Chain Link Calculator 

Your chain link fence

Your estimate

Professionally installed
Per linear foot
Gates included
Materials
Posts (10 ft spacing)
DIY materials only

Includes terminal/line posts in concrete, top rail, mesh, and tension hardware.

How much does a chain link fence cost in 2026?

Chain link remains the cheapest permanent fence you can build: $12 to $22 per linear foot installed for the standard 4-foot galvanized height in mid-2026, putting a 150-foot yard at $1,800–$3,300. Six-foot security height runs $16–$28 per foot. The two popular upgrades — black vinyl coating (+20%, and a dramatic looks improvement) and privacy slats (+$5/ft) — can nearly double the price, at which point it’s worth comparing against a wood fence.

Chain link cost by height

HeightGalvanized /ftVinyl-coated /ft150 ft installed (galv.)
4 ft$12 – $22$14 – $26$1,800 – $3,300
5 ft$14 – $24$17 – $29$2,100 – $3,600
6 ft$16 – $28$19 – $34$2,400 – $4,200
8 ft$22 – $38$26 – $46$3,300 – $5,700

Where chain link wins — and loses

COST PER FOOT vs LIFESPAN (4–6 FT RESIDENTIAL FENCE, 2026) CHAIN LINK$12–2225+ yrs · zero upkeep · zero privacy WOOD$18–3515–20 yrs · staining cycle · full privacy VINYL$22–4525–35 yrs · no upkeep · full privacy Chain link is the value pick for containment (pets, kids, security lines) — the moment privacy matters, slat-filled chain link loses to wood on both looks and price.
Chain link dominates on cost-per-year of service; it concedes only on privacy and looks.

What changes the price

Gauge (wire thickness): residential mesh is 11–11.5 gauge; heavier 9-gauge adds ~15% and is worth it with large dogs or commercial use (lower gauge = thicker wire). Vinyl coating: black-coated chain link visually disappears against landscaping — the single best looks upgrade for the money. Privacy slats: $4–$6 per foot installed, ~75–85% visual block; effective but wind load rises, so posts should be set deeper. Terrain: chain link follows slopes better than any panel fence — a genuine advantage on uneven lots. Gates: walk gates $150–$350; double drive gates $400–$900.

DIY chain link: the most forgiving fence

Chain link is the easiest fence to DIY: materials cost $6–$10 per foot (4 ft galvanized), the mesh forgives small post-placement errors that would ruin a vinyl panel job, and the only specialty tool is a $40 fence-puller (or a come-along) for tensioning. A 150-foot DIY install saves $900–$1,800. Sequence matters: set terminal posts in concrete first, cure 24–48 hours, string line posts, top rail, then stretch mesh last. The one skill to practice: tensioning — under-stretched mesh sags within a season.

Frequently asked questions

How much is 100 feet of chain link fence?
$1,200–$2,200 installed for 4-foot galvanized at 2026 prices; roughly $600–$1,000 in materials if you DIY.
Is chain link cheaper than wood?
Yes — typically 35–45% less per foot installed, and it lasts longer with no maintenance. Wood wins on privacy and appearance.
How long does chain link last?
25–30+ years galvanized; vinyl-coated often longer. Gates and tension bands usually need attention before the mesh does.
Can I add privacy to existing chain link?
Yes — slats ($3–5/ft DIY), privacy screen fabric ($1–2/ft, shorter lifespan), or fast-growing hedging along the line.

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