
Culleoka's local fence contractor for southeast Maury County families and farms. We handle wood privacy fences, farm fencing, repairs, and custom gates from Lewisburg Pike out to the rural acreage south of Columbia.
Culleoka — the old Choctaw word for “sweet water” — has kept its agricultural identity while the rest of Maury County grows around it. Southeast of Columbia along Highway 99 and Carters Creek Pike, this unincorporated community of around 5,000 residents is defined by rolling pastureland, century-old farmhouses, and a tight-knit population that still gathers at the Culleoka Community Center for the annual Fall Festival.
Fencing in Culleoka means something different than in the subdivisions up north. Here, a fence protects cattle from the road, keeps horses in the pasture, and marks property lines that have been in the same family for generations. Middle TN Fence & Gate respects that heritage. We build farm fencing that works as hard as the land it sits on, and we install residential privacy fences for the newer homes without disrupting the character of the community.
The Nashville and Decatur Railroad put Culleoka on the map in 1859, and the Culleoka Unit School — a K-12 campus serving around 1,000 students — remains the social center of the area. The Campbell Station Country Store, a rustic restaurant beloved across Maury County, draws visitors from Columbia and beyond. The Duck River flows through the northern edge, feeding the bottomland pastures that produce some of the county’s best forage. Yanahli Park, Maury County’s newest and largest park, sits within easy reach.
For more on permit requirements, HOA rules, easements, and surveys for Culleoka projects, see our guide to fence permits and HOA rules in Maury and Williamson County.
In Culleoka, we install every major fence material — wood farm and privacy fencing, vinyl horse pasture fencing, ornamental aluminum for estate-style and pool-code fencing, and split rail and farm fence for rural acreage and horse pasture. We help you pick the right one for your property and budget. Our best fence materials for Tennessee farms walks through how each material holds up to Middle Tennessee weather.

Culleoka’s rolling pastures and hay fields need fencing that contains livestock, withstands weather, and does not break the bank on a multi-acre run. We install high-tensile wire, woven wire, board fence, and pipe-and-cable configurations for cattle, horses, goats, and mixed-use operations. Every post goes deep into Maury County’s clay soil with concrete footings that prevent leaning.

Newer homes on one-to-five-acre parcels along Bear Creek Pike and near the Culleoka Unit School often need a privacy perimeter around the yard closest to the house while leaving the remaining acreage open. Our cedar and treated pine privacy fences frame your living space without closing off the farmland views that make Culleoka special.

For homeowners who want a clean, finished look around their yard without annual staining or painting, vinyl is the right answer. It weathers Culleoka’s hot summers and icy winters without maintenance, and the white or tan profiles complement both new builds and updated farmhouses along the Culleoka corridor.
Split Rail Fencing in Culleoka, TN" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1024" height="559">Split rail is the traditional boundary marker in Culleoka, and it still works. Three-rail cedar split rail defines your property line and gives you a rustic perimeter that ages beautifully against the backdrop of Maury County’s farmland. We add woven wire backing when you need to keep dogs, goats, or chickens contained.
We know the difference between cattle fencing and horse fencing, and we know why it matters. Barbed wire works for cattle but can injure horses. Woven wire keeps goats in but not deer out. We match the fence to the animal.
Culleoka’s clay-heavy soil expands when wet and contracts when dry, which can shift fence posts over time. We set posts deeper with wider concrete footings and proper drainage at the base.
Farm fencing in Culleoka often means hundreds or thousands of linear feet. We price farm jobs competitively with bulk material purchasing and efficient crew scheduling.
Culleoka is unincorporated with no HOA governance on most properties. That means fewer restrictions on fence style, height, and placement. You choose what works for your property.
Culleoka is unincorporated and most residential and agricultural fences do not require a permit. Maury County does enforce setbacks from road rights-of-way. We verify the applicable setback distance for your property before installation.
High-tensile wire or woven wire with treated wood posts is the most cost-effective and durable option for cattle in Maury County. We install five-strand high-tensile for perimeter containment and woven wire for areas with calves or mixed livestock.
Farm fencing typically ranges from $5 to $15 per linear foot for wire configurations, and $15 to $35 for board fence. Residential wood privacy runs $25 to $45 per foot. We provide free on-site estimates for any size project. For typical price ranges by material before you call, see our fence pricing across Middle Tennessee.
Yes. We remove and dispose of old fencing as part of many farm projects. Rotted posts, rusted wire, and collapsed sections are common on older Culleoka properties. We clear the old fence line, reset posts, and install new fencing.
In Culleoka’s clay-heavy soil, we typically set posts 30 to 36 inches deep with concrete footings. Corner and gate posts go deeper, usually 40 to 48 inches, with reinforced bracing to prevent leaning under tension.
Culleoka sits southeast of Columbia, off Highway 50 / Lewisburg Pike. The land here is a mix. Flatter sections that fence out easily, and rolling pasture that needs the panels stepped down a slope. The soil's better than the far-west part of the county for the most part. Less rock, more workable dirt. The exception is anywhere near a creek line or a hill cut, where we may hit shale or limestone shelves. We walk the line before we quote so there are no surprises.
Culleoka is a tight community built around the K-12 unit school and the surrounding farms and homes. Most of our work here is residential. Privacy fences for new construction, replacement work for older homes, and farm fence on the acreage around town. We handle properties from the Lewisburg Pike corridor out toward the Marshall County line.
How quickly can you start a job in Culleoka? Usually within a couple of weeks for residential, faster for repairs.
Do most Culleoka homes need permits? Most don't, but we always check the county requirements before we dig.
Can you match an existing wood fence? Yes. We stock cedar and pressure-treated dimensions that match most builds from the last decade or so.
Culleoka is near our regular route through Columbia and Chapel Hill, which keeps response times short for most projects in this part of the county.