
Eagle Pass Fence is your local fence contractor serving Brackettville, TX and Kinney County, installing farm and ranch fencing, wood privacy fences, and chain link for residential and rural properties - responding within 1 business day.

Kinney County is ranch country, and properties here range from small in-town lots to large hunting leases that need miles of perimeter fencing. Our farm and ranch fencing service covers everything from woven wire for livestock to high-fence deer exclusion systems common on Kinney County hunting properties.
Many Brackettville homes are older structures that benefit from a traditional wood privacy fence to define the yard and add a buffer from neighboring properties. The intense summer heat here requires properly treated lumber and sealed surfaces to prevent warping and cracking over time.
For Brackettville homeowners who need a durable, low-maintenance perimeter without the upkeep of wood, chain link is a practical fit - it holds up in the clay-heavy soil and handles the temperature swings this part of southwest Texas is known for.
Brackettville has a significant share of older homes, many built before 1970, and fences from that era are often showing their age. Posts that have shifted in the shrink-swell soil, split boards, and rusted hardware are all common repair calls we handle across Kinney County.
Brackettville sits in coyote and wildlife country - a standard 4-foot fence is not enough to keep a dog safe in this part of Kinney County. We install taller, reinforced pet enclosures with dig-prevention footers that account for the local wildlife pressure.
Rural and semi-rural properties around Brackettville often need a driveway gate that can be opened remotely - especially for hunting camps and ranch properties where the gate may be far from the main structure. We install both swing and slide automatic gate systems.
Kinney County sits in a semi-arid part of southwest Texas where the soil is a clay-heavy mix that shrinks during the long dry spells and swells when rain arrives. That constant movement is hard on fence posts - a post set at the wrong depth will shift and lean within a few years. Brackettville also sees summer temperatures that regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit from May through September, which accelerates wood drying, cracks unsealed surfaces, and degrades hardware faster than in milder climates. A contractor who does not factor in these conditions during installation will leave you with a fence that needs early repairs.
Beyond the soil and heat, Kinney County properties include a wide range of structures - older in-town homes, converted buildings inside the Fort Clark Springs community, hunting cabins on ranch leases, and working agricultural operations. Each of those property types has different fencing needs. A ranch property might need high-fence deer exclusion along with a standard wood fence around the residence. A Fort Clark Springs home in a converted military building might have unusual lot boundaries that require a custom solution. Matching the right fence system to the actual property is what separates a useful fence from a frustrating one.
Our crew works throughout Brackettville and the surrounding Kinney County area regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect fence contractor work here. We are familiar with the mix of in-town residential properties, the Fort Clark Springs community on the edge of town with its converted military-era buildings, and the rural ranch properties that stretch across the county.
Brackettville is a small, remote town - about 120 miles west of San Antonio on Highway 90. Most homeowners here have learned that they cannot count on contractors from the city who charge for long drives and then rush the job. We make the trip and stay until the work is done right. We know the courthouse square at the center of town, the Las Moras Creek corridor near Fort Clark, and the ranch roads that connect properties out into the brush country. That familiarity makes scheduling and logistics much simpler for homeowners in this area.
We also serve Uvalde, about 30 miles east on Highway 90, where a similar mix of residential and agricultural fencing work keeps our crew active in that corridor. Homeowners between Brackettville and Uvalde get the same level of service as those in either city.
We respond within 1 business day. A brief conversation covers your fence type, estimated footage, and whether it is a residential lot or a larger rural property - so we come prepared with the right equipment.
We visit your Brackettville property, walk the fence line, check soil conditions, and measure the run. You get a written, itemized quote that covers labor, materials, and any soil-specific considerations. Cost questions get answered here, before you commit to anything.
We confirm permit requirements with the City of Brackettville or Kinney County before work starts, and we handle the application. Utility marking is arranged before any digging so the job runs safely.
Most in-town residential fences in Brackettville are complete in two to three days. Larger ranch jobs are scheduled based on footage. We do a final walkthrough with you at the end and address anything that is not right before we leave.
We serve Brackettville and Kinney County with no long-drive fees. Written quotes, no verbal estimates.
(830) 386-1883Brackettville is the county seat of Kinney County, located in far southwest Texas with a population of around 1,600 to 1,700 residents. The town grew up around Fort Clark, a U.S. Army post established in 1852, and that military heritage is still visible today in the Fort Clark Springs residential community built on the old fort grounds. Housing in Brackettville ranges from modest in-town single-family homes - many built in the mid-20th century - to the historic stone structures inside Fort Clark Springs that were originally officers' quarters and military barracks converted into private residences. The town has a quiet, ranching-community character, with most residents being long-term homeowners who have deep ties to the area.
Outside the city limits, Kinney County is defined by brush country, hunting ranches, and working livestock operations. The area is well known in Texas for white-tailed deer hunting and wildlife ranching, which draws seasonal visitors every fall. Rural property owners here deal with fencing challenges that differ from standard residential work - long perimeter runs, high-fence deer exclusion, and remote locations where a contractor has to plan logistics carefully. Brackettville is also close to Del Rio, about 30 miles to the west, and we serve homeowners throughout that corridor. Neighbors in Uvalde to the east also call us regularly for both residential and agricultural fencing work.
Affordable, secure chain link fencing for any residential or commercial lot.
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Learn MoreCall Eagle Pass Fence today or submit a free estimate request - we respond within 1 business day and make the trip to Kinney County without long-drive fees.