If you’ve ever gone down the rabbit hole of finding fence posts, panels, or gates, you’ll know it’s a minefield. Some are flimsy, some warp after the first bit of rain, and some cost way more than they’re worth.
That’s why I decided to put Travis Perkins to the test for my own garden. No showroom lighting, no perfectly edited Instagram posts—just me, some fence posts, and the unpredictable British weather.

What I Ordered

  • Travis Perkins fence posts (pressure-treated)
  • A couple of Travis Perkins garden gates
  • 6×6 fence panels
  • Some decorative stone to neaten the front

Here’s how it went…

Quick Look at the Gear

ProductPrice RangeMy Take
Travis Perkins Fence Posts£7–£15Solid, no warping, actually heavy (a good sign)
Travis Perkins Garden Gates£40–£90Strong frames, smooth finish, didn’t feel cheap
Travis Perkins Fence Panels 6×6£25–£45Sturdy, no rattling in the wind
Travis Perkins Decorative Stone£5–£8Uniform size, nice finish
Travis Perkins Coping Stones£3–£7Simple, clean edges, no chips

The Build Quality

The fence posts were chunky and solid—you know that feeling when wood actually feels like it can take a beating? That.
The panels were heavier than I expected, which is great because light panels tend to get wrecked in storms. Gates were just as good—smooth hinges, good timber.

The Price & Discounts

Without a Travis Perkins discount code, the prices are already fair, but I’d always recommend grabbing a Travis Perkins promo code or voucher code before checkout. It just makes sense.

Delivery

Delivery wasn’t a circus. It was actually painless. The driver called ahead, dropped it exactly where I needed, and nothing was damaged—can’t ask for much more.

Bottom line

If you want fence posts, panels, or gates that don’t feel flimsy and you’re tired of replacing stuff every few years, Travis Perkins is worth it. Just don’t forget that discount code.