How to Start a Landscaping Business in Delaware (2026)



Last updated: February 26, 2026

Starting a landscaping business in Delaware is straightforward for general work like mowing, planting, and mulching – no specialized state contractor license is required. Your primary requirements are the Delaware Business License ($75/year), proper business registration, and insurance. However, if you apply pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers on clients’ property for compensation, additional certifications from the Delaware Department of Agriculture are required. This guide covers every requirement using official Delaware sources.

Landscaping Business Requirements in Delaware at a Glance

Requirement Agency Cost Timeline
Delaware Business License Division of Revenue $75/year Immediate (temp) / 10 days
LLC Formation (recommended) Division of Corporations $90 Varies
Commercial Applicator Certification – Category 03 (if applying pesticides) DE Dept. of Agriculture, Pesticide Management Section $50 (certification) + $25 (category exam) After passing exam
Pesticide Business License (if operating a pesticide application business) DE Dept. of Agriculture, Pesticide Management Section $100/year After certification; annual renewal December 31
Commercial Nutrient Management Certification (if applying fertilizers commercially) DE Dept. of Agriculture $100/year After passing exam
General Liability Insurance Private insurer Varies Before first job
Workers’ Comp Insurance Private insurer (required at 1+ employee) Varies by payroll Before hiring

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


Step 1: Register Your Business and Get Your Delaware Business License

Form an LLC with the Division of Corporations ($90) at icis.corp.delaware.gov/ecorp and obtain your Delaware Business License ($75/year) from the Division of Revenue at onestop.delaware.gov. The Business License is required for all Delaware businesses regardless of industry. If operating under a trade name, register it for $25 at the same portal.

After forming your LLC, pay the $300 annual franchise tax by June 1 each year at corp.delaware.gov/paytaxes.

Step 2: Determine Your Services (Pesticide Work?)

Delaware divides landscaping requirements based on whether you apply pesticides:

  • General landscaping only (mowing, planting, mulching, pruning, grading, irrigation installation): No specialized state license required beyond the Delaware Business License.
  • Pesticide application (weed control, pest control, lawn chemical treatments, tree/shrub spraying): Requires Commercial Applicator Certification and a Pesticide Business License.
  • Fertilizer application on client property (more than 1/4 acre commercially): Requires Commercial Nutrient Management Certification (effective May 2025).

Step 3: Obtain Commercial Pesticide Applicator Certification (If Applying Pesticides)

If you will apply pesticides on clients’ property for compensation, you must become a certified Commercial Applicator through the Delaware Department of Agriculture, Pesticide Management Section.

  • Relevant Category: Category 03 – Ornamental and Turf Pest Control (maintenance of ornamental trees, shrubs, flowers, and turf)
  • Certification fee: $50 (initial and renewal)
  • Category exam fee: $25 per category
  • Renewal: Every 3 years. Requires 12 Continuing Education Units (CEUs) – 8 must be specific to Category 03.

Apply and register for the exam through the online portal: dda.my.site.com/pesticide. For questions: Delaware Department of Agriculture, Pesticide Management Section, (302) 698-4571. Website: agriculture.delaware.gov/pesticide-management.

You may also hire a Pesticide Technician to apply pesticides under your supervision. Technicians must register with the Department ($25 fee) but do not need to pass the certification exam – they must work under a certified applicator’s direct supervision.

Step 4: Obtain a Pesticide Business License (If Running a Pesticide Business)

If your landscaping company commercially applies pesticides (not just you personally, but as a business offering pest/weed control services), you need a Pesticide Business License from the Delaware Department of Agriculture.

  • Annual fee: $100
  • Renewal deadline: December 31 each year. Late renewal after January 1 incurs a 20% penalty.
  • Requirements: At least one Certified Commercial Applicator in the category of work you perform must be associated with the business.
  • Insurance required: Minimum $300,000 bodily injury/death per occurrence and $100,000 property damage per occurrence.
  • Vehicle marking: All service vehicles must display the business name and Pesticide Business License number in letters 2-6 inches tall.
  • Apply at: agriculture.delaware.gov/pesticide-management/business-licenses

Step 5: Commercial Nutrient Management Certification (If Applying Fertilizers)

Effective May 2025, Delaware requires a Commercial Nutrient Management Certification if you apply nutrients (including fertilizers) to more than one-quarter acre as part of a commercial landscaping business.

