Construction Site Fencing Rental in Chandler
Construction site fencing rental in Chandler runs $1.50–$3.00 per linear foot per month, with most sites totaling $800–$3,000 monthly — delivery, professional install, and removal quoted flat at $100–$500. We fence commercial and residential job sites across Chandler, from Price Road Corridor pads to infill teardowns in older neighborhoods, usually within the week.
Built for Chandler’s construction market
Chandler’s construction economy is dominated by commercial and industrial work, and it shows in the fencing jobs. The Price Road Corridor — anchored by Intel’s five-fab Ocotillo campus at the south end, with NXP, PayPal, and Wells Fargo up the road — generates a constant cycle of tenant improvements, utility trenching, parking expansions, and contractor laydown yards. The Chandler Airpark employment area keeps adding flex industrial and hangar projects along Germann, Queen Creek, and Cooper. Add road work along Arizona Avenue and the Loop 202 frontage, and there’s rarely a quiet month.
Residentially, Chandler is close to built out, so the work is infill: teardown-rebuilds, additions, garage conversions, and a steady stream of pool builds (those have their own rules — see temporary pool fencing). Infill sites sit tight against occupied homes, which changes the fencing calculus: neighbors, HOAs, and code enforcement all see your perimeter every day.
We supply both major fence types and will tell you which your site actually needs:
- Driven-post chain link — posts driven into soil, fabric stretched between. Cheapest per foot on long runs, best wind resistance, right choice for multi-month dirt sites.
- Freestanding panels — 12-ft chain link panels on weighted bases. No ground penetration, fast to reconfigure around pours and deliveries. Right choice for pavement, finished surfaces, and short jobs. Full details on the chain link panels page.
Dust control: how fencing fits Rule 310
If your site disturbs a tenth of an acre or more in Maricopa County, you need a Rule 310 dust control permit and an approved dust control plan. Fencing with windscreen is one of the cheapest visible control measures in that plan. Mesh screening on the perimeter cuts wind-blown dust crossing the property line and reduces track-out visibility — and on the Chandler flats, where a June haboob can drop visibility to nothing in minutes, upwind screening earns its keep.
Screening adds $0.50–$1.00 per linear foot per month on top of the fence rate. Many GCs screen only the upwind (typically southwest-facing) runs and the runs facing streets or neighbors. We’ll price both options. More on mesh options at privacy screen and windscreen.
One honest caveat: windscreen adds wind load. A fully screened fence line is a sail, so screened runs get extra ballast and bracing — included in our install, not an upsell later.
Security that actually deters
Job site theft in the Valley tracks copper prices and tool resale value, and an unfenced site is an invitation. What works, in rough order of value per dollar:
- A complete perimeter with no gaps. Sounds obvious; most burgled sites had a gap.
- Locked, framed gates — vehicle gates wide enough for your concrete trucks (we size them to your truck list), pedestrian gates that latch. Gates run $50–$150 per rental.
- Windscreen so opportunists can’t inventory your site from the street.
- Tight laydown fencing — a second small enclosure around high-value materials inside the main perimeter costs a few hundred a month and concentrates protection where the value is.
We don’t sell cameras or guards, and we won’t pretend fence stops a determined professional. It stops opportunists, documents due diligence for your insurer, and keeps kids out of your excavation — which is the liability that actually ends companies.
Monsoon-ready installs
From mid-June through September, outflow winds ahead of Chandler-area storms routinely hit 50–60 mph. Our standard install spec accounts for it: sandbag ballast on every freestanding base, perpendicular bracing panels on runs over 100 feet, and reduced screening on exposed lines when the layout allows. If a storm does knock a section down mid-rental, tell us — resetting fence is part of the service, and a downed fence line is a liability you don’t want to leave overnight.
Gate planning: the detail that saves the most grief
More mid-project fence changes trace back to gates than to everything else combined, so we settle gate placement at quote time. The checklist we run with every GC:
- Vehicle gates sized to the actual truck list. A concrete pump, a lowboy delivering an excavator, and a daily crew truck have very different turning radii. Tell us the biggest thing entering the site and we size and place the gate for it — typically 12–24 ft openings.
- Pedestrian gates near the trailer and parking, self-latching, so crews don’t leave the vehicle gate standing open (the number-one gap in otherwise secure sites).
- A second access point on long perimeters. On 800-ft-plus lines, one gate at the wrong corner adds real walking and real forklift time every day for months. A second gate costs $50–$150 per rental; do the math on labor.
- Fire access. On occupied-adjacent and commercial sites, keep emergency access in mind and on the site plan — inspectors ask.
Gates run $50–$150 each per rental, swing or slide, with locks and hardware included in the install.
What a quote looks like
Send footage (or a site plan — even a marked-up aerial), dates, gate needs, and the address. You’ll get an itemized number: fence line, gates, screening if any, and one flat delivery/install/removal figure. Typical Chandler examples:
| Site | Scope | Typical total |
|---|---|---|
| Infill teardown-rebuild | 300 ft panels, 1 gate, 6 months | $450–$900/mo + install |
| Commercial pad, Airpark | 900 ft driven post, 2 gates, screened street runs, 10 months | $1,500–$2,600/mo + install |
| Laydown yard, Price Corridor | 600 ft driven post, full screen, 1 vehicle gate, 12 months | $1,100–$2,100/mo + install |
Month-to-month extensions continue at the same rate when schedules slip. When the job closes out, we pull the fence on your call and billing stops — the removal date is in the contract, not at our convenience.
Full rate tables are on the pricing page. Working outside Chandler proper? We cover Ahwatukee, Sun Lakes, and homebuilder work down in Maricopa.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does construction site fencing cost in Chandler?
Driven-post chain link runs $1.50–$3.00 per linear foot per month, and most Chandler construction sites total $800–$3,000 a month depending on perimeter length. Delivery, install, and removal add a flat $100–$500. Windscreen for dust control adds $0.50–$1.00 per foot per month.
Does my Chandler job site legally require perimeter fencing?
Arizona doesn't mandate fencing on every construction site, but liability, theft, OSHA exposure, and city right-of-way rules make it standard on virtually all commercial work — and if your site has an excavation, an open trench, or a pool shell holding water, barriers stop being optional. Many GCs' insurance carriers and project owners require fenced perimeters regardless.
Can you fence a site where we can't drive posts?
Yes. Freestanding 12-ft panels on sandbag-weighted bases handle parking lots, finished hardscape, and sites with shallow utilities. They cost slightly more per foot than driven-post fence but install and reconfigure faster.
How does fencing fit into a Rule 310 dust control permit?
Maricopa County Rule 310 requires an approved dust control plan on sites disturbing a tenth of an acre or more. Perimeter windscreen doesn't replace water application, but it reduces wind-blown dust leaving the property line and is a visible, cheap control measure inspectors respond well to. We can screen the full perimeter or just the upwind runs.
How fast can you fence a new job site?
Same-week is standard in Chandler; small perimeters often go up in 1–3 business days from quote approval. Give us the site plan when you request the quote and gate locations are settled before the crew rolls.