625 Celeste St Suite 504-E,
This guide covers every high-end fencing option available, what drives their cost, and how to think about value when you are investing in a fence that should outlast the house it surrounds. For a full overview of fence options in New Orleans, visit our New Orleans fence services page.
Table of Contents
Not all premium fences are created equal. Here is how the most expensive fencing materials stack up from highest to lowest cost, along with the key reason each material commands a premium:
The sections below cover the top five categories in depth, with specific attention to how each material performs in New Orleans’s coastal climate and why local context affects the cost picture significantly.
When most New Orleans homeowners think of an expensive fence, they are thinking of ornamental iron. Custom-fabricated from mild steel (commonly marketed as ornamental iron or wrought iron style), these fences represent the dominant high-end residential fencing choice in Louisiana.
The cost premium for ornamental iron comes from several compounding factors:
Standard ornamental iron fence panels in New Orleans: $60 to $100 per linear foot installed. Mid-range decorative designs with finial tops or fleur-de-lis accents: $90 to $130 per linear foot. Full scrollwork and custom artisan panels: $130 to $200 per linear foot or more. Drive gates and automatic entry systems are priced separately and typically add $2,000 to $8,000 or more to a project.
A correctly installed and maintained ornamental iron fence in New Orleans lasts 50 to 75 years. Many iron fences on Uptown and Garden District properties date to the late 1800s and early 1900s and remain structurally sound today. No other fencing material delivers comparable longevity in this climate.
Ornamental iron is not just a style preference in New Orleans. The Historic District Landmarks Commission (HDLC) requires material-authentic fencing in locally designated historic districts, and aluminum or vinyl are often not approvable in these areas. Property owners in the French Quarter, Garden District, Marigny, Bywater, and other historic neighborhoods frequently have no alternative to iron or steel fencing if they want HDLC approval.
True wrought iron and modern ornamental steel are frequently conflated, but they are fundamentally different materials with very different cost profiles.
Wrought iron is a slag-iron alloy that was produced by repeatedly heating and hammering iron to work out impurities and align the grain of the metal. The result is a fibrous, tough material that resists cracking under impact and can be shaped by a skilled blacksmith with hammer and anvil. True wrought iron was the primary structural iron used in architectural work, including fencing, from the pre-industrial era through the late 19th century.
Commercial production of true wrought iron ceased almost entirely in the mid-20th century as mild steel became cheaper and easier to produce at scale. What you see sold today as “wrought iron fence” is almost always mild steel fabricated to look like wrought iron. The two products behave similarly for fencing purposes, but they are not the same material.
Sourcing genuine wrought iron in 2025 requires hunting specialty salvage yards, reclaimed materials suppliers, or the few remaining blacksmiths who work with historically sourced stock. Price per linear foot for a fence fabricated from true wrought iron ranges from $200 to $500 or more, assuming you can find a blacksmith willing to take the commission and a source of material. This is not a market-rate product. It is a commission for a historically authentic reproduction at artisan craft prices.
The primary use case is restoration of historic fencing on landmark properties where authenticity requirements demand original materials. Some French Quarter and Garden District properties with landmark status may require true wrought iron for restoration work rather than modern steel reproductions. Outside of that narrow application, ornamental steel is the practical choice for both new construction and most restoration projects.
New Orleans has some of the finest surviving examples of 19th-century iron fence work in the United States. The cast iron galleries of the French Quarter, the ornamental iron fences of the Garden District, and the cemetery enclosures of St. Louis Cemeteries are among the most recognized ironwork in the country. Much of this original work would be classified as true wrought iron or early cast iron. Restoring it requires specialized craftspeople and, in some cases, historically sourced materials.
Copper fencing is among the most expensive and visually distinctive fencing options available. It is rarely seen in residential applications because of its cost and the specialized fabrication skills required, but in New Orleans it has a particular aesthetic logic given the city’s tradition of decorative metalwork.
