Estimated local cost for retaining wall in Pennsylvania, based on regional cost-of-living data. Updated April 2026.
Quick Answer: The estimated cost of retaining wall in Pennsylvania is $2,900 – $14,550 ($20 – $60 per sq ft of wall face). Average: $6,300.Pennsylvania is 3% below national average.
Source: ClearCost national data adjusted by BEA Regional Price Parity for Pennsylvania — updated April 2026
Pennsylvania
$6,300
Estimated range: $2,900 – $14,550
$20 – $60 per sq ft of wall face
National Average
$6,500
Range: $3,000 – $15,000
Pennsylvania is 3% below national average based on BEA RPP data.
About these estimates: These prices are derived from our national pricing data adjusted for Pennsylvania's cost of living (BEA Regional Price Parity: 97.0). Actual costs vary based on specific project requirements, contractor availability, and local material sourcing. See the national cost guide for full details.
Retaining walls hold back soil on sloped properties, prevent erosion, and create usable level areas in your yard. The national average cost is around $6,500 for a typical retaining wall, with most projects falling between $3,000 and $15,000. Costs depend on the wall material, height, length, and whether engineering is required. Walls over 4 feet tall generally require a structural engineer's design and a building permit.
Material choice affects both the appearance and structural capability of a retaining wall. Landscape timbers are the cheapest option but have the shortest lifespan and are limited to walls under 3 feet. Concrete blocks (interlocking segmental units) are the most popular choice due to their strength, variety of finishes, and moderate cost. Natural stone walls provide a premium aesthetic but are more labor-intensive to build. Poured concrete walls are the strongest option and are often used for tall engineered walls and foundations.
Wall height dramatically affects cost because taller walls require deeper foundations, more material, reinforcement, and often engineering approval. Walls under 3 feet are relatively simple gravity walls that rely on their own mass to resist soil pressure. Walls 3–4 feet typically need geogrids or reinforcement layers behind the wall. Walls over 4 feet almost always require a structural engineer's design, a building permit, and specialized construction techniques including a reinforced footing and drainage system.
Proper drainage is the single most important factor in retaining wall longevity. Water pressure behind the wall (hydrostatic pressure) is the leading cause of retaining wall failure. Every retaining wall should include a drainage aggregate layer behind the wall, a perforated drain pipe at the base, and filter fabric to prevent soil from clogging the drainage system. Walls over 4 feet tall typically require an engineer's stamp, which adds $500–$1,500 to the project but ensures the wall is designed to handle the actual soil loads.
$1,000
Retaining wall labor includes excavation, compacting the base, laying courses of block or stone, backfilling with drainage aggregate, installing drain pipe and filter fabric, and compacting backfill in lifts. A professional crew of 2–4 workers can typically build 20–40 square feet of wall face per day depending on material and height. Labor accounts for roughly 50–60% of the total project cost. Tall walls that require geogrids and engineered footings take significantly longer per linear foot.
A typical retaining wall of 50–100 linear feet takes 3–7 days to build.
Most jurisdictions require a permit for retaining walls over 4 feet tall (measured from the bottom of the footing to the top of the wall). Some areas set the threshold at 3 feet. Walls that support structures, hold back a slope above a building, or affect drainage patterns may require permits regardless of height. Always check with your local building department.
A properly built concrete block retaining wall with adequate drainage lasts 50–100 years. Natural stone walls can last even longer. Timber retaining walls have a shorter lifespan of 15–25 years before the wood deteriorates. The most common cause of premature failure is inadequate drainage, which allows water pressure to build behind the wall.
Short retaining walls under 3 feet are a manageable DIY project using interlocking concrete blocks, which require no mortar. However, walls over 3 feet involve significant excavation, engineering considerations, and proper drainage installation that are best handled by professionals. An improperly built retaining wall can fail catastrophically, causing property damage and safety hazards.
The most common causes of retaining wall failure are inadequate drainage (allowing water pressure to build behind the wall), insufficient footing depth, lack of geogrid reinforcement in taller walls, and poor compaction of the base material. Frost heave in cold climates can also damage walls that are not built on footings below the frost line.
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