(877) 544-9363 — Tallahassee's Fence Company
Tallahassee, FL & Leon County Licensed & Insured (877) 544-9363
Rural Tallahassee-area property with open perimeter, suited to farm and ranch fencing
Farm & Ranch Fencing

Farm & Ranch Fencing in Tallahassee & Leon County

Livestock containment, acreage perimeter, and rural-style fencing for Leon County's semi-rural fringe — 3-rail, no-climb, and field fence, built for horse country toward Miccosukee and Centerville Road.

Licensed & InsuredEvery farm & ranch project
Tallahassee & Leon CountyIncluding the rural fringe
(877) 544-9363Call for a free estimate

Do you install fencing for large rural properties, not just suburban lots? Yes — Tallahassee Fence Masters handles farm and ranch fencing across Leon County's semi-rural fringe, distinct from the standard residential fencing we install closer to the city core. That includes livestock containment, acreage perimeter marking, and rural-style rail fencing for properties toward the Miccosukee and Centerville Road corridors, where larger lots and horse-country parcels are common.

What kind of fence is best for horses in Tallahassee? It depends on the property, but a classic 3-rail wood or vinyl ranch rail fence is the most common horse-country perimeter style in this area, while no-climb woven wire is generally the safer containment choice for horses specifically, since it reduces the risk of a hoof or leg getting caught the way it can in standard field fence. We'll walk your property and recommend the fence type that fits your animals and acreage.

What's Included

What's Included in Farm & Ranch Fencing

Built for acreage, not just a standard yard.

Site & Acreage Assessment

Full-property walkthrough to plan perimeter runs and any livestock zones.

Fence Type Selection

3-rail wood/vinyl, no-climb woven wire, or high-tensile field fence.

Farm Gate Sizing

Gates sized for equipment or trailer access, not standard residential driveway gates.

Long-Run Layout

Perimeter planning across longer linear-footage runs than a typical suburban lot.

Mixed-Use Planning

Coordinated fencing for properties with both livestock areas and a residential yard.

Process

How Farm & Ranch Fencing Works

From site visit to walkthrough.

  1. Site visit & acreage assessment — we walk the property and discuss livestock or perimeter needs.
  2. Fence type & material selection — 3-rail, no-climb woven wire, or high-tensile field fence.
  3. Layout across long perimeter runs — planning for acreage-scale linear footage, not a single yard.
  4. Post setting — posts set to handle the load of long rail or wire runs.
  5. Rail/wire install — rail sections or wire fencing installed across the full perimeter.
  6. Farm gate integration — equipment- or trailer-width gates fitted where needed.
  7. Final walkthrough — we review the completed perimeter and gate operation with you.
Fence Types

3-Rail vs. No-Climb vs. High-Tensile Field Fence

What's the difference between field fence and no-climb fence? Standard field fence uses a wider woven-wire grid that works well for general cattle or pasture boundaries but carries more risk for horses, since a hoof can get caught in the larger openings. No-climb fence uses a tighter, smaller-opening weave specifically designed to prevent that, making it the safer standard for horse containment. A classic 3-rail wood or vinyl ranch rail fence is more of a visual perimeter marker — attractive and traditional for horse-country properties, though it's sometimes paired with a no-climb wire backing for actual containment.

Rural-fringe properties toward Miccosukee and Centerville Road also tend to need longer perimeter runs than a standard suburban lot, which affects both installation timeline and how we stage materials and crews for the job.

Horse & Livestock Safety

No-climb wire and properly spaced rail fencing reduce injury and escape risk for horses and livestock.

Acreage Perimeter Marking

Boundary fencing for larger rural-fringe lots even without livestock on the property.

Equipment-Ready Gates

Farm gates sized for tractors, trailers, and other equipment access — see our farm gate installation details.

Can You Fence a Mixed-Use Property?

Do you install fencing for properties outside the main city limits, and can you fence a mixed-use property with both livestock and a yard? Yes to both — we regularly plan combined projects that pair a residential-style yard fence closer to the house with rail or wire containment fencing further out for animals or pasture, all in one coordinated job.

What We Handle

Farm & Ranch Projects We Take On

Livestock, acreage, and mixed-use rural properties.

Quick Answers

Farm & Ranch Fencing FAQs

Straight answers — no clicking around.

Do you work on properties outside the main city limits?
Yes — we serve Leon County's rural fringe, including horse-country properties toward the Miccosukee and Centerville Road corridors, not just fencing inside the city core.
How is farm/ranch fencing priced differently than residential fencing?
Rural and acreage fencing usually involves longer linear-footage runs and different material logistics than a standard yard, which affects both timeline and cost — call for a specific estimate based on your property.
Can you fence a mixed-use property (some livestock, some yard)?
Yes — we plan combined projects that pair residential-style yard fencing near the house with rail or wire containment fencing for animals or pasture further out.
Do you handle long perimeter runs across multiple acres?
Yes — we coordinate material staging and crew scheduling for long-run perimeter projects that go well beyond a typical suburban lot.

See our full fencing services Tallahassee lineup, or return to fencing in Midtown Tallahassee. Farm and ranch fencing is most requested near Leon County's larger-lot, semi-rural fringe areas, including fencing near Killearn Lakes and fencing near Southwood.

Get Your Farm & Ranch Fencing Estimate

Call Tallahassee Fence Masters to discuss your acreage or livestock fencing project.

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