Step 6: Get Business Insurance

Essential insurance for a Delaware landscaping business:

  • General liability insurance: Minimum $1 million per occurrence recommended. Required at $300,000 min for Pesticide Business License.
  • Commercial auto insurance: Required for business vehicles – personal auto policies do not cover commercial use.
  • Workers’ compensation: Required as soon as you hire one employee. Delaware has no minimum headcount threshold.
  • Equipment insurance: Covers mowers, trimmers, and other equipment from theft and damage.

Step 7: Register for Gross Receipts Tax

Register with the Division of Revenue for the Gross Receipts Tax (GRT) at grossreceiptstax.delaware.gov. For landscaping and service businesses, the GRT rate is 0.3983% on revenues above the monthly exclusion ($100,000/month for most service businesses). Most small landscaping businesses starting out owe $0 in GRT. Delaware has no sales tax – you do not collect sales tax from clients. Phone: (302) 577-8780.

Cost to Start a Landscaping Business in Delaware

Item Cost Notes
Delaware Business License $75/year Division of Revenue; all businesses
LLC Formation $90 One-time; Division of Corporations
LLC Annual Franchise Tax $300/year Due June 1
Commercial Applicator Certification (if applying pesticides) $50 + $25 (exam) = $75 Renews every 3 years; 12 CEUs required
Pesticide Business License (if applicable) $100/year Required if operating a commercial pesticide application business
Nutrient Management Certification (if applying fertilizers) $100/year Required if applying fertilizers to 1/4+ acre commercially
Pesticide Technician registration (optional employees) $25 per technician For employees applying pesticides under supervisor
General liability insurance $800-$2,500/year $300K min required for Pesticide Business License
Workers’ comp (if hiring) Varies by payroll Required at first employee
Equipment (mowers, trimmers, blowers) $3,000-$30,000+ Varies by equipment quality and quantity
Service vehicle $5,000-$30,000+ Truck or trailer; commercial auto insurance required

Estimated total startup cost: $10,000-$65,000+ (equipment and vehicle are the major variables; licensing costs are modest)

Related Delaware Business Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

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

For general landscaping (mowing, planting, pruning, mulching), no specialized state contractor license is required. You need the Delaware Business License ($75/year from the Division of Revenue). If you apply pesticides or herbicides on client property for compensation, you need a Commercial Applicator Certification (Category 03) and a Pesticide Business License from the Delaware Department of Agriculture. If you apply fertilizers commercially to more than 1/4 acre, a Nutrient Management Certification is also required (effective May 2025).

How do I get a pesticide applicator certification in Delaware?

Apply through the Delaware Department of Agriculture’s online portal at dda.my.site.com/pesticide. For landscaping work, you need the Category 03 (Ornamental and Turf) certification. Certification fee: $50. Category exam fee: $25. You must pass both the core pesticide exam and the Category 03 exam. Certification renews every 3 years with 12 CEUs required. Phone: (302) 698-4571.

Does a Delaware landscaping business need to collect sales tax?

No. Delaware has no state or local sales tax. You do not collect sales tax from clients for landscaping services. Your revenues may be subject to the Gross Receipts Tax (0.3983% for service businesses) but the first $100,000 of receipts per month is excluded, so most small landscaping businesses owe nothing. Register at grossreceiptstax.delaware.gov.

Can I hire employees to apply pesticides in Delaware?

Yes. Employees can apply pesticides as Pesticide Technicians under your supervision. Technicians must register with the Delaware Department of Agriculture for $25 but do not need to pass the certification exam. They must work under the direct supervision of a Certified Commercial Applicator (you or another certified employee). Your business must hold the Pesticide Business License ($100/year).

What insurance does a Delaware landscaping business need?

General liability insurance (minimum $1 million per occurrence is standard) is strongly recommended. If you have a Pesticide Business License, minimum required insurance is $300,000 bodily injury/death per occurrence and $100,000 property damage per occurrence. Commercial auto insurance is required for business vehicles. Workers’ compensation is required when you hire your first employee.


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.