Outdoor Sound Systems — Speakers, Zones, and What Works in Arizona
Hidden landscape speakers, soundbars, and zone control — how to get great audio outside without annoying the neighbors.

Speaker types
- Landscape (in-ground or planter-mounted): hidden, even coverage. Best for large yards.
- Rock speakers: blend with desert landscape, individually disappointing — buy in pairs minimum.
- Patio-mount weatherproof (Sonos Outdoor, Bose 251): focused coverage near the entertaining zone.
- In-eave bullets: best fidelity, requires a covered patio.
Zoning matters more than wattage
A yard that plays the same music at the kitchen, the pool, and the kids' play area at the same volume is annoying. Plan 2–4 independent zones (kitchen/dining, pool/lounge, fire/conversation) on a multi-zone amp (Sonos Amp, Russound, Episode). Each zone has its own volume and source.
Neighbor-friendly install
Aim speakers down and inward (toward the house, not the property line). Use more low-wattage speakers at lower volume rather than two loud ones cranked. Pre-wire conduit at install time — retrofitting after pavers go down is brutal. Sound carries further in dry desert air than people expect — keep peaks below 70 dB at the property line.
Costs (installed)
Basic 2-speaker patio system: $1,200–$2,500. 6-speaker landscape system, 2 zones: $4,500–$8,000. Full 4-zone, 10-speaker, hidden + landscape: $10K–$20K including amp + control. Run all wiring as part of the pool/hardscape rough-in — half the labor disappears.


