in Edmond, OK

Fence Repair Built Around the Materials You Already Have

Jointhehoop rebuilds wood, vinyl, chain link, and iron fences across Edmond, matching the original stock board for board and post for post. Free written estimates.

Fence repair in Edmond, OK

Fence Care Notes

Practical tips on keeping wood, vinyl, and chain link fences standing strong through Oklahoma seasons.

Well-maintained fence in Edmond, OK

A Season-by-Season Fence Care Guide for Edmond Yards

A fence in Edmond takes a beating that most homeowners never think about until a post finally leans. Between the summer heat, the spring swelling of the clay soil, and the ice loads that roll through Oklahoma County, a little seasonal attention saves you a real repair bill later. Here is what to watch for through the year, whatever your fence is made of.

Spring: Check the Posts After the Thaw

Spring is when the ground moves most. As the clay soil around Coltrane Rd swells and dries, it heaves posts that sit in a weak footing. Walk your line after the last freeze and push on each post at the top. Any that rock or lean have a footing problem, and that only spreads to the panels beside them. This is the season to catch a shifting post before it pulls a whole section down.

Summer: Watch the Wood and the Gate

Summer sun dries cedar fast, cupping and cracking boards that were flat in April. Look for pickets pulling away from the rail and rails sagging in the middle of a run. Heat also swells and shifts gates, so if yours starts dragging or missing the latch, it is telling you the frame has moved. A quick hinge adjustment now beats a rehang later. If several boards have gone, our wood fence repair crew can match the cedar before the gap widens.

Fall: Clear the Base and Tighten Hardware

Leaves and mulch piled against a fence trap moisture right where wood and steel are most vulnerable. Rake the base clear so the bottom of your pickets and the foot of each chain link post can dry out. Fall is also a good time to run down the line and snug up loose caps, hinges, and latches while the weather is mild. On vinyl, check the routed pockets where rails meet posts, because that is where a brittle winter crack will start.

Winter: Respect the Ice

Ice is the hardest thing an Oklahoma fence faces. A heavy load can bow a chain link top rail or snap a cold vinyl rail at the pocket. There is not much to do mid-storm except stay clear of downed sections that may hide sharp wire or exposed nails. Once it clears, photograph any damage before you move debris in case you file a claim, then get on a repair schedule early before every yard on the block calls at once.

When a Check Turns Into a Repair

Not every wobble means a full replacement. If the posts are sound and only boards, mesh, or a panel are damaged, a targeted repair puts things right for far less. When you spot a problem you would rather hand off, contact us and we will walk the line with you. Call Jointhehoop at (405) 573-3678 for a fast, free written estimate, and we will get your fence back to solid.

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A Materials-First Fence Repair Crew in Edmond

Jointhehoop provides fence repair in Edmond, OK, working with cedar pickets, vinyl panels, chain link mesh, wrought iron scrollwork, aluminum rails, galvanized tension wire, and concrete post footings so the fix matches whatever went up around your property. We are a materials-first crew, which means we read how a fence was built before we touch a tool. A rotted cedar post gets handled differently than a cracked vinyl rail, and a sagging chain link run asks for a different hand than a bent iron gate. That habit shows up along Covell Rd and across the 73025 ZIP, where our repairs tend to outlast the weather that knocked them loose.

Craftsmanship is the whole reason a repair holds. Anyone can screw a new picket over a soft rail and call it done, but the board pops within a season. We chase the failure back to its source. When a wood section leans, the trouble is almost always at the base of the post where clay soil has drawn moisture into the grain for years. We pull that post, set a fresh one in a proper concrete collar, and only then rebuild the panel above it. The section stands straight because the footing under it is right, not because we hid the problem behind new lumber.

The same care carries into vinyl and metal. Vinyl looks low maintenance until an Oklahoma cold snap makes a brittle rail crack at the routed pocket, and the only clean fix is a matched profile from the right manufacturer. Chain link fails at the tension bands and the top rail long before the mesh itself gives out. Iron rusts from the inside of the picket where you cannot see it. We keep cedar, vinyl profiles, galvanized hardware, and primer on the truck so most repairs finish in one visit instead of stringing you along across three.

Homeowners tell us the part they remember is the walk. Before a dollar changes hands, we walk the fence line with you, point at the exact posts and rails that need attention, and hand over a written price with no pressure attached. Neighbors near Coltrane Rd and out toward the 73034 ZIP have sent us down the street to the next yard more than once, which is the kind of word of mouth you cannot buy. The promise is simple: if a repair we made does not hold, we come back and set it right.

