Sprinkler System Installation

A sprinkler system built for Utah water

Your lawn needs the right water, in the right spots, at the right time. We design and install in-ground irrigation that does exactly that. No misters drowning the sidewalk. No dry patches by the fence. Just even coverage and a controller that knows when to back off.

The EPA WaterSense program reports that a smart, weather-based controller saves the average home up to 15,000 gallons of water a year. A poorly maintained system, on the other hand, can waste 25,000 gallons. The system itself decides which one you end up with.

We work in Ogden, Layton, South Weber, Willard, and across Weber and Davis counties.

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What you get with our install

Zoned design that fits your yard

Sun zones water differently than shade. Lawn waters differently than shrubs. We map zones around your property, not a generic grid. Drip for beds. Rotors for lawn. Spray for tight spots.

WaterSense smart controllers

Smart controllers pull local weather data and skip watering after storms. They reduce irrigation use by up to 30% and qualify for rebates from Utah Water Savers.

Pressure-regulated heads

High pressure misters waste water. We install pressure-regulated spray bodies and matched-precipitation nozzles so every part of every zone gets the same coverage.

What a system costs

A typical residential install in Northern Utah runs $2,000 to $5,000. The Western US average sits around $3,000, with each additional zone adding about $1,000. Big lots with drip beds and lighting tie-ins cost more. The savings show up on your water bill the first summer.

"Rising temperatures and increased demand will be a cause for concern this summer," said Candice Hasenyager, then-Director of the Utah Division of Water Resources, when Governor Cox issued the April 2025 drought executive order. Efficient irrigation is the single fastest way to cut household water use in this state.

Repairs and seasonal service

We also fix what is broken. Clogged heads, leaks in valve boxes, cracked laterals, controller wiring issues. Add us to your spring start-up and fall blowout schedule and your system will run for 20 years without a major rebuild.

When to install and when to blow out

Plan installs for April through September. Start the controller in April once nighttime temperatures stop dropping below freezing. Blow out between early October and the first week of November, before the first hard freeze. The Slow the Flow weekly watering guide tells you when to dial back during the season.

Pair your install with our sod installation or a new rock and hardscape design and we will set the zones to match before we cover the trenches.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to install sprinklers on a quarter acre?

Plan on $2,000 to $5,000 in Northern Utah. National average is $2,540. Each added zone runs about $1,000. We give a fixed quote before any work starts.

Does a smart controller really save water?

Yes. WaterSense-labeled controllers save an average home up to 15,000 gallons per year and cut irrigation use by up to 30%. They also qualify for Utah Water Savers rebates.

When should I turn my sprinklers on in Utah?

April. Soil is warm enough to charge the system, and overnight freezes are usually past for valley homes. We handle full spring start-ups.

When do I need a sprinkler blowout?

Between early October and early November. The first hard freeze in Northern Utah averages October 7 to 18. Water left in the lines cracks pipes and breaks valves.

How long does an install take?

One to three days for a typical residential yard. Bigger lots with drip lines, multiple controllers, or rock work mixed in can run longer.

Can you upgrade my existing system?

Yes. We swap old controllers for smart ones, add zones, replace broken heads, and retrofit drip on beds. Most upgrades pay back in one or two summers.

Ready for water that
actually hits the lawn?

Call us, text us, or fill out the form. We will be in touch fast.

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