How to Start a Landscaping Business in Arizona (2026)



Last updated: February 25, 2026

Starting a landscaping business in Arizona doesn’t require a general contractor license for basic lawn and landscape maintenance. However, if you plan to apply pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers, you’ll need certification from the Arizona Department of Agriculture’s Office of Pest Management (OPM). Arizona’s desert climate creates a unique landscaping market focused on xeriscaping, desert-adapted plants, irrigation systems, and hardscaping. The warm climate means year-round work, though the focus shifts seasonally. This guide covers every step using official Arizona sources.

Landscaping Business Requirements in Arizona at a Glance

Requirement Agency Cost Timeline
LLC Formation Arizona Corporation Commission $50 14-16 business days
Pesticide Applicator Certification AZ Dept. of Agriculture (OPM) $75-$155 After passing exam ($55)
Pesticide Business License AZ Dept. of Agriculture (OPM) $250 Required if applying pesticides commercially
TPT License AZ Dept. of Revenue (ADOR) $12 Before first taxable transaction
City/Town Business License Local municipality Varies ($25-$100+) Before starting operations
General Liability Insurance Private Carrier ~$50-$125/month Before operations
Workers’ Compensation Insurance Private Carrier Varies by payroll Before hiring first employee
Federal EIN IRS Free Immediate (online)

How to Start a Landscaping Business in Arizona (Step by Step)


Step 1: Form Your Business Entity

Register an LLC with the Arizona Corporation Commission ($50). If your statutory agent is in Maricopa or Pima County, you’re exempt from the publication requirement. Apply for a free federal EIN from the IRS.

Step 2: Get Pesticide Certification (If Applicable)

If you’ll apply pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers, you need certification from the Arizona Office of Pest Management (OPM) under the Department of Agriculture:

  • Certified Applicator License: $75 (individuals who apply pesticides)
  • Qualified Applicator License: $100 (supervisory level)
  • Exam fee: $55 per exam attempt
  • Required exams: Core exam + Category 3 (Ornamental and Turf)
  • Pesticide Business License: $250 (required for businesses applying pesticides commercially)

If you only do mowing, trimming, planting, and general maintenance without chemical applications, pesticide certification is not required.

Step 3: Get Insurance

  • General liability: $1 million per occurrence / $2 million aggregate recommended. Essential for property damage claims
  • Workers’ comp: Mandatory in Arizona from your very first employee, including part-time and seasonal workers
  • Commercial auto: Required for work trucks and trailers
  • Inland marine: Covers equipment in transit (mowers, trimmers, blowers)

Step 4: Register for TPT and Get Local Licenses

Landscaping services are subject to Arizona’s Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT). Get a TPT license from ADOR ($12). Combined state and local rates range from 7% to over 10%. Get a local business license from your city or town.

Step 5: Get Equipment and Set Up Operations

Basic landscaping equipment for Arizona includes:

  • Commercial mower (reel or rotary depending on turf type)
  • String trimmers, edgers, and blowers
  • Pruning and hand tools
  • Work truck or trailer
  • Irrigation repair tools (Arizona’s heavy irrigation use creates steady demand)

Step 6: Get ROC License for Hardscaping (If Applicable)

Basic lawn and landscape maintenance does not require an ROC contractor license. However, you may need an L-39 (Landscape Contracting) license from the ROC if you perform hardscaping, retaining walls, irrigation system installation, or other contracting work exceeding $1,000.

Cost to Start a Landscaping Business in Arizona

Item Cost Notes
LLC Articles of Organization $50 One-time ACC filing fee
Federal EIN Free IRS, immediate online
Pesticide applicator license $75-$100 Only if applying pesticides
Pesticide exam $55 Per attempt
Pesticide business license $250 Only if applying pesticides commercially
TPT License $12 ADOR, per location
City business license $25-$100 Varies by municipality
General liability insurance $600-$1,500/year $1M/$2M coverage
Workers’ comp insurance Varies by payroll Required at 1+ employees
Equipment (mower, trimmers, blowers) $3,000-$15,000 Commercial-grade equipment
Work truck or trailer $5,000-$25,000 Used truck + trailer setup
Commercial auto insurance $1,200-$2,500/year Required for work vehicles

Estimated total startup cost: $10,000-$45,000 (vehicle and equipment are the largest expenses; a maintenance-only business without pesticide services starts at the lower end)


Related Arizona Business Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a license to start a landscaping business in Arizona?

No state-level landscaping license is required for basic maintenance (mowing, trimming, planting). If you apply pesticides or herbicides, you need OPM certification. If you do hardscaping or irrigation installation over $1,000, you may need an ROC L-39 contractor license.

Do I need pesticide certification for a landscaping business in Arizona?

Only if you apply pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers. You need a certified applicator license ($75) from the OPM, passing the core exam plus Category 3 (Ornamental and Turf). Your business also needs a pesticide business license ($250).

Are landscaping services taxable in Arizona?

Yes. Landscaping services are subject to Arizona’s Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT). Combined state and local rates range from 7% to over 10%. You need a TPT license ($12) from ADOR before your first taxable transaction.

Do I need workers’ comp for a landscaping business in Arizona?

Yes, from your very first employee. Arizona requires workers’ comp for all employers with 1+ employees, including part-time and seasonal workers. Landscaping is classified as a higher-risk trade, so premiums reflect that.

Do I need an ROC contractor license for landscaping in Arizona?

Not for basic maintenance. You need an L-39 (Landscape Contracting) ROC license if you do hardscaping, retaining walls, irrigation system installation, or other contracting work exceeding $1,000.

How much does it cost to start a landscaping business in Arizona?

Total startup costs range from $10,000 to $45,000. The largest expenses are the work vehicle ($5,000-$25,000) and equipment ($3,000-$15,000). A maintenance-only business without pesticide services can start at the lower end.


Robert Smith
About the Author

Robert Smith has run a licensed private investigation firm for 8 years from the Florida-Georgia state line - where he learned firsthand how wildly business licensing rules differ between states just miles apart. He personally researched requirements across all 50 states and D.C., reviewing hundreds of government sources over hundreds of hours to build guides he wished existed when he started. Not a lawyer or accountant - just a business owner who has done the research so you don't have to.