(855) 598-3288 — Beaverton's 24/7 Fence Company
Open 24/7 Beaverton, OR & Washington County Licensed & Insured (855) 598-3288
fence repair Beaverton
Fence Repair

Fence Repair in Beaverton, OR

Leaning posts, rotted boards, sagging gates, or storm-worn sections — we fix all of it, on any fence type. Fast on-site assessment and 24/7 scheduling across Beaverton and Washington County.

Same-day assessment available Licensed, bonded & insured All fence types repaired
Open 24/7Fast scheduling & same-day assessment
Licensed & InsuredActive Oregon CCB, bonded & insured
Beaverton + Washington CountyLocal crews across the metro

Why fences fail in Beaverton

Most fence failures here trace back to one thing: water. Beaverton's wet ground attacks wood right where it meets the soil, so posts rot at grade and the fence starts to lean long before the boards above look bad. Add saturated soil that shifts and heaves, plus the occasional Pacific Northwest windstorm, and you get the classic local repair list — leaning posts, rotted boards, sagging gates, and broken rails. If your fence took a hit in a storm and a section is down now, our emergency storm-damage fence repair handles urgent securing 24/7; for everything else, we come out, assess, and fix it. Call Beaverton Fence Pro or see all Beaverton fencing services.

Common Repairs

The repairs we handle most

Whatever's wrong with your fence, we've fixed it — the right way, so it lasts.

Leaning posts

Caused by rot at grade or shifting ground. We straighten and re-concrete the post where it's sound, or pull and replace it — with proper drainage so it stays put.

Rotted boards & pickets

Moisture wicks up and rots boards from the bottom. We remove the damaged pieces and match-replace them without disturbing the sound neighbors on either side.

Sagging gates

Usually loose fasteners or a rotting hinge post. We re-set the hinges, add an anti-sag cable kit, and reinforce or replace the hinge post so the gate swings square again.

We also fix broken and cracked rails, re-tension loose chain-link fabric, replace damaged vinyl panels, and re-secure aluminum sections. If the gate is the main problem, our fence gate repair and installation service goes deeper on hardware and hinge-post work.

What we repair

We repair every common fence material in Beaverton, not just wood:

  • Wood & cedar — post resets, board and picket replacement, rail repair, hardware.
  • Vinyl / PVC — cracked or damaged panel replacement and post reinforcement.
  • Chain-link — re-tensioning sagging fabric, post resets, mended rails and gates.
  • Aluminum & ornamental — re-securing sections, post and gate fixes.

If matching the exact original material is part of the job, we source the closest match so the repair blends in rather than standing out.

Repair vs Replace

The honest 20% rule

Sometimes a repair is throwing good money after bad — here's how we decide.

Should you repair or replace? Our rule of thumb is simple and honest: if more than 20% of the posts are rotted or leaning, a full replacement usually beats piecemeal repair on both cost and longevity, because new failures will keep cropping up around the patches. When the damage is localized — a few boards, one or two posts, a tired gate — repair is absolutely the smart, economical call, and that's most of what we do.

We won't upsell you into a new fence you don't need. After the inspection we'll tell you straight which way the math points. If replacement is genuinely the better value, see our fence replacement service; if repair makes sense, we get it scheduled fast.

Got a leaning, broken, or sagging fence?

Call Beaverton Fence Pro for a fast assessment. We answer 24/7 and repair fences across Beaverton and Washington County.

(855) 598-3288

reinforced fence post reset drainage repair

Our repair process & preventing repeat damage

We start every job with an on-site inspection to scope the true extent of the damage — rot often spreads further than it looks. Then we fix it with the same drainage and reinforcement discipline we use on new builds: posts reset in concrete over a gravel base so water drains away, hardware tightened or upgraded, and exposed wood sealed where it helps. The goal isn't just to make it stand up today — it's to keep the same failure from coming back next winter.

