The single biggest factor in how long an artificial lawn lasts isn't the grass itself - it's who installed it. We're regularly called out to look at lawns fitted by other companies that are failing years ahead of schedule, and in almost every case the product was fine; the sub-base, drainage or edging weren't.
Choosing an installer is worth taking seriously for exactly that reason. This guide covers what to actually check before you commit, and what tends to separate a lawn that lasts fifteen years from one that needs redoing in three.
Research and Recommendations
Start with people who've actually had the work done, not just search results. A recommendation from a neighbour whose lawn you can walk over and inspect tells you far more than a polished website.
| Source | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Friends, family, neighbours | A finished lawn you can actually inspect in person - edges, joins, how it's held up over time |
| Google reviews | Volume and recency of reviews, and how the company responds to any negative ones |
| Trustpilot | Independent verification separate from the company's own website |
| Local Facebook groups | Unfiltered local opinion, including any recurring complaints about specific installers |
You can see what customers across Essex have said about our own work on our reviews page.
Qualifications and Experience
There's no single mandatory qualification for artificial grass installation in the UK, which makes it easy for anyone with a van and some tools to call themselves an installer. Experience and track record do most of the work that a formal qualification would elsewhere.
Examine Past Work and Reviews
Photos on a website only show you the finished, flattering angle. What you actually want to assess is whether the work holds up over time.
Ask for Older Completed Jobs
A lawn installed two or three years ago tells you far more about durability than one finished last week.
Check for a Local Portfolio
A gallery or case studies section with jobs specifically in your area shows they understand local soil and drainage conditions.
Read Reviews for Detail, Not Just Star Ratings
Reviews that mention specific things - tidiness, communication, how issues were handled - are more useful than a bare five-star rating.
Our own case studies and gallery show completed installations across Essex, including some that have been down for several years.
Warranties and Guarantees
A guarantee is the clearest signal of how confident an installer actually is in their own work. Vague or absent warranty terms are a reason to keep looking.
| What to Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Length of the guarantee | Longer terms signal confidence in both the product and the installation quality |
| What's actually covered | Product defects, workmanship, or both - get this in writing rather than taking it on trust |
| Who honours it | A guarantee from a company likely to still be trading in ten years is worth more than one from a here-today business |
Every lawn we supply and install comes with a 10-year product guarantee - the full terms are on that page if you'd like to compare them against anyone else you're considering.
Questions Worth Asking
A good installer should be able to answer these clearly and specifically, not with vague reassurance.
| Question | What a Good Answer Sounds Like |
|---|---|
| What sub-base will you use? | A specific material and depth, not "the usual stuff" |
| How do you handle drainage? | A clear explanation of falls and membrane choice for your specific garden |
| Who does the work - you, or subcontractors? | A direct answer either way; evasiveness is the concern, not the answer itself |
| What's the project timeline? | A realistic estimate, including what could extend it (weather, access, etc.) |
| What are the payment terms? | A staged structure, not a large deposit demanded upfront in full |
Getting Multiple Quotes
Comparing two or three quotes is worthwhile, but the cheapest number rarely represents the best value once groundwork corners get cut to hit that price.
Our cost calculator gives you a starting estimate, and a free site visit gets you an exact, fixed-price quote to compare against anyone else.
Red Flags to Watch For
Beyond the questions above, a few specific signs tend to predict problems down the line - these come up repeatedly on the jobs we're called out to fix.
No Written Quote
A verbal price with nothing in writing leaves no record if the final job doesn't match what was agreed.
Full Payment Upfront
A large deposit is normal; being asked to pay the full amount before work starts is not.
Pressure to Decide Immediately
"Today-only" pricing is a sales tactic, not a genuine time-limited offer on groundwork.
