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How to Use Landscaping to Create More Privacy at Home

Privacy doesn't require a 10-foot wall or blackout curtains over every window. Most of the time it comes down to picking the right plants, structures, and placement, and doing it in roughly the right order. Get the order wrong, and the yard ends up pretty in photos, but useless for the window that's actually bothering you.

What Are You Actually Trying to Block?

Walk the yard at a few different times of day before you plant anything. Notice where the exposure is really coming from. A neighbor's kitchen window looking into your patio is not the same problem as cars slowing down in front of your porch during the school run. Sometimes it's one tree, placed right. Sometimes it's a hedge running the whole property line. Make sure you're addressing the right issue.

Evergreens Do Most of the Heavy Lifting

Deciduous shrubs go bare for months, usually right when you're spending more time indoors and want the privacy most. Evergreens skip that problem. Choose arborvitae, holly, boxwood, or cypress, depending on what does well where you live.

Spacing is where people get it wrong. Plant too tight, and you're dealing with disease and stunted growth for years. Too far apart, and there's a visible gap for a decade before it fills in.

Height is a separate call from spacing, and it's easy to conflate the two. A second-story window from next door needs real height to block. A patio screened from the sidewalk usually doesn't.

A Fence Still Earns Its Keep

Plants take years to become useful. A fence solves that immediately, while everything else grows in behind it. Wood, vinyl, or composite fencing each has its own upkeep and cost. Most cities cap fence height toward the front of a lot, and backyards usually get more room to work with than the street-facing side. Run vines along a fence, or plant a narrow bed in front of it, and it starts to feel more intentional.

Before You Dig, Make a Call

Local rules can shape more of your outdoor plans than you might expect. Fence height limits, tree ordinances, permit requirements, and rules about building near property lines or utility areas can all vary by city, and sometimes even by neighborhood or lot. Before you plant, build, or install anything permanent, it's worth making a quick call to the city or local office. A few minutes of checking can help you avoid the frustration of changing or removing something later.

Most of the time, this isn't a weekend project. Give it two or three years before the planting is doing what you actually wanted from it, with the fence and whatever's already there covering the gap until it catches up. Start with whatever's bothering you most.

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