Front Yard - Landscaping Ideas
Front-yard landscaping ideas get more useful when they help you organize the whole arrival sequence, not just decorate the strip by the porch. These real YardShare projects are strongest when they show how walkway edges, stone, planting, and hardscape work together so the front yard feels intentional from the street. That is also why the live Real Yard Curb-Appeal / Arrival-Sequence Patterns 2026 benchmark fits here: 93 of 175 benchmark yards include front-yard framing, with 39 also pairing front-yard structure with path or walkway features.
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Murphy Lake Fall View
by Karen WThought I would add a few pictures of our view in the fall. Also added a few ...
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My garden in Holland in june 2008
by Henk JukkemaA garden from 2500 m3. Round the house. In the middle of Holland.
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Wade's Paradise Island
This is our yard on Paradise Island, Bahamas. We put this in January 2007 an...
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Mandina
Side yard with new fence that my husband built with down and post lighting. ...
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new install
installed complete new landscaping on new construction house.
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Bill & Barb's
Small city lot with a "park" in the yard. Gardens, fountains, fish ...
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Chloedezigns Landscaping, LLC
We provide quality landscaping and design for every budget. Give us a call.
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Outdoor living in Puerto Rico
This is my landscaped patio, garden, outdoor kitchen and backyard. With so m...
About Front Yard Landscaping
All front yard photos on YardShare are shared by real homeowners and landscaping professionals, so you can compare full projects instead of a single hero shot. Use these examples to study plant combinations, material choices, and how each feature connects to the rest of the yard before you copy anything at home.
Keep browsing related inspiration: 93 arrival-sequence yards include front-yard framing, path and walkway ideas, stone and rock ideas for front entries, hardscape structure and circulation ideas, driveway landscaping ideas from real homes .
Front-yard planning questions
What usually makes a front yard feel more intentional?
A readable path, strong edge treatment, and a repeatable material palette usually do more than adding extra decorative pieces at random.
Can a front yard be lower-water without feeling bare?
Yes. The strongest examples use stone, planting structure, and hardscape to create a clear arrival sequence so the yard feels finished before you even think about lawn reduction.











