Contractors continue to settle back in — and then some — since the end of the Great Recession, making it another solid year for the green industry. Landscaping companies had a median revenue of $291,000, which is up from $256,000 in 2015 and $217,000 in 2014. Slightly more contractors turned a profit in 2016 (86%) than in 2015 (84%) and 2014 (78%).
Landscape maintenance stayed as the most profitable service offered, and it regained the top spot as the most popular service provided after losing that spot to lawn care last year.
27% of growers sell to landscapers
A lack of quality labor continues to be the top concern in the industry, especially for companies making more than $1 million in revenue. On a 1-10 scale (10 being a major concern), those companies ranked hiring a 7.8, compared to the average ranking from all companies, which was 6.5.
Personal stress, low-ball competitors and high health insurance costs also ranked as major concerns for landscapers. Bad weather fell in the middle of the pack this year as a concern, though this survey was taken before the hurricanes in Texas and Florida.
Two major issues we covered in last year’s State of the Industry were changed. One was a cosmetic chemical ban on lawns in Montgomery County, which was overturned in August. The other was a federal overtime rule that would have made employees making less than $47,476 annually eligible for overtime pay, doubling the current threshold of $23,660.
Landscape companies with $1 million+ in revenue ranked a lack of quality labor as a 7.8 out of 10, with 10 being a major concern.
Explore the October 2017 Issue
Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.
Latest from Greenhouse Management
- Don’t overlook the label
- Hurricane Helene: Florida agricultural production losses top $40M, UF economists estimate
- No shelter!
- Sensaphone releases weatherproof enclosures for WSG30 remote monitoring system, wireless sensors
- Profile Growing Solutions hires regional sales manager
- Cultural controls
- Terra Nova Nurseries shares companion plants for popular 2025 Colors of the Year
- University of Maryland graduate student receives 2024 Carville M. Akehurst Memorial Scholarship