
MC Montclair Fence Builder installs and repairs fences throughout Chino, CA, from the newer subdivisions in The Preserve to the older neighborhoods near downtown. We handle wood, vinyl, chain link, ranch-style, and farm fencing for residential and agricultural properties, with free estimates and replies within one business day.

Chino grew up as dairy and agricultural land, and while most of the old farms have been replaced by housing tracts, several properties on the city's edges still have large lots that need practical perimeter fencing. Post-and-rail, high-tensile wire, and pipe fencing all work well for these applications. See our full farm and ranch fencing options for Chino properties.
Wood privacy fences are common throughout Chino's residential neighborhoods, particularly in the older tracts near downtown and along the city's central corridors. Cedar and redwood hold up best in Chino's hot, dry summers, and a properly sealed fence resists the UV damage that the Inland Empire sun delivers year-round.
Many of the master-planned communities in Chino built since the 1990s have HOAs that prefer a uniform, low-maintenance look, and vinyl fencing fits that requirement well. Vinyl will not crack, fade, or require repainting, and it handles the heat and Santa Ana wind conditions in Chino without the maintenance demands of wood.
Chain link is a practical choice for large Chino lots, side-yard enclosures, dog runs, and properties near the Chino Airport where a cost-effective, durable perimeter is the priority. Galvanized chain link holds up well in clay soil conditions and does not require the post-setting depth that heavier solid-panel fences demand.
Chino is a family-oriented city with a high rate of homeownership, and many households have dogs that need a properly secured yard. We install dedicated dog run enclosures and full yard pet fencing in chain link, welded wire, and aluminum, sized and configured to match your yard and the size of your animals.
Chino clay soil and Santa Ana winds are hard on fences, and even well-built fences eventually need posts re-set, boards replaced, or gates re-hung. We repair wood, vinyl, and chain link fences throughout Chino and can often address localized damage without requiring a full replacement of the fence line.
Most of Chino was built between 1980 and 2005, and the homes that went up during that period now have fences that are anywhere from 20 to 40 years old. Chino sits on heavy clay soils left over from its agricultural past, and clay does not behave the same way as the sandy or loamy soil found elsewhere in Southern California. Clay expands significantly when winter rains soak in, then shrinks and cracks during the dry summer months. That repeated swelling and shrinking cycle stresses fence post footings more than most homeowners realize, and it is one of the primary reasons fence posts in Chino lean and shift faster than in other areas.
Santa Ana wind events are another consistent factor. Chino sits in the western Inland Empire, directly in the path of east-to-west wind flows that can push gusts above 50 mph in the fall and winter. Older fences with shallow footings or weakened boards are particularly vulnerable, and after each major wind event we receive calls from Chino homeowners whose fences did not survive. Building to the right depth with the right hardware matters here more than the installation cost savings might suggest.
Our crew works throughout Chino regularly, and the variety of property types here is something we deal with on every job. Chino is one of the few Inland Empire cities where you can still find a residential neighborhood next to a large-lot property that was converted from agricultural use within the last 20 years. Those former dairy and farm parcels often have soil conditions and drainage patterns that differ from the standard tract lots, and fencing them requires a different approach than a typical suburban backyard job.
We know the city well, from the older neighborhoods near Central Avenue and the downtown corridor to the newer developments in The Preserve and the streets near Chino Airport. Homeowners in south Chino near the Chino Hills border often have sloped lots that require careful planning for fence lines and gate placement. We handle those details upfront so the installation goes smoothly.
We also serve nearby Chino Hills to the south and Ontario to the north, so if you have a property that straddles these areas or you need work done at multiple locations, we can coordinate that easily.
Call or fill out the contact form and we will follow up within one business day to schedule your estimate. If you have a rough sense of your fence length and preferred material, let us know when you reach out.
We visit your Chino property, measure the fence line, note any underground utilities, and assess the soil and slope conditions. The estimate we provide is itemized - no vague totals - so you know exactly what you are getting.
We manage the City of Chino permit application on your behalf and, where applicable, coordinate HOA approval. We handle the paperwork so the project does not stall on your end.
Most residential jobs are completed in one to two days. We set posts to the correct depth for Chino clay conditions, let concrete cure properly before tensioning rails or panels, and remove all debris from the site when we finish.
We serve homeowners throughout Chino, CA. No pressure - just a clear estimate and honest advice about what your property needs.
(909) 488-7004Chino is a city of about 90,000 residents in San Bernardino County, sitting in the western part of the Inland Empire near the intersections of the 60, 71, and 83 freeways. For most of the twentieth century, Chino was one of the most productive dairy farming areas in California, and that agricultural history is still visible in the city's flat terrain and the open land that persists on its edges. Starting in the 1980s and continuing through the 2000s, those dairy farms gave way to residential subdivisions at a rapid pace. Today, Chino is a predominantly owner-occupied city with a large share of single-family homes on mid-size lots, tract housing from the 1990s in the central and south parts of the city, and a growing number of newer homes in master-planned communities like The Preserve.
Chino is bordered by Ontario to the north, Pomona to the northeast, and Chino Hills to the south. The Planes of Fame Air Museum at Chino Airport is one of the city's best-known landmarks and draws visitors from across Southern California. The city has a strong family-ownership culture - most residents own their homes and plan to stay long-term, which means there is consistent demand for home improvement work like fencing done correctly the first time. We also serve nearby Chino Hills and Pomona for homeowners in those adjacent communities.
Durable chain link fencing for security and boundary definition.
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Learn MoreCall us today or request a free estimate online - we respond within one business day and serve homeowners throughout Chino and the surrounding Inland Empire.