Hear from Our Customers
You stop finding brown patches in your yard three days after you thought everything was fine. Your water bill doesn’t spike because a broken head has been spraying your driveway for two weeks straight.
Your controller actually adjusts for the season instead of running the same schedule it’s been on since 2019. Zones turn on when they should, run as long as they need to, and shut off without flooding your flower beds.
When Florida’s dry season hits, you’re not scrambling to figure out why half your lawn is dying. Your system’s already dialed in. You’re not calling for emergency repairs during the hottest week of the year because someone checked everything before it mattered.
Regular irrigation maintenance means fewer surprises, lower water bills, and a landscape that stays green without you babysitting a system that should be automatic.
We’ve been handling irrigation systems across Palm Beach County long enough to know what breaks, when it breaks, and how to fix it before it becomes your problem. We work in Haverhill, West Palm Beach, Boca Raton, Jupiter, and Boynton Beach.
We’re licensed, insured, and we’ve seen every type of system failure Florida weather can cause. Sandy soil, summer storms, year-round heat—it all takes a toll on sprinkler systems, and we know how to keep them running through it.
You’re not getting a crew that learned irrigation last month. You’re getting techs who understand South Florida Water Management District regulations, know how to program controllers for Florida’s climate, and can spot a failing valve before it floods your yard.
We start by running every zone and watching what happens. Not just turning it on from the controller—actually walking the property and checking each head, each valve, each section of your system.
We’re looking for heads that aren’t popping up, zones with low pressure, overspray hitting your house or driveway, and leaks you wouldn’t notice until your water bill arrives. We adjust heads that have shifted, clear any clogs, and test your backflow to make sure it’s working right.
Then we check your controller. Is it programmed for the current season? Does it match Florida’s watering restrictions? Are the rain and moisture sensors actually connected and working, or just sitting there doing nothing?
If something needs repair—a cracked head, a leaking valve, a wire that’s shorting out—we’ll tell you what it is, what it costs, and what happens if you wait. Most maintenance visits catch small problems before they turn into expensive ones. That’s the point.
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Every maintenance visit includes a full system inspection—every zone, every head, every valve. We test water pressure, check for leaks, adjust spray patterns, and make sure your coverage is even across the entire property.
We clean or replace clogged nozzles, straighten heads that have been hit by mowers or shifted by settling, and verify that your backflow preventer is functioning properly. Your controller gets checked and reprogrammed if needed, and we’ll update your watering schedule based on the season and current Palm Beach County water restrictions.
In Haverhill and throughout South Florida, irrigation systems take a beating. Summer storms knock heads out of alignment. Sand and debris clog nozzles. Valves stick or start leaking. Regular maintenance catches this stuff during a scheduled visit instead of when your landscape is already suffering.
Most properties benefit from quarterly maintenance—about every three months. That keeps your system compliant with Florida regulations, prevents most major repairs, and ensures your landscape gets the water it needs without waste. If we find something that needs repair during maintenance, you’ll know exactly what it is and what it costs before any work happens.
Quarterly maintenance works for most residential and commercial properties in Haverhill—that’s about every three months. Florida’s year-round growing season and weather conditions put constant stress on irrigation systems, so checking everything four times a year catches problems early.
If your property has a larger system, older equipment, or you’ve had recurring issues, you might benefit from more frequent inspections. Smaller residential systems with newer components can sometimes stretch to twice a year, but you’re risking more expensive repairs by waiting that long.
The goal is catching a $15 sprinkler head before it becomes a $300 valve replacement or a $500 water bill. Quarterly visits do that. Waiting until something breaks costs more every time.
Most maintenance visits run between $85 and $150 depending on your system size and what’s included. A basic inspection and adjustment for a standard residential system typically falls around $85 per visit. Larger properties or commercial systems cost more because there’s more ground to cover and more zones to check.
That’s just for maintenance—the inspection, adjustments, cleaning, and programming. If we find something that needs repair during the visit, that’s separate. A broken sprinkler head might add $15 to $30. A valve replacement could be $150 to $300. You’ll know the cost before we do the work.
Some companies offer annual maintenance contracts that include multiple visits at a discounted rate. Either way, regular maintenance costs less than emergency repairs, and it definitely costs less than replacing dead landscaping because your system failed during a dry spell.
Yes, if it’s something straightforward like a broken head, a clogged nozzle, or a misaligned spray pattern. We carry common parts and can handle most minor repairs on the spot during a maintenance visit.
For bigger issues—a failing valve, a major leak, wiring problems, or controller replacement—we’ll diagnose it during maintenance and give you a clear estimate for the repair. Most of the time we can schedule that work for the same day or within a few days, depending on parts availability and your schedule.
The advantage of catching problems during regular maintenance is that you’re dealing with them on your timeline, not in the middle of an emergency when your lawn is dying and you need someone out immediately. Scheduled repairs cost less than emergency calls, and you have time to plan for the expense instead of getting hit with an unexpected bill.
If your system seems fine, that’s exactly when you want maintenance. Most irrigation problems don’t announce themselves until they’ve already cost you money or damaged your landscape.
A small leak in a valve box can waste thousands of gallons before you notice. A head that’s slightly out of alignment creates dry spots that take weeks to show up. A controller that’s running an outdated schedule might be watering too much or too little, and your grass adjusts slowly until it doesn’t.
Regular maintenance catches these things while they’re still small. A tech walking your property will spot a head that’s starting to stick, a zone with dropping pressure, or a valve that’s not closing completely. Fixing that during a scheduled visit costs a fraction of what you’d pay for an emergency repair after the problem gets worse.
Most system failures don’t happen suddenly—they develop over time. Maintenance finds them before they matter.
Yes. Part of every maintenance visit includes checking your controller settings against current South Florida Water Management District regulations and local Palm Beach County restrictions. We’ll reprogram your system if needed to make sure you’re watering on the right days, at the right times, and for the right duration.
Florida’s water restrictions are in effect through July 2026, and new regulations are coming after that. Violating these restrictions can result in fines, and repeat violations can get expensive. Your irrigation system needs to be programmed correctly to stay compliant.
We also check that your rain sensor and soil moisture sensor (if you have one) are actually working. A lot of systems have sensors that were installed but never connected properly, or they’ve failed and nobody noticed. If your system is running during a rainstorm, that’s a compliance problem and a waste of money. Maintenance fixes that.
We’ll walk you through exactly what’s wrong, why it’s a problem, what it costs to fix, and what happens if you don’t fix it. No pressure, no upselling—just clear information so you can make the right call for your property.
If it’s something that needs immediate attention—like a major leak that’s flooding your yard or wasting water—we’ll tell you that. If it’s something you can schedule for later, we’ll tell you that too. Most problems we find during maintenance aren’t emergencies, but they will become more expensive if you wait.
We’ll give you a written estimate before doing any repair work beyond basic maintenance. If you want to move forward, we can usually handle it the same day or schedule it within a few days. If you need time to think about it or get another opinion, that’s fine too. The maintenance visit already gave you the diagnostic information—you’re not starting from scratch if you call someone else.
Other Services we provide in Haverhill