Professional drip irrigation installs in 2026 run $300-$1,500 for a small flower bed (100-500 sqft, 1 zone), $1,500-$4,500 for a mid-size vegetable-and-bed garden (500-2,000 sqft, 2-3 zones), and $4,000-$10,000 for a large drip network covering 2,000-5,000 sqft across 4+ zones. Per-zone drip install averages $300-$1,100; per-linear-foot installed drip line is $1-$4; above-ground drip systems average $0.85-$2.85 per square foot of coverage. The national average for a typical residential drip system is about $520 per LawnLove data.
Drip irrigation is the precision watering choice for beds, vegetable gardens, shrub borders, and anything planted in distinct groupings. Unlike pop-up spray that broadcasts water across open lawn, drip delivers water directly to plant root zones through emitters spaced 6-24 inches apart. Drip installs are 20-40% cheaper per zone than equivalent spray zones and use 30-50% less water annually — the combined cost and water-bill savings pay back the professional install premium within 2-4 years in most US climates.
Pricing in this guide is aggregated from Angi, HomeGuide, LawnLove, LawnStarter, and Bob Vila. Use the calculator above to scope coverage and zone count, then read on for the drip-vs-DIY-kit decision framework, the backflow preventer code requirement, and the smart-controller rebate that 30+ US states offer through utility water conservation programs. For broader mixed-system scope, the irrigation install cost calculator handles drip + spray hybrid quotes, and the sprinkler system install cost calculator handles pure lawn sprinkler scope.
One decision up front makes every quote easier to compare: decide whether you want a basic DIY-grade kit professionally installed, a full pro zoned system with a dedicated manifold per zone, or a smart controller system with weather-adaptive scheduling. Each tier has a distinct material and labor profile, and the tier choice shifts the bid midpoint by roughly $800-$2,500 for a mid-size 3-zone install. Homeowners who skip this decision usually end up with the contractor defaulting to their preferred tier, which is rarely the cheapest or the most feature-rich option.