Skip to main content
AE Outdoor Living
Arizona licensed, bonded & insured·Serving Arizona homeowners since 2005·Peoria design showroom·Written, itemized project scopes·Project-specific payment & warranty terms
Play & Recreation

In-Ground Trampolines — The Backyard Upgrade Kids Beg For

In-ground trampolines look cleaner, last longer, and are dramatically safer than the rusty above-ground kind. Here's what installing one actually involves.

Dylan, AE Outdoor Living · February 2, 2026
Arizona licensed, bonded & insuredPeoria design showroomWritten, itemized scopesProject-specific termsHow we earn trust →
In-Ground Trampolines — The Backyard Upgrade Kids Beg For

Why in-ground beats above-ground

Above-ground trampolines blow over in monsoons, fade and rust in UV, and are the #1 cause of yard injuries. In-ground sits flush with your turf — no ladder fall, no wind sail, no eyesore. The trampoline itself is the same; the install is what's different.

What's actually involved in install

  • Excavate a bowl 3 ft deep at the perimeter, 4 ft deep at the center — wider than the trampoline frame.
  • Build a retaining wall (concrete block or pre-engineered kit) so the soil doesn't collapse inward.
  • Engineer ventilation — without airflow under the mat, kids 'thud' instead of bounce.
  • Drainage to daylight or to a French drain — Phoenix monsoons can drop 2 inches in an hour.
  • Reinstall surrounding turf or pavers flush with the frame.

Cost in Arizona

A quality in-ground install (10–14 ft trampoline + excavation + wall + drainage + turf restoration) runs $4,500–$9,500. The trampoline kit itself is $1,200–$3,000; the rest is dirt work and finish. We use Capital Play and Avyna kits — both designed specifically for sunken install with bonded retaining walls.

Safety net — yes or no?

For kids under 12: yes, always. The trampoline being flush doesn't eliminate the sideways-fall risk. A removable net pole system runs about $400 and pulls out when you want a cleaner look for entertaining.

What kills cheap in-ground installs

DIY pits without retaining walls cave in within a year. No drainage = standing water + mosquitoes + rotted mat. No ventilation = poor bounce + broken springs. Skipping any of these saves $1,500 now and costs $5,000 in two years.

Related guides

Keep learning before you build.