
A fence that actually stops entry - not just marks a line. We install steel and aluminum security fences sized and anchored for Chino Hills hillside lots, with permits and HOA approvals handled from start to finish.

Security fence installation in Chino Hills means installing a taller, stronger perimeter barrier - most commonly steel or aluminum - with posts set in concrete deep enough to handle the area's clay soil, most residential jobs complete in one to three days once permits are in hand.
The material and height you choose determine how much deterrent your fence actually provides. A 4-foot decorative fence marks a boundary. A 6-to-8-foot fence with closely spaced vertical pickets and solid post anchoring creates a real physical barrier. We walk your property line before quoting so the recommendation fits your actual terrain - not a generic spec that assumes flat ground. Sloped lots in Chino Hills require either stepped or racked installation, and the choice affects both the look and the cost.
Many homeowners combine security fencing for rear and side sections with fence staining and sealing to protect wood components, or pair it with commercial fence installation when the property includes a business structure or ADU.
If your home or a neighbor's has been targeted, or you have seen unfamiliar people on your property line, your current perimeter is not creating enough friction. A taller fence with no obvious handholds or footholds changes the visible calculus. In Chino Hills, where some neighborhoods border open hillside with limited street lighting, a defined perimeter matters more than in a dense urban block.
If your existing fence is 4 feet tall or less, has gaps, or has sections that have rusted or rotted through, it provides the appearance of a boundary without the reality. Walk your fence line and look for spots where someone could push through or squeeze past. A boundary that looks like it is there but does not stop entry can create a false sense of security.
California law requires pool enclosures that meet specific barrier requirements, and a security fence can serve double duty as both a legal barrier and a genuine deterrent. If you have a pool in Chino Hills and your current fencing does not fully enclose it with a self-closing, self-latching gate, you may already be out of compliance - and you are carrying real liability risk.
Chino Hills has extensive open space and trail systems, which is one of the things that makes it desirable. But properties that back up to open space or hillside areas have a longer, less visible perimeter. If your backyard fence is the only thing separating your property from a trail or undeveloped hillside, upgrading to a taller, more secure fence line is a straightforward way to reduce that exposure.
We install security fences in steel, aluminum, and chain-link with security enhancements throughout Chino Hills. Steel and iron give you the most strength and the most visible deterrent effect - a tall steel fence with pointed pickets sends a clear signal. Aluminum is lighter, rust-resistant, and a strong choice for the dry Southern California climate where steel needs a protective coating to hold up long term. For properties where budget is the primary driver, chain-link with close-spaced wire, a locked gate, and an extended height can be as effective at stopping entry as a more expensive metal panel fence.
Gates are as important as the fence itself - a security fence is only as strong as its weakest entry point. We install security gates with heavy-duty hinges, latches that lock from both sides, and reinforced frames so the gate cannot be kicked or forced open. For properties adding an automatic driveway gate, we coordinate that work with the fence installation so everything goes in as one project. Homeowners who need a finished look along street-facing sections often pair security fencing at the rear with fence staining and sealing for wood sections, or use commercial-grade fencing on sections that border a shared lot or right of way.
Suits homeowners who want maximum strength and a visible deterrent, particularly on rear lots and hillside perimeters.
Suits properties in the Inland Empire where rust resistance matters and a lighter, low-maintenance material is preferred.
Suits homeowners who need a cost-effective full-perimeter solution with close-spaced wire and a lockable gate.
Suits any security fence project where a controlled entry point with a reinforced frame and locking hardware is required.
Chino Hills is literally hilly, and the terrain shapes every fence project here. Many residential lots have significant grade change from one end of the property to the other, which means a security fence that would be straightforward to install on flat ground requires either stepped or racked panels - two approaches that look different and cost differently. A contractor who has not walked your lot before quoting is guessing. We do an in-person walkthrough on every project before writing a number, because in Chino Hills the property you describe on the phone and the property we see in person are rarely the same.
Parts of Chino Hills also fall within areas designated as high fire hazard zones by CAL FIRE. In those zones, how and where a fence is installed matters beyond just the security goal - a fence that blocks emergency vehicle access or creates a fuel path can conflict with defensible space rules. We are familiar with those designations and install fences that meet fire safety requirements without compromising the security function. We serve homeowners across the region, including Rancho Cucamonga and Corona, where hillside lots and fire zone adjacency raise the same questions.
We ask about your property, what you are trying to accomplish, and whether you have an HOA. Not a sales call - just enough to schedule the right kind of visit and give you a rough ballpark. Replies within one business day. Be ready to describe your lot roughly and mention if you are in an HOA so we can factor that into the timeline.
We come to your property, walk your fence line, and measure. We check for grade changes, note any obstacles, and confirm underground utilities before any digging is planned. You get a written estimate that breaks down materials, labor, and any permit fees separately - no single lump sum that hides what you are paying for.
If you are in an HOA, we help you submit the approval request with the right drawings and specifications. HOA review can take one to four weeks depending on your board's schedule. If a city permit is required - typically for fences over 6 feet in Chino Hills - we pull it before work begins. No digging starts without both approvals in hand.
The crew marks post locations, sets posts in concrete, and attaches fence panels or pickets. Gates are hung and adjusted on the final day - we test every gate multiple times before calling the job done. Walk the full fence line with us before we leave: check that posts are plumb, panels are secure, and every gate latches properly.
Licensed contractor. Written, itemized quote. We walk your property in person before quoting - no surprises.
(909) 546-5337Sloped lots, clay soil, fire zone designations, and HOA requirements all affect what a security fence project actually costs in Chino Hills. We walk every property before writing a number. A quote given without seeing the terrain is a guess that can change significantly once the crew shows up - and that is not how we operate.
Chino Hills has one of the highest concentrations of HOA-governed neighborhoods in the Inland Empire. We know how those approval submissions need to be structured, and we prepare and submit the documentation on your behalf. Every HOA approval is in hand before installation is scheduled - no after-the-fact letters asking you to modify or remove the fence.
The clay-heavy soil in Chino Hills expands when wet and contracts when dry, and that seasonal movement is what causes fence posts to lean over time. We set posts deeper than the minimum and use concrete footings sized to resist that movement. A fence installed without accounting for this soil is a fence you will be calling someone about in three years.
In California, any fence contractor must hold a valid license from the California Contractors State License Board. You can look up any contractor - including us - in about 30 seconds at cslb.ca.gov. Check that the license is active and carries workers' compensation and liability insurance. A contractor who hesitates to give you their license number is one worth walking away from.
Each of these points comes from doing this work in Chino Hills specifically - on these soils, in these neighborhoods, on lots with real grade changes. They are the things that determine whether a security fence actually performs its job five years after installation.
Protect wood fence sections adjacent to your security perimeter from UV fading and moisture damage.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty fencing for properties with business structures, ADUs, or shared commercial lot lines.
Learn MoreWe handle HOA approvals, city permits, and sloped lots - call today and get a written estimate before your project schedule fills up.