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Wyoming Rebates

Wyoming Native Landscaping Rebates

Water providers across Wyoming often run efficiency rebates that pair well with native and low-water landscapes. The listings below include statewide pointers and any city or utility programs we have verified. Search by zip in the app or on our rebates hub to see what matches your address.

Last updated: March 2026 · 2 programs tracked

The quick version

  • Many Wyoming water utilities list rebates for EPA WaterSense controllers and drip irrigation on the national rebate finder.
  • Turf-to-native and rain garden programs are often city- or utility-specific. We add verified local programs as we research them.
  • Always confirm eligibility and pre-approval rules with your water provider before starting work.

See the vision

From turf to a native front yard.

A typical turf-grass front yard before conversion
Before
A Patch Vision rendering of the same front yard replanted with native plants
After

An illustrative Patch Vision rendering of a turf-to-native front yard. In the app, every plan is generated from a photo of your own yard, for your sun, soil, and HOA strictness.

How to apply for Wyoming rebates

  1. 1.Apply for pre-approval before you start. Starting work first is the most common reason applications get denied.
  2. 2.Take before photos of the area you plan to convert, then matching after photos from the same angles once the work is done.
  3. 3.Apply early in the fiscal year. Many programs are first-come, first-served. Each program below links to the provider for current rules. See our step-by-step lawn replacement guide.

Wyoming

2 programs available

Smart Irrigation & Drip Rebates

Local utilities (EPA WaterSense)

Irrigation
Varies by utility ($50–$500+ typical)

Many Wyoming water utilities offer rebates for EPA WaterSense smart irrigation controllers and for converting spray to drip. Amounts and eligibility vary by provider. Search by zip code at the EPA WaterSense Rebate Finder to see programs in your area.

Casper, Cheyenne, Gillette, Jackson, Kemmerer, Rawlins, Riverton, Rock Springs, Sheridan, Wheatland, Worland, Yellowstone

Rebate finder links to utility-specific programs. Smart controller and drip conversion rebates are common in water-stressed regions.

Turf-to-Native Rebates (Start Here)

Local water utilities and municipalities (varies)

Turf replacementNative planting
Varies by utility

Many utilities in Wyoming offer incentives tied to water efficiency improvements. Turf replacement rebates and native landscaping incentives vary a lot by provider. Use the national rebate finder below to see what is available near your zip code.

Casper, Cheyenne, Gillette, Jackson, Kemmerer, Rawlins, Riverton, Rock Springs, Sheridan, Wheatland, Worland, Yellowstone

This entry is a starting point for finding applicable programs. Specific amounts and requirements depend on the utility and your address.

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Rebates in other states

Common questions

Does Wyoming have a turf replacement rebate?
Wyoming does not have a statewide turf replacement or native landscaping rebate as of 2026. Individual water utilities may offer efficiency programs for smart irrigation controllers or drip conversion. Use the EPA WaterSense rebate finder at epa.gov/watersense to search by zip code for utility-specific programs in your area.
What water conservation rebates exist in Wyoming?
Wyoming water utilities occasionally offer rebates for EPA WaterSense-certified irrigation controllers, drip irrigation conversion, and rain barrels. Programs vary by utility and are not statewide. Check with your local water provider or search the EPA WaterSense rebate finder at epa.gov/watersense/rebate-finder for current offerings near you.
What native plants work in Wyoming?
Wyoming spans USDA zones 3a to 6b across its high plains, mountain valleys, and basin shrublands. Reliable native plants include Blue Grama Grass, Buffalo Grass, Prairie Sage (Artemisia frigida), Blanket Flower (Gaillardia aristata), Rocky Mountain Penstemon, and Wyoming Big Sagebrush. For drier basins, Four-Wing Saltbush and Rabbitbrush are drought-tough choices. The Wyoming Native Plant Society (wynps.org) publishes regional guidance.
Can a Wyoming HOA prevent native landscaping?
Wyoming does not have a statute equivalent to Texas §202.007 that limits HOA authority over water-conserving landscaping. HOA CC&Rs in Wyoming are generally enforceable unless they violate state law or are applied in an arbitrary or unreasonable way under Wyoming common law. Review your specific CC&Rs and consult your HOA's architectural review process before starting any front yard conversion.

Get started

Plan a native yard with Pollinator Patch.

Pollinator Patch helps you pick the right native plants for your region, plan an HOA-friendly layout, and generate the documentation that rebate programs ask for.

Get notified about new Wyoming rebates

Join the list and we'll let you know when new native plant rebate programs are added for Wyoming homeowners.

See a problem with a program? Report it

Programs change throughout the year. If something here is out of date or wrong, tell us and we'll check it against the provider.

We compile these programs from utility and city pages, and not every amount here has been independently confirmed. Program details also change throughout the year. Always verify requirements, amounts, and eligibility directly with your water utility before starting work. Pollinator Patch is not affiliated with any rebate program and does not guarantee approval.