Copper is a commodity metal with significant raw material cost. As of 2025, copper trades at roughly $4 to $5 per pound, compared to roughly $0.40 to $0.60 per pound for mild steel. A copper fence uses substantially more raw material cost per linear foot before any labor or fabrication is applied. Add the specialized skill required to fabricate and solder copper fence components, and you have a product that starts at $100 to $150 per linear foot for simple designs and reaches $250 to $300 or more for detailed work.
New copper fence starts as a bright, shiny reddish-orange metal. Over time, exposure to air and moisture causes the copper to oxidize through a sequence of colors: golden brown, then a darker chocolate brown, and eventually the green patina (called verdigris) that is associated with aged copper on historic buildings. In New Orleans’s humid, salt-air environment, this patina process moves faster than in drier climates. Full patina development typically takes 5 to 15 years depending on proximity to water and salt exposure.
Some homeowners install copper fencing specifically for the patina effect, wanting the aged-green look that reads as historic and artisanal. Others prefer to maintain the bright copper appearance by periodically applying a clear lacquer or wax sealant, which slows oxidation. Both approaches are valid but require different maintenance commitments.
Copper fencing is most often chosen for accent applications: small courtyard enclosures, garden feature fencing, decorative entry gates, or architectural detail elements where the visual impact of the material justifies the cost premium. It is rarely used as primary perimeter fencing because the cost per linear foot becomes prohibitive at scale. A 50-foot copper fence courtyard enclosure might cost $7,500 to $15,000. A 200-foot perimeter fence in copper would be a $20,000 to $60,000+ project.
If you choose to maintain bright copper, plan for annual cleaning and reapplication of protective sealant. If you allow natural patination, the fence is essentially self-maintaining once full patina develops, as the verdigris layer actually protects the underlying copper from further corrosion. Structural repairs to copper fencing require a fabricator experienced with copper work, which is a smaller talent pool than iron fence repair specialists.
The combination of a low brick or stucco masonry wall topped with ornamental iron panels is one of the most traditional and recognizable fencing configurations in New Orleans. It is also among the most expensive because it combines two separate skilled trades: masonry and ironwork.
The typical configuration involves brick or stucco-covered concrete block columns set at regular intervals (typically 6 to 8 feet on center), with a low wall running between the columns. Ornamental iron panels, usually 18 to 36 inches in height, are set into the top of the wall or mounted to the column faces. The overall fence height, wall plus iron, typically ranges from 4 to 6 feet.
Variations include full-height masonry walls (3 to 4 feet of solid masonry topped with 18 to 24 inches of iron) or minimal knee-wall configurations (12 to 18 inches of masonry topped with 3 to 4 feet of iron) that provide a traditional boundary definition while keeping more of the property visible.
Masonry work runs $30 to $80 per linear foot depending on wall height, material (brick vs. concrete block with stucco), and column complexity. Ornamental iron panels for the top run $40 to $100 per linear foot. Combined installed cost typically falls between $100 and $200 per linear foot for moderate configurations and can reach $300 to $400 per linear foot for elaborate brick columns with custom iron work and integrated lighting.
Masonry-iron combination fencing is strongly associated with Uptown and Garden District residential architecture, where large lots and formal gardens traditionally called for substantial perimeter definition. It is also common around commercial properties, churches, and institutions throughout the metro area. The visual weight of this fence type communicates permanence and prestige in a way that a pure iron fence cannot match.
New Orleans’s soft soil creates additional complexity for masonry fence construction. Masonry walls require continuous concrete footings that must be engineered to distribute load across the soft deltaic soil without settling unevenly. A masonry fence that settles even slightly can develop cracks in the wall and cause iron panels to rack and pull loose from their mountings. Proper engineering of the footing system is non-negotiable for a long-lived masonry fence in this area.
High-security fencing systems represent a separate category from residential ornamental fencing. These products are engineered for environments where fence defeat is a genuine threat, such as utility infrastructure, government facilities, commercial warehouses, and high-value private properties.
True high-security fencing is engineered to defeat specific attack methods, including cutting, climbing, ramming, and tunneling. Products in this category include anti-climb expanded steel mesh panels (with apertures too small for fingers or toes), anti-cut stainless steel cables embedded in panels, crash-rated vehicle barrier systems, and perimeter intrusion detection systems integrated into the fence itself.
