Contact

National Landscaping Authority serves as a reference resource for landscaping professionals, property owners, and industry researchers across the United States. This page explains how inquiries are handled, what response timelines to expect, and which types of questions fall within the scope of this resource. Understanding the difference between information requests, service referrals, and editorial feedback helps route questions to the right channel and reduces resolution time.

Response expectations

Inquiries submitted through the contact link in the footer are reviewed during standard business hours, Monday through Friday. General information requests — such as questions about landscaping terminology, service categories, or how to navigate reference content — typically receive a response promptly.

Editorial corrections and factual disputes are held to a higher review standard. Any submission flagging an inaccuracy in published content is logged, assigned to a subject-matter reviewer, and evaluated against primary sources before a response is issued. This process may take up to 5 business days depending on the complexity of the claim.

Three distinct inquiry types are handled through this contact channel:

  1. Information requests — Questions about landscaping services, industry classifications, or how to interpret reference content on this site.
  2. Editorial feedback — Submissions flagging factual errors, outdated information, or content gaps in published articles or guides.
  3. Professional listing inquiries — Questions from landscaping contractors, nursery operators, or lawn care providers about how businesses are represented within the directory structure of affiliated properties.

Submissions that fall outside these categories — such as solicitations, link exchange requests, or advertising proposals — are not reviewed and receive no response.

Additional contact options

For landscaping-specific questions that require immediate practical guidance rather than editorial clarification, the Landscaping Services FAQ page addresses the most common service-related questions in structured format. That resource covers topics including service type definitions, seasonal scope, and contractor qualification standards.

For a structured walkthrough of how to identify, vet, and engage a landscaping professional, the How to Get Help for Landscaping Services guide provides a step-by-step breakdown organized by project type — from routine lawn maintenance to full landscape design and installation.

These self-service resources resolve the majority of questions without requiring a direct submission. Consulting them before submitting a contact link in the footer inquiry reduces wait time and ensures a more precise response when a submission is necessary.

How to reach this office

Contact submissions are accepted through the form published on this page. No phone-based support line is maintained. This reflects the editorial and reference nature of the resource — response quality depends on written documentation of the question, which allows reviewers to accurately assess context and source appropriate information before replying.

When submitting an inquiry, the following information produces the most useful response:

  1. Subject category — Identify whether the submission is an information request, an editorial correction, or a professional listing question.
  2. Specific reference — If the inquiry relates to a particular page or article, include the page title or URL.
  3. Supporting detail — For editorial corrections, cite the specific claim being disputed and the source supporting the correction. For information requests, describe the project or decision context to allow a targeted response.

Submissions lacking these details are not rejected, but resolution may require a follow-up exchange, which extends the timeline.

Service area covered

National Landscaping Authority operates as a national-scope reference resource covering the contiguous United States. Content published on this site addresses landscaping practices, service categories, and industry standards that apply across all 50 states, though specific regulatory requirements — such as pesticide applicator licensing thresholds, water use restrictions, and contractor bond minimums — vary by state and are noted as jurisdiction-dependent where relevant.

The scope distinction that matters most for contact purposes:

National reference content covers definitions, service classifications, best practices, and general industry standards that are broadly applicable regardless of geography. Questions in this category can be addressed directly through published resources or via a contact submission.

State- or locality-specific regulatory questions — including licensing requirements for landscaping contractors in a particular state, local ordinances governing grading or drainage work, or municipal permit thresholds — fall outside the editorial scope of national reference content. These questions are best directed to the relevant state licensing board, a local municipality, or a licensed contractor operating in that jurisdiction.

For nursery-specific inquiries, the National Nursery Authority at nationalnurseryauthority.com covers plant sourcing, nursery operations, and horticultural classifications. For lawn care service questions focused specifically on turf maintenance, fertilization schedules, and lawn treatment programs, National Lawncare Authority at nationallawncareauthority.com addresses those topics within a dedicated reference structure. Both properties operate under the same editorial standards applied here and accept contact inquiries through equivalent processes.