
Your dog deserves a yard with no escape routes. We build dog fences that follow your yard's grade, close every gap, and pass your HOA's rules.

Pet and dog fencing in Chino Hills is professionally installed using materials and post-setting techniques matched to the city's sloped lots and clay soil, with most residential jobs completed in one to two days.
If you have a dog that likes to dig, jump, or push against a fence, a standard installation will not hold them. We build every fence line to follow your yard's actual grade so there are no low spots at the bottom - the spots where dogs always find their way out. Chino Hills properties are rarely flat, and many sit on expansive clay soil that shifts with the seasons, which can open gaps in a fence that was tight when it was built.
Many of our dog fence customers also ask about automatic gate installation to complete the enclosure - a gate that does not latch automatically is the most common escape point on any dog fence.
If your dog has gotten out once, they will get out again through the same spot - or find a new one. A single escape is a clear sign that your current fence is not doing its job, and patching one weak point rarely solves the underlying problem.
Many Chino Hills homes back up to the city's trail system or open hillside. Without a secure rear fence, your dog can wander into brush, encounter coyotes or rattlesnakes, or disappear down a trail. If there is nothing between your yard and open land, a dog fence is a safety necessity.
Chino Hills's clay-heavy soil expands when wet and contracts when dry. That movement can pull fence posts out of alignment over time. If you can see daylight under your fence boards or the bottom rail has lifted away from the ground, a small dog or determined digger can slip right through.
Chino Hills's dry summer heat is hard on wood fences. If boards are visibly bowing, pulling away from posts, or the fence line is starting to lean, the structure is weakening. A dog that pushes or jumps against a compromised fence can bring a section down.
We install wood privacy fences, vinyl fences, chain-link fences, and welded wire fences for dog owners throughout Chino Hills. Each material has different trade-offs around visibility, durability, and how well it holds up to a dog that likes to dig or jump. A chain link fence is the most affordable option and the easiest to inspect for gaps, while a wood privacy fence gives you total visual separation from neighbors and the street.
For yards that back up to open hillside or brush - common throughout Chino Hills - we also discuss coyote roller hardware at the top of the fence and underground dig barriers that run along the base. If you want to complete your enclosure with a self-latching entry point, we pair dog fence projects with automatic gate installation so nothing is left to chance when someone forgets to latch the gate.
Suits homeowners who want full visual privacy along with a secure dog enclosure.
Suits homeowners who want low maintenance and good heat tolerance in the Inland Empire climate.
Suits homeowners who need an affordable, see-through barrier that is easy to inspect and repair.
Suits homeowners with determined diggers, combining a buried underground barrier with a strong above-ground wire panel.
Chino Hills is built across a series of rolling hills and canyons, which means most residential lots are not flat. Fence posts on a slope have to be stepped or raked to follow the grade, and that extra labor adds to your quote. The city's clay-heavy soil also moves with the seasons - swelling in winter rains and shrinking in dry summers - which means posts set without deep concrete footings can drift out of alignment within a few years and create gaps your dog will eventually find. We set every post with this in mind, using footings anchored below the active soil layer.
HOA coverage is also extremely high in Chino Hills. Most residential neighborhoods fall under HOA jurisdiction, and many associations restrict fence height to five or six feet, require specific materials like vinyl or wrought iron, and prohibit chain link in front or side yards. We review your HOA requirements before we quote the job so the fence you approve is the fence that gets built. We serve dog owners across the city, including homeowners in Diamond Bar and Brea, where HOA rules and hillside lots create the same challenges.
We schedule a time to walk your yard in person before giving you a price. This visit lets us see the terrain, measure the fence line, and spot anything that could affect the job - including slope, tree roots, and gate locations near sprinkler heads. We reply within one business day of your inquiry.
After the walkthrough, we give you an itemized written quote that breaks down material, labor, and any extras like gates or underground dig barriers. This is the right moment to ask about HOA requirements and permit costs - no surprises once work starts.
For fences above the city's height threshold, we submit the permit application to the City of Chino Hills Building and Safety Division on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we handle the architectural review documentation at the same time.
The crew marks post locations, digs or drills holes, sets posts in concrete, and attaches fence panels. On most Chino Hills residential jobs we finish in one to two days. At the end we walk the entire fence line with you, check every gate latch, and remove all debris from your yard.
Free written estimate. We review your HOA rules before we quote. No surprises on your final invoice.
(909) 546-5337Most of our Chino Hills dog fence projects involve at least some grade change. We step or rake every fence line to follow the actual contour of your yard, so there are no low spots at the bottom where a dog can squeeze through. This is not a detail we figure out on the day of installation.
Getting a fence installed only to receive a violation notice from your HOA is one of the most frustrating things that can happen. We review your HOA's restrictions before we quote the job, so the fence you approve is the fence that gets built - no do-overs at your expense.
We build dig barriers into the installation from the start - buried fence material, concrete footers, or L-shaped underground wire - whichever approach fits your dog's habits and your soil. The American Kennel Club recommends below-grade barriers as the most reliable way to stop persistent diggers.
We know the terrain, the soil conditions, and the HOA rules that apply in this city's neighborhoods. That local knowledge shows up in the quality of our quotes, the depth of our post footings, and the fact that our fences still look good years after installation.
Every one of these details comes together in a fence that actually keeps your dog in - not just on installation day, but after the first rainy season, after the first hot summer, and after the first time your dog tries to find a way out. The American Kennel Club recommends a minimum of five to six feet for medium and large breeds, with particular attention to gate hardware and below-grade dig deterrents - requirements we build into every project.
Add a motorized, self-latching entry point that removes the risk of a manually forgotten gate.
Learn MoreA cost-effective, see-through perimeter option that is easy to inspect for wear and gaps.
Learn MoreSpots fill up fast in spring. Lock in your installation date before the summer heat sets in - call or submit a request today.