  • On-site inspection to scope real damage extent
  • Proper drainage on every post reset
  • Reinforced fixes so problems don't recur
  • Section-only repairs when that's all you need

Cost factors

Fence repair cost depends on the extent of the damage, the material, and the number of posts or sections involved — a single sagging gate is a quick fix, while several rotted posts is a bigger job. We assess on site and quote it honestly so you know exactly what you're paying for, with no fixed-price guesswork. Serving the central metro — check fencing in Central Beaverton.

A closer look at the repairs we do and how we make them hold

Most fence trouble in Beaverton starts at the ground line. Posts spend the winter sitting in saturated soil, and wood rots fastest right where it meets the dirt — so a fence can look fine up top while the post that holds it is already soft at the base. Once that footing weakens, the whole section starts to lean, and freeze-thaw and shifting ground only speed it along. Wind finishes the job, catching a fence that's already compromised and pushing it over. Knowing where the failure actually begins is what lets us fix the cause instead of just propping up the symptom.

Each repair has a right way to do it

A leaning post gets handled one of two ways. If the post itself is still sound and only the footing failed, we straighten it back to plumb and re-concrete it over a drainage base. If the post has rotted through at grade, straightening it is pointless — we pull it and set a fresh ground-rated or steel post so the fix actually lasts. Rotted boards and pickets come off individually and we match-replace them, sourcing the closest board profile so the repair blends into the run rather than standing out. A sagging gate is almost always a hinge-side problem: we re-set the hinges, add an anti-sag cable kit that pulls the lower latch corner back up, and reinforce or replace the hinge post if it's the thing giving way, so the gate swings square and latches on its own again. Broken and cracked rails get spliced or swapped out where they meet the posts. The principle is the same across all of them — address what failed, not just what's visible.

We fix every common material, and we'll tell you when to stop fixing

This isn't a wood-only service. We reset and rebuild wood and cedar fences, replace cracked vinyl and PVC panels, re-tension sagging chain-link fabric and mend its rails and gates, and re-secure loose aluminum and ornamental sections. What stays constant is the discipline: posts reset in concrete over gravel so water drains away instead of pooling, hardware tightened or upgraded, and exposed wood sealed where it helps — the same approach that keeps the same post from rotting out again next winter. There's also a point where repair stops making sense. Our rule of thumb is that once more than about 20% of the posts are rotted or leaning, you're patching around failures that will keep cropping up, and a full fence replacement becomes the better value. Below that line, repair is almost always the smart, economical call. Because fences fail on their own schedule and storms don't wait for business hours, we answer and schedule around the clock, with same-day assessment available across Beaverton and Washington County.

Quick Answers

Fence repair FAQs

Straight answers — no clicking around.

Can you match my existing fence boards and color?
In most cases, yes. We source the closest available board profile and, where the fence is stained or weathered, blend the repair so it doesn't stand out. On older fences a brand-new board will look fresher at first but weathers in over a season or two to match the rest.
How long does a typical fence repair take?
Many common repairs — a sagging gate, a few rotted boards, one leaning post — are done in a single visit. Larger jobs with multiple posts can take longer, partly because concrete footings need time to set before the fence carries full load. We'll give you a clear timeline after the on-site assessment.
Do you reinforce posts so the problem doesn't come back?
Yes — that's the whole point of doing it right. We reset posts in concrete over a gravel drainage base so water moves away instead of pooling at the base, and we use ground-contact-rated or steel posts where appropriate. Addressing the drainage is what stops the same post from rotting and leaning again.
Can you repair just a section instead of the whole fence?
Absolutely. If the rest of the fence is sound, repairing only the failing section is the most economical option and we're happy to do it. We'll only recommend a larger replacement if the damage is widespread enough that patching no longer makes financial sense.

Need fence repair in Beaverton? Call now

Fast assessment, honest repair-or-replace advice, and a fix that lasts. Open 24/7.

(855) 598-3288
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