Basic commercial-grade security fence panels run $40 to $80 per linear foot installed. Certified anti-climb and anti-cut systems run $80 to $150 per linear foot. Crash-rated vehicle barrier fencing, certified to stop vehicles at specific speeds and weights, runs $200 to $600 per linear foot and requires engineering review and permitting that adds to the project timeline and cost.
For most residential applications in New Orleans, a well-designed ornamental iron fence provides adequate security. The height, pointed tops, and structural weight of iron fencing are effective deterrents against casual intrusion. High-security commercial systems are appropriate for commercial and industrial properties where the threat profile justifies the cost, or for high-net-worth residential properties where security consulting has identified a specific need.
Several factors specific to New Orleans push the cost of iron and other premium fencing above what you would pay in most other American cities:
In most markets, the default iron-look fence is an aluminum panel in a stock size ordered from a national distributor. In New Orleans, the tradition of custom ironwork and the requirements of the HDLC push the market toward true custom fabrication. Custom fabrication means skilled labor, longer production timelines, and higher cost, but it also means a fence that is built precisely for your property and design vision.
New Orleans has a documented ironwork tradition dating to the French Colonial period. The city’s ironworkers developed distinctive design vocabularies including the fleur-de-lis, the corn stalk fence pattern, and the elaborate scroll and vine work seen on historic gallery railings. That tradition creates both a market expectation for quality and a base of skilled craftspeople who maintain the skills needed to produce it. Skilled craftspeople command skilled wages.
The Historic District Landmarks Commission requires that fencing on locally designated historic properties use authentic or historically appropriate materials and designs. Aluminum and vinyl are typically not approvable in HDLC-regulated areas. This regulatory environment pushes property owners toward iron or steel fencing and toward custom designs that meet HDLC standards, both of which cost more than the alternatives.
Salt air, high humidity, and tropical weather cycles accelerate corrosion on all metal fencing. Proper preparation for a New Orleans iron fence means hot-dip galvanizing the steel, using marine-grade powder coat formulations, and designing for wind loads that exceed what inland markets require. Each of these requirements adds cost at the fabrication and installation stage.
The answer depends on what you mean by “worth it.” If you mean the lowest upfront cost, no, iron and masonry fencing are not the most economical options. If you mean the best 30-year total cost of ownership combined with the highest property value impact, the math often favors premium fencing decisively.
A wood fence installed in New Orleans for $8,000 might need full replacement in 10 to 12 years due to humidity, rot, and storm damage. Over 30 years, that is two to three full replacements plus ongoing painting and repair costs. Total 30-year cost: $24,000 to $35,000.
An ornamental iron fence installed for $18,000 with proper corrosion protection requires only periodic touch-up painting every 5 to 10 years. Over 30 years, that might cost $2,000 to $4,000 in maintenance. Total 30-year cost: $20,000 to $22,000. And the iron fence is still standing and structurally sound at year 30, while the wood fence has been replaced multiple times.
When you extend the comparison to 50 years, iron wins decisively in total cost even at a significantly higher upfront price. This is why estate properties in New Orleans invest in iron, and why properties with intact original ironwork command premium prices in the real estate market.
Real estate professionals in New Orleans consistently report that well-maintained ornamental iron fencing adds meaningful curb appeal and can support higher asking prices, particularly in historic neighborhoods where iron fencing is expected as part of the architectural context. A property with original or period-appropriate iron fencing often sells faster and at a higher price per square foot than comparable properties without it.
Premium fencing is not just an aesthetic choice. It is also a decision to stop making the fencing decision every decade. A homeowner who installs a quality ornamental iron fence in their 30s or 40s will likely never deal with fence replacement again. That peace of mind has real value that does not appear in any cost-per-linear-foot comparison.
Understanding the custom fabrication process helps explain why premium iron fences cost significantly more than the aluminum alternatives sold at home improvement stores.
