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Landscapers & Gardeners · Differdange

Landscapers & Gardeners in Differdange

Gardening in Luxembourg runs hard from March through November, then shifts to winter pruning, hedge work, and terrace maintenance once the grass stops growing. Verified landscapers and gardeners across the Grand Duchy handle fortnightly lawn mowing, seasonal clean-ups, hedge trimming along property lines, tree pruning and removal, and full garden redesigns after an extension or a move. Most households sign a recurring maintenance contract for the warm months; one-off jobs — a neglected plot reset, a storm-damaged tree, a new terrace — are quoted per project. Compare three quotes before committing, and check that green-waste disposal is included in the hourly rate.

Introduction

Are you looking to enhance your outdoor space in Differdange? Whether you need help with garden design or terrace planting, you're in the right place. Many landscapers are available to assist you, often responding within a few days. If you're in nearby communes like Sanem, Kaerjeng, or Pétange, you can also find the same great services.

When to hire

  • Fortnightly lawn care from April to October

    Your grass is growing faster than you can keep up, and a recurring contract would cost less than repeated one-off visits. Landscapers typically plan routes by commune, so signing up locally lowers travel costs.

  • Annual or bi-annual hedge cut

    A hedge over 1.8 m or exceeding 50 linear metres is work for a pro with a long-reach trimmer and a green-waste trailer — and it usually needs timing around nesting season (end of February to mid-August is restricted for major cuts).

  • Storm-damaged or leaning tree

    A split trunk, a large broken branch over a roof, or a tree leaning after heavy wind is not a DIY job — insurers routinely require proof of a certified arborist intervention before paying out on property damage.

  • Moving into a neglected garden

    You've taken over a property where the lawn, hedges, and beds haven't been touched for a season or more. A one-off reset — mowing, cutting back, clearing — puts the garden back to a state you can maintain yourself or hand to a monthly contract.

  • Full redesign after an extension

    Building work has churned up the garden, killed the lawn, and left the old layout out of date. A designer will survey the new footprint, re-plan circulation, and specify planting that works with the renovated façade.

  • Maintenance contract for a rental property

    You let a house and want predictable outdoor upkeep without coordinating with tenants each visit. A monthly or fortnightly contract with a fixed scope and fixed price avoids disputes over what 'tidy garden' means in the lease.

Services covered

  • Lawn mowing and seasonal lawn care
  • Hedge trimming and shaping
  • Tree pruning, felling, and stump removal
  • Garden design and landscaping projects
  • Spring and autumn clean-ups
  • Terrace and patio maintenance
  • Planting — trees, shrubs, perennials, lawns
  • Automatic irrigation system install and servicing
  • Winter gritting and snow clearing (where offered)
  • Green-roof and planted-facade maintenance

How to choose

  • Verify the autorisation d'établissementCommercial gardening in Luxembourg requires an autorisation d'établissement issued by the Ministry of the Economy. Ask for the authorisation number and cross-check on guichet.lu — an informal cash-only operator cannot invoice, cannot insure, and cannot offer you recourse.
  • Confirm insurance — especially for tree workTree felling and climbing work carry real third-party risk. Ask for a current liability (responsabilité civile professionnelle) certificate naming tree work explicitly — not every general gardener is covered for aerial intervention.
  • Clarify green-waste disposalSome quotes include disposal in the hourly rate; others bill it as a separate line item (typically €60–€150 per trailer load, with a SuperDrecksKëscht or commune fee on top). Ask explicitly — it's the single biggest source of unexpected charges on a first invoice.
  • Check the seasonal contract mathsA recurring contract should spell out the number of visits, the duration of each, what's included (mowing, edges, blowing, light weeding) and what isn't (hedges, spring clean-up, fertiliser). A flat monthly price divided over 12 months is fine — but insist on knowing the visit schedule behind it.
  • Ask about herbicide and pesticide practiceLuxembourg has banned glyphosate for non-professional use and restricts professional applications. Reputable landscapers will either hold the required phytosanitaire certification or work glyphosate-free. If a crew casually proposes Roundup on a driveway, that's both illegal for amateurs and a compliance risk for a pro.
  • Insist on a written schedule and scopeEmail or PDF confirmation of each visit window — morning or afternoon, day of the week, what will be done — protects both sides. A good landscaper sends a month-ahead plan in March and an end-of-season summary in November.

Pricing

  • Hourly rate — gardener or landscape crew4070
  • Recurring lawn mowing — per square metre0.30.6
  • Hedge trimming — per linear metre (one-sided)816
  • Tree felling — small to large specimen250900
  • Garden design — small residential plot4001500

Coverage in this commune

18 providers cover Differdange.

Verified providers

18 results

Nearby communes

Frequently asked questions

  • How much does it cost to hire a landscaper?

    Landscaping costs can vary, but you might expect to pay between 300 and 1,500 EUR depending on the project size and complexity. Simple jobs like planting can be less, while full garden designs will be on the higher end.

  • Do you cover nearby areas as well?

    Yes, we cover not just Differdange but also nearby communes like Sanem, Kaerjeng, and Pétange. You can find skilled landscapers in all these areas.

  • Does my gardener need an autorisation d'établissement?

    Yes, if they operate commercially in Luxembourg. The autorisation d'établissement is issued by the Ministry of the Economy and is verifiable on guichet.lu. Without it, the operator cannot invoice, cannot hold professional liability insurance, and you have no formal recourse if something goes wrong.

  • Is glyphosate still legal in Luxembourg?

    Glyphosate is banned for non-professional (amateur) use in Luxembourg, and professional use is tightly restricted and subject to certification by the Administration de la nature et des forêts. Most reputable landscapers now work glyphosate-free on residential jobs, using mechanical weeding, mulching, or hot-water treatment instead.

  • Do landscapers maintain green roofs?

    Some do — green-roof maintenance is a specialist subset covering sedum and extensive systems on flat roofs. Typical upkeep is one or two visits a year for weeding, drain checks, and light irrigation. Ask specifically for a green-roof reference; not every general landscaper handles them.

  • Is green-waste disposal included in the price?

    It depends on the contract. Some landscapers include disposal in the hourly rate up to a set volume; others bill it as a line item (typically €60–€150 per trailer, plus any commune or SuperDrecksKëscht fee). Always ask before signing — it's the single biggest source of unexpected charges on a first invoice.

  • How much does hedge trimming cost?

    Typical pricing sits between €8 and €16 per linear metre, one-sided, for hedges up to 2 m. Double-sided cuts, taller hedges, or species like thuja that produce heavy waste push the upper end. Green-waste disposal is often quoted separately at €60–€150 per trailer load.

  • What's a fair hourly rate for a gardener in Luxembourg?

    Expect €40 to €70 per hour for a single gardener in 2026, excluding VAT. A two-person crew typically runs €70 to €130 per hour. Rates below €35 without an invoice signal undeclared work; rates above €80 should be justified by specialist equipment, arboriculture certification, or protected-site work.

  • How do I pick a reliable landscaper?

    Verify the autorisation d'établissement on guichet.lu, ask for a current insurance certificate, and get three itemised quotes that separate labour, machinery, green-waste disposal, and VAT. A landscaper who sends a visit schedule by email before the first cut is a good sign; one who quotes only a round cash figure is not.

  • What insurance should a landscaper hold?

    At minimum, a current responsabilité civile professionnelle certificate covering ground-level gardening. For tree work, the certificate should explicitly include aerial intervention (élagage). Ask for a copy — not every general gardener is insured for climbing or felling, and damage caused by uninsured work falls back on you.

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