You walked through the backyard this morning and actually paid attention. The paver section near the fire pit has a corner that rocks when you step on it. One deck board flexes more than it should. And the gate — you’ve been lifting it slightly every time you swing it open, just to keep it from dragging on the concrete. You’ve been living with all three. Your guests haven’t.
Friday is July 4th. Company arrives Thursday afternoon at the earliest, maybe earlier. You have one window to fix this: Thursday morning, before the Lakewood Ranch fireworks crowd hits the roads and your backyard fills up.
Here’s what each job actually takes.
Paver Re-Leveling: Half a Day, Not a Weekend
When a paver section shifts and rocks underfoot, it’s almost always the same cause: the sand base beneath has settled or washed out. The fix is to pull the affected pavers, re-grade and tamp the base, reset the pavers level, and re-fill the joints with polymeric sand. It locks everything back in place.
For a 50–100 square foot section, figure roughly four hours of labor — call it a half-day job. Material costs run $8–16 per 50-lb bag of leveling sand and $25–45 per bag of polymeric jointing sand, depending on what the section needs. Labor typically runs $200–500 for a section that size.
A rocking paver is also a liability in a way a wobbly cabinet isn’t. Put 15 people in your backyard, mix in a few drinks, add a kid running in flip-flops, and that shifted corner is now the most dangerous square foot of your property.
Deck Board Replacement: Spot-Fix, Not a Full Rebuild
If one or two boards are the problem — soft spots, visible flex, surface checking that’s gotten deep — you don’t need to rebuild the deck. You need to pull those boards and set new ones.
A single pressure-treated 5/4×6 board in an 8–12 foot length runs $8–16 at the hardware store. Labor for a single board swap is roughly 1.5–2 hours. A three- or four-board section runs 3–4 hours, $300–500 in labor. The deck looks right, feels right, and doesn’t shift under a full cooler or a folding table.
The only time this becomes a bigger conversation is if the joists underneath are the actual problem. A tech can assess that in the first few minutes on site, and if it’s more than board replacement can solve, we’ll tell you straight.
Gate Rehang: 60 to 120 Minutes
A dragging gate has three possible causes: hinge sag, post movement, or the latch has shifted out of alignment. Sometimes it’s all three. Heavy-duty exterior hinge sets run $30–70 per pair. The labor to pull the gate, reset or replace the hardware, and rehang level is typically 60–120 minutes, $150–450 depending on the gate size and what the post situation looks like.
A gate that doesn’t close right is a gate that stays open. That matters more when kids and dogs are involved, which they will be Friday.
Thursday Is Your Window
The forecast makes this clear. July 1st and 2nd have afternoon storms rolling through most afternoons — morning work is still fine, but it’s not ideal for outdoor finishing. Thursday, July 3rd, is the day: mostly sunny, low storm chance, 92 degrees. Work gets done clean. Everything dries. You’re ready before the first guest pulls into the driveway.
Under Florida’s new repair exemption — effective today — jobs under $7,500 don’t require a permit, so there’s no waiting on an inspection. All three of these jobs fall well inside that threshold.
How to Get This Done Before Friday
HANDYS handles paver re-leveling, deck board replacement, and gate rehangs across Sarasota, Bradenton, Lakewood Ranch, Venice, and the barrier islands. Background-checked, insured, and working within Florida handyman scope-of-work guidelines. Free quotes within 24 hours, satisfaction guarantee.
Call 941-207-6969 for a free quote — we can usually get a crew out within 24 hours.