A custom iron fence project begins with a site visit to measure the fence line, assess terrain, identify gate locations, and discuss design preferences. For complex projects, the fabricator may produce a drawing or sample panel before committing to the full project. This design work takes time and is either included in the project cost or charged as a separate design fee.
Each panel is cut, formed, and welded by hand in a fabrication shop. Decorative elements like scrolls, finials, and fleur-de-lis toppers require separate forming and welding operations. A skilled fabricator might produce 10 to 20 linear feet of standard picket fence per day. Complex scrollwork panels might take a full day to produce 4 to 6 linear feet. Shop time drives cost in a way that is not visible in the final installed price but is very real.
After fabrication, the steel is blasted clean, hot-dip galvanized if specified, and then powder coated. Powder coating involves applying the finish electrostatically and baking the panels in a commercial oven at 350 to 400 degrees to cure the finish. This multi-stage process takes time and requires specialized equipment. It is what separates a quality iron fence finish that lasts 20-plus years from a brush-applied paint finish that may need repainting in 3 to 5 years.
Installation requires setting posts in concrete, hanging panels, aligning and leveling, and finishing any welded connections in the field. In New Orleans, deeper footings and soft soil conditions add time to the installation phase. A 100-linear-foot residential fence project with a gate typically takes a 2 to 3 person crew 2 to 4 days to install.
For property owners in New Orleans’s locally designated historic districts, the choice of fencing material is not entirely a personal decision. The Historic District Landmarks Commission has jurisdiction over exterior changes to properties within its boundaries, and fence replacement is among the exterior changes that require HDLC review and a Certificate of Appropriateness.
The HDLC’s design guidelines generally require that fencing on historic properties use materials that are historically appropriate to the period of the building’s construction and the character of the neighborhood. For most properties constructed before 1940, this means iron or steel fencing. Aluminum and vinyl are generally not approvable because they were not available as fencing materials in the historic period and do not read as authentic when compared to original iron fencing.
Beyond material, the HDLC reviews design. A spindly modern aluminum fence that looks nothing like the traditional ironwork of the neighborhood is unlikely to receive approval even if the material were acceptable. A fence design that reflects the historical context of the property, the appropriate height, picket style, and ornamental elements, has a much better chance of smooth approval.
Property owners in HDLC-regulated areas who need to replace or install fencing are effectively required to use iron or steel and to choose a design compatible with historic character. This is not a burden for most homeowners who want their property to look consistent with the neighborhood. It does mean that the lower-cost alternatives available in other markets are not available options here.
The HDLC offers pre-application consultations where staff can advise on whether a proposed fence design is likely to receive approval before you commit to the design and submit a formal application. Using this service can save significant time and money by catching design issues early. A knowledgeable iron fence contractor will guide you through the HDLC process and help prepare the required documentation.
True wrought iron fencing, which is now essentially extinct as a commercially available product, is technically the most expensive fence type when it can be sourced. For practical purposes, custom ornamental iron fencing with scrollwork, masonry-iron combination walls, and copper fencing represent the high-cost end of the residential fencing market. Masonry-iron combinations regularly run $150 to $400 per linear foot installed, making them among the most expensive fence types homeowners in New Orleans encounter.
True wrought iron, the slag-iron alloy worked by blacksmiths using pre-industrial techniques, is not commercially available as a new product. What is sold today as wrought iron fencing is mild steel fabricated to look like traditional wrought iron. Antique or salvaged true wrought iron can sometimes be found through specialty reclaimed materials suppliers, but sourcing it for a full fence project is difficult and expensive.
Copper’s high raw material cost, combined with the specialized fabrication skills required to work with it, drives the price of copper fencing significantly higher than steel alternatives. Copper trades at roughly 8 to 10 times the price of mild steel per pound, and the fabrication skills are more specialized. For a full-perimeter fence project, copper is rarely cost-effective. It is most often used for accent applications where the distinctive appearance justifies the premium.
In New Orleans, yes, with some nuance. Ornamental iron fencing consistently improves curb appeal and perceived property value in residential neighborhoods where it is expected as part of the architectural context. In historic neighborhoods, original or period-appropriate iron fencing can meaningfully support higher sale prices. However, over-improving a fence relative to the value of the property or the expectations of the neighborhood produces diminishing returns. A $40,000 copper fence on a $200,000 property in a neighborhood where wood fences are the norm adds less value than it costs.
