Landscaping Logo Inspiration

A landscaping business runs on reputation. You show up, the work speaks for itself, and word spreads. But before any of that happens, someone sees your truck, your website, or a yard sign. That first impression is your logo doing its job.

A good landscaping logo is simple enough to read on a moving vehicle, clear enough to print small on an invoice, and specific enough that people know what you do. You don’t need a complicated illustration. You need something that says “we work outside, we know plants, and we’re professionals.”

The best ones in this category lean on a handful of visual ideas: tools, plants, natural shapes, and clean lines. Here’s a look at some options worth considering.

Logos we love

The Wheelbarrow with Plants Logo is direct and recognizable. A wheelbarrow is one of those universal symbols for yard work, and this one pairs it with foliage to make the context obvious at a glance.

The Overlapping Work Gloves Logo takes a different angle. Gloves signal hands-on work without pointing to any one service, which makes this a solid pick if you do more than just lawn care.

If your business has a broader outdoor focus, the Outdoor Adventure Logo has a rugged, outdoorsy feel that works for companies doing landscape design, trail maintenance, or property management in natural settings.

The Plants with Sun Logo keeps things fresh and simple. It’s the kind of mark that reads well in green and yellow, and it works across seasonal promotions without feeling out of place.

For companies in hilly or mountainous regions, the Mountain Logo is a clean geometric option. It skips the literal garden imagery and instead says something about the terrain you work in.

The Line Nature Logo uses minimal linework to suggest natural shapes. It’s a quieter mark, which can actually help you on printed materials where simpler is easier to reproduce.

And the Drill Bit Logo might seem like a curve ball for landscaping, but if you offer hardscaping, irrigation installation, or outdoor construction, a tool-focused mark signals that side of the business clearly.

How to customize your logo

Once you’ve picked a mark, a few small adjustments make it yours:

  • Color: Green is the obvious choice, but earthy tones like warm brown, slate, or deep navy can set you apart from competitors who all went the same route. Think about what’s on your truck already.
  • Font: Pair the icon with a clean, readable typeface. Avoid anything too decorative. Someone reading your van in traffic has about two seconds.
  • Tagline placement: If you have a short tagline, place it below the business name in a lighter weight. Keep it under six words or skip it entirely.
Most of the logos here come as SVG files, which means you can open them in Figma, Illustrator, or Inkscape and swap colors, adjust proportions, or add your business name without losing any quality. If you’re working in Figma specifically, just drag the SVG in, double-click to enter the group, and edit individual paths from there.

If you’re adding your logo to a vehicle wrap or sign, make sure to export a version with enough contrast to work on both light and dark backgrounds. A white version on a dark truck panel and a colored version on a white background both need to look good.

Browse the full collection at /collections/landscaping-logos and find something that fits your work.

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