Haralson County Fence Company
From Bremen’s I-20 subdivisions to livestock pastures outside Tallapoosa, we bring Hiram-based expertise to every corner of Haralson County — agricultural fencing, rural privacy, and HOA-aware residential installs across the county’s rolling upper Piedmont terrain.
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Haralson County is genuinely rural — and that shapes the fence work here in ways that suburban markets don’t. A large share of projects are agricultural: woven wire cattle fence on T-posts across open pasture, high-tensile perimeter lines on large acreage, post-and-board for horse paddocks. The county’s A-1 zoning ordinance makes perimeter fencing a legal requirement for any property keeping livestock, so these aren’t optional upgrades — they’re obligations. We serve the full spread from county-seat properties in Buchanan to the I-20 subdivision corridors in Bremen, the Victorian streetscapes of Tallapoosa, and the rural edges near Waco.
Our Hiram office sits about 35 miles east on I-20 — the same highway that connects directly to Bremen. We’re one of the few fence contractors operating in this county with substantive local knowledge, city-by-city permit familiarity, and authentic agricultural fence capability. Most competitors either lack a Haralson County page entirely or run generic franchise templates with no local content.
Cities & Communities We Serve in Haralson County
Bremen
The most suburban community in the county, Bremen sits on the I-20 corridor with the highest concentration of HOA-governed subdivisions — Stonebridge, Bentwater, Creekside at Magnolia, and the new Liberty Station development. The city requires a building permit for fences, limits front yards to 3.5 feet, and prohibits chain link in front yards. Bremen also carries the county’s textile heritage: it earned the title “The Clothing Center of the South” during decades of apparel manufacturing at plants like Sewell Mill.
Bremen PageBuchanan
Buchanan is the county seat — a small historic town of about 1,300 residents built around its 1891 Queen Anne-style courthouse, now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The fence market blends rural-residential properties outside town with the small subdivision clusters near The Oaks at Five Points and Westmoreland Lake. Buchanan’s code allows rear fences up to 8 feet in required yards, and prohibits chain link in residential front yards.
Buchanan PageTallapoosa
Tallapoosa anchors the western edge of the county, sitting about 9 miles from the Alabama state line on US-78. It has a National Register-listed Historic District of Victorian-era homes dating to the 1880s–1900s and is known regionally for its annual New Year’s Eve Possum Drop. Tallapoosa’s 2024 building regulations require all new fencing to use standardized, uniform materials — mixed-material construction is prohibited. Historic district properties should verify additional standards with City Hall.
Tallapoosa PageWaco
Waco is one of the most rural incorporated communities in northwest Georgia, with a population around 620. Located near the Carroll County line on US-78, the area is characterized by large rural residential lots, hobby farms, and agricultural land. Fence work here is dominated by pasture and perimeter fencing — woven wire, T-post, and chain link for working properties. No competing fence company has any published Waco content online.
Waco PageTop Fence Styles in Haralson County

Field & Pasture Fence
The dominant project type in Haralson County. We install woven wire field fence on driven T-posts for cattle and mixed-livestock perimeters, high-tensile wire for large-acreage runs, post-and-board for horse paddocks, and barbed wire for working ranch applications. Haralson County’s A-1 zoning legally requires perimeter fencing for any property keeping livestock.
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Wood Privacy Fence
Pressure-treated wood privacy is the leading residential style across Haralson County, especially on larger-lot properties where long backyard runs are common. Red clay soil and humid summers make proper post depth and rot-resistant lumber critical — we use treated lumber rated for ground contact and set posts to sufficient depth to resist heave through Haralson’s wet winters.
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Chain Link Fence
Practical and durable for Haralson County’s rural working properties — dog kennels, equipment perimeters, garden enclosures, and general rural security. Available in galvanized and vinyl-coated black. Note: chain link is not permitted in residential front yards in Bremen or Buchanan; it is well-suited for rear and side yard applications in both cities and throughout unincorporated areas.
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Ornamental Aluminum Fence
The preferred front-yard style in Bremen’s HOA subdivisions, where open-view fencing is required in front yards. Ornamental aluminum meets Bremen’s 3.5-foot front yard height limit, satisfies ARC review requirements in communities like Stonebridge and Bentwater, and requires zero maintenance in Georgia’s humid subtropical climate.
View ServicePermits, HOAs, and Compliance in Haralson County
Permit requirements and material rules differ across Haralson County’s four incorporated cities and the unincorporated county. Here’s what applies where:
| Jurisdiction | Permit Required? | Front Yard Limit | Chain Link Front? | Rear/Side Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bremen | Yes — required before installation | 3.5 ft, open/ornamental only | Not permitted | 6 ft solid |
| Buchanan | Verify with City Hall | 6 ft ornamental; 3 ft in corner sight triangle | Not permitted in front | Up to 8 ft in required rear yard |
| Tallapoosa | Likely — verify at 770-574-2345 | Uniform standardized materials required | Permitted if standard gauge/style | Uniform materials required throughout |
| Waco | Verify with Haralson County | No published city ordinance found | Likely governed by county rules | Verify with county |
| Unincorporated County | Verify with county at 770-646-2033 | No published residential height limit | Generally allowed | Verify with county |
We always recommend verifying your specific address with the appropriate jurisdiction before finalizing height, placement, and material choices. If your property is in an HOA, your governing documents may be more restrictive than local ordinance — we help you navigate both.
