Landscaper Leads — Scrape Google Maps for Landscaping Businesses
This page turns a single Google Maps search into a clean CSV of landscaping businesses in any city. Run a search like "landscapers in Austin" or "lawn care in Sacramento" and every matching company comes back as one row — name, full address, phone, website, category, star rating, and review count — with a flag on the ones that have no website at all. No code, no Places API, no copy-paste: fill in the search, watch the count climb live, and download the file.
It is built for two kinds of people. The first is agencies, web designers, and local marketers who sell to the green industry — the no-website flag hands you a pre-qualified list of landscapers visibly losing search traffic, plus the phone number to pitch them. The second is landscapers themselves, sizing up a market: pull every competitor in town, sort by review count, and see at a glance who owns the local rankings and who never built a site worth beating.
What's in every row
Each landscaping business lands as a single row with consistent columns, so a map full of pins becomes a list you can work top to bottom.
Business name & category
The company name and how Google files it — landscaper, lawn care service, or landscape designer.
Full address
Street, city, state, and zip in clean columns, ready for territory mapping or a mailed postcard.
Phone number
The public number from the listing — your outreach channel, since these owners run the business from their phone.
Website, or the no-website flag
The site URL when there is one, and a clear flag on the businesses with none — your prime web-design prospects.
Rating & review count
Star rating and how many reviews, so you can spot the well-run crews with no web presence in seconds.
How to turn it into clients
The landscapers worth pitching are the ones with strong reviews and no website — established crews whose reputation lives on Google. Their weak spot is that landscaping is a visual sale: homeowners want to see the patio, the wall, the transformed front yard before they call. Build a one-page demo with a photo gallery of their work, their real reviews, a service-area map, and a quote-request form, then open with "I already built you something — here is the link."
Time it for late winter and early spring, right before the season floods every landscaper with "landscaper near me" searches — the site that exists before the rush captures it. Sell the build flat and the hosting as a small monthly, and note that a quote form turns their site into a lead engine for the recurring mow-and-maintenance work that smooths out the off-season.
Filter to the best-fit prospects
Not every row is worth a call. Sort by review count and rating and start at the top — a four-star-plus landscaper with dozens of reviews and no website is an established business that never got online, the easiest close and the best long-term client. Skip the zero-review listings, which are often dormant, and work the no-website rows first if you are strictly selling sites.
How it works
Search your city
"landscapers in Austin", "lawn care in Sacramento" — or sweep the whole landscaping category across a metro.
Set your cap
Choose how many businesses to pull. Starting the run holds only its worst-case cost, never more than your balance.
Watch it run live
Landscapers stream in with a live counter — flip on the no-website filter first if you only want prospects.
Download your CSV
Billed per place scraped, the unused hold refunded, and the file opens straight in Excel or Google Sheets.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get landscapers without a website?
Yes. Every row shows whether the business has a website, and you can flip a filter so the CSV keeps only landscapers with none — the pre-qualified list for web-design and marketing outreach. You still get name, phone, address, rating, and reviews on each one, so you can call the best-rated first.
How current is the data?
It is as current as Google Maps itself. Every run pulls live listings the moment you start it, so the phone numbers, ratings, and review counts reflect what is on Google that day — not a stale list sold and resold for months.
How much does it cost?
Runs are $8 per 1,000 results, and every new account starts with $5.00 in free credits — enough to pull a city's worth of landscapers before you pay anything. You are billed per result scraped, never for your cap, and failed runs are refunded in full. Contact columns are included at no extra cost.