Skip to main content

Service Areas

Where We Work

MRO Landscaping is based in Danbury, and everything we serve radiates out from there — close enough that every town below is part of a regular working week, not a long-distance promise. In many of these neighborhoods our mowing routes are already running; in all of them, we design, build, and maintain with the same standard. Find your town below.

Fairfield County, CT

  • Danbury — Home base. Five active route areas across the city and counting.
  • Bethel — Practically next door, with routes already in three neighborhoods.
  • Brookfield — Ten minutes from our driveway to yours.
  • New Fairfield — Lawn care for town and Candlewood Lake properties alike.
  • Sherman — Fairfield County's smallest town, served at full standard.
  • Newtown — Sixty square miles, including active routes in Sandy Hook village.
  • Monroe — Two tight mowing mini-routes, growing street by street.
  • Trumbull — Dense neighborhoods where route service shines.
  • Ridgefield — Historic stone walls and large lots, fifteen minutes from base.
  • Redding — Rural acreage, long driveways, and stonework worth preserving.
  • Easton — Quiet roads, generous lots, and a route already in town.
  • Weston — Two-acre zoning makes every property a canvas.
  • Wilton — One-to-two-acre lots, ideal hardscaping country.
  • Westport — Premium builds on one street, mowing routes on the next.
  • Fairfield — A big market where reliability is the differentiator.
  • New Canaan — Estate properties built and kept to an estate standard.
  • Darien — Coastal luxury and serious outdoor living.
  • Norwalk — City lots, route pricing, and popular bi-weekly plans.

Litchfield County & Nearby, CT

  • New Milford — Connecticut's largest town by area, with a route already on Sawyer Hill.
  • Bridgewater — Litchfield County's smallest town, minutes from our New Milford routes.
  • Southbury — Our busiest town: five active route areas and growing.
  • Woodbury — Historic character, weekly routes, and stonework to match.

Don't See Your Street?

Routes grow one address at a time — and project work travels further than mowing routes do. If you're near any of these towns, ask.