Fencing · Easthampton, MA

Fencing in Easthampton, Massachusetts

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Contractors serving Easthampton

Fencing in Easthampton — what to know

Rebates & incentives

Fencing carries no Mass Save or energy rebate because it is not an energy-efficiency measure, so there is nothing to chase or miss either way. What matters in Easthampton is local rule. The zoning bylaw typically caps fences at 6 ft in rear and side yards and lower (often around 4 ft) within the front-yard setback, so confirm the exact figure with the Building Department before ordering panels. Easthampton sits on the Manhan River, Lower Mill Pond, and Nashawannuck Pond, so the Conservation Commission must review any fence within roughly 100 ft of a wetland or bank under the Wetlands Protection Act. Pool-barrier fencing must meet the MA building code: at least 4 ft tall with self-closing, self-latching gates.

Permits in Easthampton

Easthampton generally requires a building or zoning permit for a new fence, and the residential contractor you hire must hold a state Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration. The Building Department handles the application, where you confirm height limits and setbacks from the property line. Set posts on footings reaching about 48 inches below grade to clear the frost line, which matters on the ledge-prone ground near Mount Tom where post holes can hit rock. Pull a recent plot plan or survey before building near a boundary, and call Dig Safe (811) before any digging so underground utilities are marked.

Typical project cost

Western Massachusetts fence pricing runs a bit below the Boston metro, though ledge and rock near Mount Tom can add drilling and footing cost. Expect roughly $25–$45 per linear foot for chain-link, $30–$60 for wood picket or post-and-rail, $40–$75 for cedar privacy or stockade, and $45–$80 for vinyl, all installed. A standard back-yard run of 150 ft in cedar lands around $6,000–$11,000. Pool-barrier aluminum and gates, ledge drilling, and wetland-area work near the Manhan River push the total upward.

About Easthampton homes

Easthampton holds about 16,136 residents across 8,420 housing units in Hampshire County, with a median home age near 62 years. The mix runs from former mill-worker housing and triple-deckers in the village center to mid-century ranches and newer subdivisions out toward Southampton. Many lots sit close to the Manhan River, Lower Mill Pond, and Nashawannuck Pond, which puts a real share of fence work inside wetland buffers. Cedar privacy and picket fences are common in the older neighborhoods, while chain-link, vinyl, and post-and-rail show up on the larger lots and back-yard properties closer to the Westhampton line.

Common questions — Fencing in Easthampton

Do I need a permit to put up a fence in Easthampton?
Yes, Easthampton generally requires a building or zoning permit for a new fence. Apply through the Building Department, where staff confirm your height limit and property-line setbacks before you build.
How tall can my back-yard fence be in Easthampton?
Rear and side-yard fences are typically capped around 6 ft, with a lower limit (often near 4 ft) inside the front-yard setback. Confirm the exact number with the Building Department, since corner lots and sight lines can change it.
My yard backs up to Nashawannuck Pond. Does that affect my fence?
Likely yes. A fence within roughly 100 ft of the pond, the Manhan River, or any wetland bank triggers Conservation Commission review under the Wetlands Protection Act, which adds time before the Building Department issues a permit.
Will I hit ledge digging post holes near Mount Tom?
It is common on the higher ground in that part of Easthampton. Rock can force a switch to drilled or epoxied posts, so have your installer probe the line first, since it affects both schedule and price.
Do I have to call Dig Safe before setting fence posts?
Yes. Massachusetts law requires calling Dig Safe at 811 before any digging so gas, electric, and other underground utilities are located and marked. Reputable Easthampton installers handle this as part of the job.
Is Easthampton a Mass Save town for fence rebates?
Easthampton is in National Grid territory, but fencing is not an energy measure, so no Mass Save or energy rebate applies to a fence regardless of utility. Your only real paperwork is the town fence permit.