Patio - Landscaping Ideas
Patio ideas carry a lot of commercial intent because people are usually deciding between materials, size, and how the space will actually get used. These real yards are handy for comparing paver and concrete looks, seeing how patios connect to planting beds, and spotting layouts that leave room for dining, lounging, or a fire feature. If you want the bigger archive-wide pattern read first, YardShare's Real Yard Trend Report shows how often outdoor-living and backyard-room moves recur across real submitted yards.
-
Endless Possibilities The Gardener
Landscape construction of a pond ,waterfall, patio, and plants from start to ...
-
An Elegant Backyard Design
by Zaynea NiaziA pool and backyard oasis garden. Design based on a 45 degree angle off our h...
-
formal organic shell garden
shell garden with ilex schilling. This areea was grass originally, I added fe...
-
My Outside Greatroom
Fenced patio attached to our L shape home with a pool and lots of patio table...
-
Rosemary Dr
by edonySmall garden bordering on a tidal stream. Across the road is a large pond whi...
-
Royal County Down (Unionville Ontario)
Newly installed cobble stone driveway, retaining walls, natural stone steps, ...
-
Just past puberty!
by Stacey MundtOut-of-control! The yard is not bordered correctly, is rather overgrown in p...
-
Fantastic Flagstone
by LucybugOur odd yard area needed a make over and our ideas turned out beautiful. Plan...
About Patio Landscaping
All patio 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: Real Yard Trend Report, fire pit patios, outdoor kitchen layouts, covered patio ideas, backyard patio design ideas .
Patio comparison questions
What should you compare first when planning a patio?
Start with function and circulation: how many people need to fit, whether dining or lounging matters most, and how the patio connects to doors, grill areas, and the yard beyond.
How do patios feel less stark?
The nicest examples use planting beds, seat walls, or nearby vertical elements so the hardscape feels integrated instead of like a bare slab dropped in the yard.











