Landscaping Services Glossary of Terms

The terminology used across the landscaping industry spans design, installation, maintenance, ecology, and contract administration — making a shared vocabulary essential for property owners, procurement officers, and service providers alike. This glossary defines the core terms encountered when evaluating, hiring, or managing landscaping services at residential, commercial, and municipal scales. Definitions draw on classifications recognized by the National Association of Landscape Professionals (NALP) and the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA). Understanding these terms reduces miscommunication in scope-of-work documents, contract negotiations, and service evaluations.


Definition and scope

A landscaping services glossary covers the working vocabulary of exterior land management — from the physical components of a landscape to the professional designations, service categories, and contractual terms used to describe and procure work. The scope runs from basic lawn care through engineered site grading, ecological planting design, and long-term maintenance agreements.

The landscaping industry does not operate under a single federal definitional standard. NALP publishes training and certification curricula that standardize terminology across member firms. ASLA governs the professional practice of landscape architecture and maintains its own technical vocabulary rooted in site design and land planning. At the state level, contractor licensing boards — which exist in 46 states according to the Contractor Licensing Reference Guide maintained by NALP — define scope-of-work categories that determine which services require a licensed contractor versus a general laborer.

For a broader orientation to how these terms fit together in practice, see Types of Landscaping Services Explained.


How it works

Landscaping terminology is structured around three foundational classification axes:

  1. Material type — whether the work involves living plant material (softscape) or non-living constructed elements (hardscape)
  2. Service phase — whether the work is design, installation, or maintenance
  3. Site context — whether the project is residential, commercial, municipal, or HOA-governed

Core Term Definitions

Softscape — All living, horticultural elements of a landscape: turf, ornamental plants, trees, shrubs, groundcovers, and native plantings. Softscape services include planting, sodding, seeding, and ongoing horticultural maintenance.

Hardscape — Constructed, non-living features integrated into an outdoor space: patios, retaining walls, walkways, driveways, edging, and pergolas. Hardscape services require different licensing in most states than softscape work, often falling under general contractor or masonry categories.

Hardscape vs. Softscape — Key Contrast: Hardscape elements are capital improvements with depreciation schedules applicable under IRS Publication 946 guidelines; softscape elements are typically treated as operating maintenance expenses. This distinction affects budgeting and tax treatment for commercial property managers.

Grading — The reshaping of land surface contours to direct water flow, prevent pooling, or prepare a site for construction. Grading work above a threshold disturbed area — typically 1 acre under EPA NPDES Construction General Permit requirements — triggers stormwater management obligations.

Erosion Control — Temporary or permanent measures (silt fencing, hydroseeding, bioswales, riprap) applied to stabilize disturbed soil. Covered in depth at Erosion Control and Grading Services.

Mulching — Application of organic or inorganic ground-covering material around plants to retain soil moisture, moderate temperature, and suppress weed germination. The recommended application depth per the University of Florida IFAS Extension is 2–3 inches for organic mulch; deeper application can cause crown rot.

Integrated Pest Management (IPM) — A structured, evidence-based approach to pest and weed control that prioritizes biological, cultural, and mechanical controls before chemical intervention. Defined by the EPA's IPM program framework.

Scope of Work (SOW) — A contractual document specifying the exact tasks, frequencies, materials, and site boundaries covered by a service agreement. See Landscaping Service Scope of Work Definitions for a breakdown of standard SOW components.

Maintenance Contract — A recurring service agreement, typically structured on an annual or seasonal basis, covering defined tasks at set intervals. Pricing models, inclusions, and exclusions are addressed at Landscaping Service Contracts: What to Expect.

Climate Zone — A USDA Plant Hardiness Zone designation (zones 1–13 in the continental US) that determines which plant species are viable for a given region. Zone maps directly inform plant selection in design and installation projects.


Common scenarios

Terminology gaps most frequently create problems in three contexts:


Decision boundaries

Selecting the right terminology framework depends on the decision being made:

Decision Type Primary Terms to Clarify
Hiring a contractor License category, scope of work, service phase
Writing an RFP Service frequency, material specs, climate zone
Reviewing a contract Inclusions/exclusions, SOW boundaries, renewal terms
Planning a renovation Hardscape vs. softscape split, grading requirements
Managing an HOA Maintenance standards, appearance definitions, IPM policy

When a proposed service straddles categories — for example, a patio installation that requires grading and planting — the scope must explicitly assign each component to the correct contractor license type. Misclassification exposes property owners to liability for unlicensed work.


References