  • Matched to your stockWe source cedar, vinyl profiles, and galvanized hardware that fit the fence you already own, so the repair blends in instead of standing out.
  • The promise in writingEvery job carries a written scope and a written price, and if a repair fails we return and correct it at no charge.
  • What homeowners tell usThe feedback we hear most is that we found the real cause, not just the broken board, so the fence stopped failing in the same spot.
  • A cut above the quick fixWe repair from the footing up, which costs a little more effort now and saves you a second call next spring.

Ballpark Numbers for a Fence Fix

Everyone wants a rough figure before they pick up the phone, so here is an honest one for the Edmond area. These are typical ranges, not a quote. What moves the price most is the material, whether the posts are sound or need resetting in a fresh concrete footing, and how many feet of the run are affected. A single cracked panel is quick. A section flattened by an ice storm off Danforth Rd is a bigger day. We put the firm number in writing after a free look.

Board and rail repair$150 to $600Post reset in concrete$175 to $475 eachChain link and gate work$150 to $750
  • Replace cracked cedar or vinyl
  • Re-secure or swap loose rails
Get estimate
  • Dig out the failed post
  • Reset in a concrete footing
Get estimate
  • Restretch mesh and tension
  • Rehang gates and swap hardware
Get estimate

Repairs Our Crew Handles Every Week

Fences fail in a handful of predictable ways, and we see each of them across Edmond most weeks. Here is the work we get called for again and again.

Wood and cedar sections

We replace cracked and cupped cedar pickets, re-secure or swap loose horizontal rails, and blend the new lumber into the existing run so the repair reads as one fence.

Post resets in concrete

One leaning post pulls its neighbors out of plumb. We dig out the failed post, set a new one in a concrete footing below the frost line, and true the line back up.

Vinyl panels and rails

Brittle winter cracks and blown-out routed pockets get a matched vinyl profile, not a mismatched patch, so the fix holds color and shape through the seasons.

Chain link and tension work

We restretch loose mesh, replace bent line posts and rusted top rail, and reset tension bands and bottom wire so the fabric pulls tight and flat again.

Iron and aluminum repair

We grind and treat rust at the picket base, weld cracked joints on wrought iron, and rehang aluminum sections that have worked loose from their brackets.

Gates and hardware

The gate moves every day, so it wears first. We square the frame, replace worn hinges and latches, and adjust the swing so it closes clean and latches on the first try.

Answers Before You Book

How much does fence repair cost in Edmond?
Most repairs land between $150 and $750 depending on the material and how many posts are involved. Storm jobs and long runs cost more. Because the condition of the posts drives so much of the price, the only honest number comes from a free on-site look, which we always put in writing before any work starts.
Can you match my existing fence material?
Yes, and it is the core of how we work. We keep cedar pickets, common vinyl profiles, and galvanized chain link hardware on hand so a repaired section blends into the original run rather than standing out as a patch. For wrought iron we match the picket size and finish before we weld.
Should I repair or replace my fence?
If the posts are still sound and only boards, mesh, panels, or a single section are damaged, a repair is the smart and affordable choice. When posts have rotted along most of the line and several runs are failing at once, a replacement often costs less over time. We give you the straight read either way.
How fast can you get to my property?
Usually within a few days, and often sooner for a small job. After a big Oklahoma storm the schedule fills fast because everyone calls at once, so it helps to reach us early at (405) 573-3678 near the 73025 ZIP.
Why do my fence posts keep leaning?
In Edmond it almost always traces to the clay soil around Covell Rd and Coltrane Rd, which holds water and heaves as it swells and dries. A post set in a shallow or crumbling footing shifts with that movement. We reset the post in a proper concrete collar so the ground can move without taking your fence with it.
Are your estimates really free?
Yes. Every estimate is free and arrives in writing before any work begins, so you know the full price and scope before you commit to anything at all.
Are you licensed and insured?
Yes. We are a licensed and insured local contractor, and we are glad to share our current details whenever you ask. It is your yard, and you deserve to know who is working in it.

The Corners of Edmond We Cover

We keep our jobs close to the shop, which is how we schedule fast and get to you fast. We work Edmond and the nearby stretch of Oklahoma and Logan County, and we know the local streets and soil.

  • Edmond, OK (73003, 73013, 73025, 73034)
  • Arcadia, OK
  • Guthrie, OK
  • Oklahoma City, OK
  • Nichols Hills, OK
  • Deer Creek, OK
  • Jones, OK

Not sure whether your street falls in our range? Call (405) 573-3678 and we will tell you on the spot.

Line Up Your Fence Repair

A leaning post or a gate that will not latch only gets worse, and Oklahoma weather does not wait around. Let us take a look while it is still a simple fix on one section instead of a rebuild of the whole line. Jointhehoop offers free written estimates across Edmond and the surrounding county, and most repairs wrap up in a single visit.

Call (405) 573-3678