Properly installed and maintained ornamental iron lasts 50 to 75 years or longer. Aluminum fences typically last 20 to 30 years. Wood fences in New Orleans’s climate typically last 8 to 15 years before significant structural degradation. Vinyl fences last 20 to 30 years but can become brittle and discolored from UV exposure. Masonry walls with iron toppers, if properly engineered for local soil conditions, can last as long as the iron itself, 50-plus years.
Cast iron is made by pouring molten iron into molds and is brittle compared to wrought iron. Historic cast iron fence panels and decorative elements are common in New Orleans, particularly the ornate gallery railings of the French Quarter. Cast iron is strong in compression but can shatter on impact. Wrought iron, worked by hammering, is tougher and more impact-resistant. Modern ornamental iron fences use mild steel, which combines the formability of wrought iron with the consistency of industrial production.
Yes, and this is a common approach in New Orleans. A popular cost-management strategy is to use a masonry base wall with simpler, more economical iron panels on top, reserving the elaborate scrollwork panels for gate surrounds and entry features where they have the most visual impact. Another approach is to install a standard spear-top iron fence along the sides and rear of a property and use more elaborate custom panels only on the street-facing front section.
HDLC has jurisdiction over locally designated historic districts and individually designated landmarks, not all historic buildings in New Orleans. Properties in nationally registered historic districts but not locally designated may not be subject to HDLC review for fencing. The HDLC website and staff can confirm whether a specific address falls within their jurisdiction. If HDLC review applies, they generally prefer iron or steel fencing over aluminum or vinyl for properties with pre-1940 construction dates.
Copper in New Orleans’s humid, salt-influenced coastal environment moves through its oxidation sequence relatively quickly. The bright reddish copper surface transitions to golden brown within months of installation, to darker brown within a year or two, and to the distinctive blue-green verdigris patina within 5 to 15 years depending on proximity to salt water. The verdigris patina is stable and actually protective, making fully patinated copper very low-maintenance from a corrosion standpoint.
Yes. Home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) offer the lowest rates for homeowners with available equity. Many fence contractors work with specialty home improvement lenders including GreenSky and Service Finance Company, which offer fixed-payment installment plans over 12 to 84 months. Personal loans and 0% promotional APR credit cards can also fund smaller projects. For large custom projects over $20,000, a HELOC or cash-out refinance typically offers the most favorable terms.
Ask whether their fence panels are custom-fabricated in-house or ordered from a national supplier (in-house fabrication allows more design control and better quality assurance). Ask about their galvanizing process and what finish warranty they offer. Ask to see photos of completed projects similar to yours. Verify their Louisiana contractor license number. Ask specifically about their experience with HDLC projects if your property requires HDLC approval. And ask for an itemized written quote so you can see exactly what you are paying for.
Ready to invest in a fence that will last longer than any other improvement you can make to your property? Call Big Easy Iron Works at 504-732-0066 for a free consultation. We handle everything from design to HDLC documentation to custom fabrication and installation, all in New Orleans. You can also explore our custom iron fencing options to see the range of designs we produce.
“Great job on the iron gates! I can’t believe they finished installing the iron gate and repairing our fence. A lot of my neighbors recommended Big Easy Iron Works and I can see why they trust them so much. Very professional workers came and the owner checked up from time to time. Great experience.”
– Vanessa Johnson“You have my respect for Big Easy Iron Works! Thank you for staying true to your word about quality service. They helped install our new iron fence and it exceeded my expectations to be honest. They explained everything they would be doing every day of the job. I really recommend them for those living in New Orleans. Hire them for your fencing needs.”
– Billy Anderson“I contacted Big Easy Iron Works because most of my neighbors recommended them to me. I am satisfied with the time that they took to finish the work repairs with my wood fence. The fences they placed turned out nice and they looked like they would last longer. I would also recommend them to my friends in New Orleans.”
– Shirley Oaks