Independent Australian Cost Guides
Updated July 2026

Timber Paling Fence Cost Geelong (Per Metre, 2026)

treated pine paling fence between two suburban backyards - fencing cost geelong

The treated pine paling fence is the default Geelong boundary fence for a reason: at $80 to $190 per metre installed, nothing beats it on upfront cost. Step up to lapped-and-capped or hardwood and you’re into the $160–$190 band.

Quick answer — timber paling fence cost in Geelong

StyleTypical Geelong rate (2026)
Standard 1.8 m treated pine paling, installed$80 – $110 per metre
Paling with exposed posts & capping$100 – $140 per metre
Lapped & capped (premium overlap style)$130 – $170 per metre
Hardwood palings / posts$160 – $190 per metre
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What a paling fence quote includes

A standard quote covers treated pine posts set in concrete, two or three rails, palings, and a bottom plinth board — the sacrificial timber that cops the ground moisture so the palings don't. Check three things on any Geelong quote: whether old fence removal is included or a separate $15–$50 per metre line; whether the plinth is included (it should be); and the rail count — a 1.8 m fence on two rails will sag years before a three-rail fence does, and the cheapest quote is usually cheapest because of exactly this.

carpenter nailing palings to fence rails - fencing cost geelong

Pine vs hardwood — where the extra money goes

Treated pine is the workhorse: cheap, straight enough, and rated for ground contact. Hardwood costs up to double but takes knocks better, holds nails harder, and suits exposed or high-traffic boundaries. The smart middle path many Geelong fencers suggest: hardwood posts and plinth (the parts that fail first) with pine palings on top — most of the durability for a fraction of the full-hardwood premium.

Worked example — 20 m boundary replacement, Armstrong Creek

Line itemCost
Remove & dispose of old fence (20 m)$600
Treated pine posts, rails, plinth & palings — supply$1,300
Installation labour (3-rail, 1.8 m)$1,300
Total$3,200 (mid-range of the $1,900–$4,800 band)
Half-share with neighbour$1,600 each

Sharing the bill

Boundary paling fences are the bread and butter of the Fences Act 1968 (Vic) half-share arrangement: a standard paling fence is the textbook "sufficient dividing fence", so an equal split is the default position. Get the quote in writing, give your neighbour a copy, and keep it civil — the formal fencing-notice process exists for the rare standoff, but a $1,600 half-share conversation rarely needs lawyers.

On the new estates south of the city — Armstrong Creek, Warralily and Charlemont — most boundary runs go up between two owners at once, so the cost split is usually settled before either fence exists. Under the Victorian Fences Act the default is a 50/50 share of a sufficient dividing fence, which for a residential estate is a standard treated-pine paling fence. If both neighbours are happy with the standard fence, an even split is the norm; if one side wants an upgrade, that owner usually covers the difference above the standard cost.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a 20 metre paling fence cost in Geelong?

Typically $1,900–$4,800 for a full replacement — old fence removed, new 1.8-metre treated pine paling fence installed. A straightforward flat block with good access lands near the bottom of that band; slopes, tight access, and capping push it up.

Is treated pine or hardwood better for a paling fence?

Pine is far cheaper and perfectly serviceable; hardwood is tougher and longer-lived but costs up to double. The popular compromise in Geelong is hardwood posts and plinth — the components that rot or fail first — with pine palings, capturing most of the durability gain cheaply.

How long does a timber paling fence last?

Around 15–25 years in Geelong, with the plinth and the post bases going first. Keeping soil and garden beds off the bottom of the fence, and replacing the plinth when it softens, buys years of extra life from the same palings.

Does my neighbour pay half for a new paling fence?

Generally yes — a standard paling fence is the classic "sufficient dividing fence" under the Fences Act 1968 (Vic), and equal contribution is the default. Provide a written quote, agree before work starts, and use the formal fencing-notice process only if you genuinely cannot agree.

Should I repair or replace an old paling fence?

If posts are solid, replacing palings and plinths is cheap and worthwhile. Once posts move at the base or the fence leans, repairs are throwing good money after bad — a leaning fence is telling you the footings are gone, and replacement is the economic answer.

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