
When repair no longer pays, we remove and haul away your old fence and build a new, weather-ready one — often in just 2 to 4 days. A clean upgrade in curb appeal, security, and value.
A fence rarely fails all at once — it tells you. The clearest signs you need a full fence replacement rather than another patch are widespread rot at the base, multiple leaning sections, several broken or missing boards, wobbly posts you can rock by hand, and simple age — a wood fence past about 15 years in our wet climate is usually near the end. When the failures are spread along the whole line instead of in one spot, repairs stop being economical because new problems keep appearing around the fixes. Talk it through with Beaverton Fence Pro or see all Beaverton fencing services.
We'd rather fix your fence than oversell you. Here's how the math works.
Our rule of thumb on a full tear-out is the 30% rule: if more than 30% of the posts are rotted or failing, replacement beats repair on both cost and labor, because you'd otherwise be paying to work around posts that will fail soon anyway. If the damage is contained — a section here, a gate there — a targeted fence repair is the smarter spend, and we'll tell you so. After a quick on-site look we give you a straight answer either way; there's no upside for us in pushing a replacement you don't need.
Replacement is more than building new — it's clearing the old out of the way first.
We pull the old posts and panels — including stubborn concrete footings — and clear the line so we can build the new fence on solid, properly set posts.
All the old fencing leaves with us and is disposed of properly. Removal and disposal are a real line item, and we quote it up front so there are no surprises.
We leave your yard clean — debris cleared and the work area tidied — not a mess of old boards and broken concrete for you to deal with.

Replacement is the perfect moment to rethink the fence, not just rebuild the same one. Tired of staining wood? Switch to no-maintenance vinyl. Want a richer look? Move to cedar. After a decorative, rust-proof option? Go aluminum. We help you weigh the trade-offs so the new fence fits how you actually live now.
Call Beaverton Fence Pro for a free replacement estimate — removal, haul-away, and new build. We answer 24/7 across Beaverton and Washington County.
Tear out, rebuild on properly set posts, done in days — not weeks.
A typical residential replacement runs 2 to 4 days depending on length and material — concrete cure time is built into the schedule.
Replacement cost has two halves: the removal and disposal of the old fence, and the new build — driven by the material you choose, the height, the length, the terrain, and the number of gates. Because tear-out and haul-away are real work, a replacement costs more than a from-scratch install on bare ground, and we itemize both so you can see exactly where the budget goes. No fixed-price guessing. Serving the south side — check fencing in South Beaverton.
Knowing when to stop repairing is the first part. A fence sends clear signals as it reaches the end — widespread rot along the base rather than in one spot, several sections leaning at once, multiple broken or missing boards, posts you can rock by hand, and plain age, since a wood fence past about fifteen years in our wet climate is usually living on borrowed time. The cleanest way to judge it is the 30% rule: once more than 30% of the posts are rotted or failing, replacement beats repair on both cost and labor, because patching means paying to work around posts that will fail soon anyway. When the failures are spread along the whole line instead of contained, a fresh build is the more economical move, not the more expensive one.
The part homeowners underestimate is getting the old fence out. We pull every post, panel, and footing — including the stubborn concrete collars that don't want to leave the ground — and clear the line completely so the new fence can be set on fresh, properly placed posts rather than squeezed in around old debris. All of that material leaves with us and is disposed of properly, and the yard is left tidy rather than stacked with broken boards and busted concrete for you to deal with. Because tear-out, hauling, and disposal take genuine labor and dump fees, we quote them as their own line item up front. It's also why a replacement costs more than building on bare ground, and being honest about that line keeps the estimate from holding any surprises.
Starting over is the natural time to rethink the fence instead of rebuilding the exact one that just failed. If staining wood every couple of years wore you out, low-maintenance vinyl removes that chore; if you want a warmer look, cedar delivers it; if you're after a decorative, rust-proof boundary, aluminum fits; and chain-link remains the budget-minded workhorse. Whatever material you land on, the new build is set up to outlast the old one — ground-rated or steel posts seated in concrete footings over a gravel drainage base, the wet-ground discipline that stops the next fence from rotting at grade the way this one did. Before anything goes in, we confirm your property boundary and check Beaverton and Washington County setback rules, so the fence sits legally on your side of the line; if the old one strayed, replacement is the time to correct it. A typical residential job runs two to four days, with concrete cure time built into the schedule rather than rushed.
Straight answers — no clicking around.
Removal, haul-away, and a brand-new weather-ready fence — from a licensed Beaverton fence company. Open 24/7.
(855) 598-3288