How to estimate a ranch rail fence (cost per linear foot)

Ranch rail (post-and-rail) covers long perimeters cheaply, so the estimate is dominated by post and rail counts over big footages — small per-foot errors multiply fast across a property line.

Installed range

$10–$30/ft

Typical height

4 ft

Post spacing

8 ft o.c.

The per-linear-foot formula

Posts: rails typically span 8 ft, so Posts = ceil(LF ÷ 8) + 1, plus corners and gates. Line posts are mortised or drilled for the rails.

Rails: multiply sections by rails-per-run (2-rail or 3-rail are standard). Rails = sections × rails-per-run, ordered in 8-ft (or 16-ft split) lengths.

For vinyl or steel ranch rail, the same section math applies but rails slot into routed posts instead of being nailed.

  • Posts = ceil(LF ÷ 8) + 1 + corners + gates
  • Rails = sections × (2 or 3)
  • Choose material: wood, vinyl, or steel (same geometry)

Material checklist

Long runs make freight and waste factor matter — order rails in efficient lengths.

  • Posts (mortised, drilled, or routed)
  • Rails (2 or 3 per run)
  • Concrete for end, corner, and gate posts
  • Gate hardware
  • Optional welded-wire or mesh backing for animal containment

Labor considerations

Ranch rail goes up fast per foot but the footages are large, so crew-days are driven by total length and terrain. Machine-augering posts is the norm.

Adding wire mesh backing (for dogs or livestock) is a separate scope that roughly doubles the per-foot labor.

  • Machine augering vs hand-digging
  • Long-run layout and string-lining over uneven ground
  • Optional mesh backing install

What moves the price

Material (wood vs vinyl vs steel), number of rails, and whether mesh backing is added are the main drivers. Terrain and total footage set the labor.

ranch rail fence FAQ

How much does a ranch rail fence cost per linear foot?
Post-and-rail fencing typically runs $10–$30 per linear foot installed depending on material (wood, vinyl, or steel) and the number of rails. Adding wire mesh backing increases both material and labor.
How many rails should a ranch fence have?
Two-rail and three-rail are both common; three-rail is standard for livestock containment and a more finished look, two-rail for simple property delineation.