Rural & Acreage Projects Across Haralson County
Agricultural and rural fence is the backbone of the Haralson County market, and we treat it as a first-class service — not a footnote. Haralson County’s A-1 agriculture district ordinance (Section 50-115) explicitly requires that any livestock must not be able to roam off the property, making perimeter fencing a legal obligation for property owners keeping animals. Minor livestock enclosures (8 animals or fewer) require a minimum 100-foot setback from property lines.
We install the full range of agricultural fence types common in northwest Georgia:
- Woven wire field fence on T-posts — the workhorse of cattle and mixed-livestock perimeters; T-posts are driven rather than augered on pasture runs, which handles Haralson’s red clay soils efficiently
- High-tensile wire fence — cost-effective for large-acreage perimeters; properly tensioned high-tensile requires fewer posts and handles heave pressure better than woven wire on longer runs
- Post-and-board (split rail or rough-sawn) — the standard for horse paddocks and pastures; we size board spacing and rail count to the specific livestock and property use
- Barbed wire — appropriate for working cattle ranches and exterior perimeters in agricultural zones; we follow county setback and placement requirements
Haralson County’s rolling upper Piedmont terrain means elevation changes are common on large rural properties. We plan gate locations, corner post bracing, and run lengths to account for slope and drainage — particularly around the Tallapoosa River floodplain areas in the western county.
Unincorporated Haralson County Areas We Serve
Our crews serve properties throughout unincorporated Haralson County, including the rural corridors between Bremen and Tallapoosa along US-78, the agricultural areas north of Buchanan toward the Polk County line, the Tallapoosa River basin communities in the western county, and the rural-residential areas near the Carroll County line east of Waco. Properties along GA State Route 100 north of Tallapoosa and the US-27 corridor through western Bremen are part of our regular service territory.
Haralson County Compliance and Terrain Strategy
Haralson County sits in Georgia’s red clay belt — Cecil and Madison clay loam soils that expand when wet and contract when dry, creating heave pressure on fence posts over time. We set residential posts at proper depth with the right concrete mix to resist the movement common through wet Georgia winters. On agricultural properties with clay-based pasture soils, we favor driven T-posts over augered wood posts for woven wire and high-tensile installations.
The county’s rolling terrain means slope management is relevant on many residential lots as well. We choose between racked panels (which follow grade smoothly) and stepped layouts (which handle sharper elevation changes) based on the specific slope, the fence style, and the gap-control requirements. We also plan around utility easements and drainage patterns before installation — particularly important on lower lots near the Tallapoosa River and its tributaries in the western part of the county.
Haralson County Fence FAQs
Permit guidance, HOA compliance, agricultural requirements, and project answers for homeowners across Bremen, Buchanan, Tallapoosa, Waco, and unincorporated Haralson County.
Yes. Bremen requires a building permit before any fence is erected. The city’s zoning ordinance states fences shall be erected only upon application to and permit issued by the city. Contact the Bremen Building Department at 770-537-2331 before installation.
In Bremen residential zones, front yard fences are limited to 3.5 feet and must be open-style — picket or ornamental. Solid fences in rear and side yards are permitted up to 6 feet. Chain link is not allowed in front yards.
Buchanan’s zoning ordinance allows ornamental fences up to 6 feet in any yard, and fences in required rear yards up to 8 feet maximum. Chain link is not permitted to enclose residential front yards. Corner lots must keep fence height below 3 feet within 25 feet of any intersection.
Yes. Tallapoosa’s 2024 building regulations require all new fencing to use uniform, standardized materials — chain link, wrought iron, wood, or other purpose-designed fencing. Mixed-material or leftover-material construction is explicitly prohibited. Properties in the Tallapoosa Historic District should verify any additional design standards with City Hall at 770-574-2345.
Haralson County’s Building and Zoning Department administers permits for unincorporated areas. The county does not publish a standalone fence-permit threshold, so we recommend verifying with the county at 770-646-2033 before installation — particularly for taller fences or agricultural enclosures.
Yes. Haralson County’s A-1 agriculture district ordinance (Section 50-115) states that any livestock must not be able to roam off the property, either kept inside a properly fenced area or a livestock enclosure. This is a legal requirement, not just a recommendation. Minor enclosures (8 animals or fewer) require a 100-foot setback from property lines.
We install woven wire field fence on T-posts for cattle and mixed-livestock perimeters, high-tensile wire for large-acreage perimeters, post-and-board for horse paddocks and pastures, and barbed wire for working ranches. We set T-posts by driving rather than augering, which handles Haralson County’s red clay soils better on open pasture runs.
Most HOA-governed Bremen communities — including Stonebridge, Bentwater, Creekside at Magnolia, and Liberty Station — require Architectural Review Committee approval before fence installation. We are familiar with HOA review processes in Haralson County communities and can provide material and dimension documentation to support your ARC submission.
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