
Picture, mirror, shelf installation near me
Connect with fast, affordable and vetted Handymen near you for all your Picture, mirror, shelf installation needs




How to book a Picture, Mirror & Shelf Installation Pro in South Africa
No jargon, no endless scrolling. Just tell Jess what you need and let her handle the rest.
Chat with your 24/7 home companion in plain language. She listens, pinpoints the real problem and connects you with a vetted Pro.
Skip the scrolling. Jess connects you with top-rated, background-checked qualified experts ready to help near you.
Track your job, get and approve your quote and pay securely in one flow: start to finish, all in one place.
"Totally satisfied with the service. The recommended company did an excellent job. Work is professional and neat. I'd recommend Kandua to anyone who needs work done.
"The plumber was efficient, affordable and knowledgeable about his craft, he resolved a blocked drain by replacing the old galvanised p-trap pipe with a new one and left the place spotless after resolving the issue."
"What a pleasant experience. Not only did he respond super fast to my enquiry, but he came out and gave a quote and kept me updated throughout the whole process."
"I recently used Kandua for an electrical project at my home, and I couldn't be more pleased with the results. The entire experience was seamless and stress-free."
"Great and sufficient service. My Pro did an exceptional job with his team. Work clean and very professional. Highly recommended. First class!"
"My Pro responded within minutes, since I started the search. He was on time for the appointment. He fixed swimming pool equipment and gave us friendly and professional advice. Highly recommend."
Frequently asked questions 👇
Quick guidance and answers to your questions about Picture, mirror, shelf installation in South Africa
Pictures run R120 to R250 each, mirrors R250 to R950 depending on size and weight, floating shelves R250 to R550, and a designed gallery wall R650 to R1,500. A typical mixed visit clearing the whole backlog lands between R650 and R1,800.
With fixings rated for the load: heavy-duty hollow-wall anchors, toggle fixings, or screwing into the studs behind the board. A 20kg mirror on a picture hook in plasterboard is a falling mirror on a schedule. Matching fixing to weight and wall is the core of the job.
The gallery standard is centring artwork at about 145 to 155cm from the floor — eye level — with mirrors positioned for their use (full-length, entrance, or over furniture). Consistent centring across rooms is what makes a home feel professionally finished, and it’s the kind of detail a pro applies by default.
It depends almost entirely on the fixing: properly anchored into brick or studs, quality floating shelves hold 15 to 40kg; badly anchored into hollow drywall, a fraction of that before sagging or tearing out. Tell the pro what the shelf will carry — books are heavier than décor — and the fixings are chosen accordingly.
Light frames can go up with adhesive strips on smooth painted walls — good for rentals — but adhesives fail on textured walls and in humid rooms, and they can pull paint off on removal. Anything heavy, valuable, or glass-fronted should be mechanically fixed. A pro will mix both approaches sensibly.
HowmuchdoesitcosttohireanaHandymaninSouthAfrica?

Get it done by someone you can trust
Manage and grow a business you are proud of
The Cost of Picture, Mirror & Shelf Installation in South Africa
(Written by the Kandua Team, with practical insights from our network of vetted South African handymen)
Everyone owns the leaning collection: frames stacked against the skirting, a mirror waiting for courage, floating shelves still in the box. Hanging things well is harder than it looks — level across a whole wall, anchored for real weight, and drilled into whatever the wall turns out to be.
A pro clears the whole backlog in a visit, and nothing falls down afterwards. This guide covers hanging and mounting costs in South Africa and what changes the price.
Expert Advice Before You Book
“The two failure modes are crooked and fallen — and both come from skipping the wall,” says a vetted handyman on the Kandua network. “People hang a 20kg mirror on a picture hook in drywall and hope. Every item has a right fixing for its weight and its wall: get that right and it hangs for decades.”
- Batch the backlog: hanging ten items in one visit costs a fraction of ten separate hangs — gather everything, including the garage stack.
- Plan the layout first: for gallery walls, laying frames out on the floor (or paper templates on the wall) before drilling saves holes and arguments.
- Know what’s heavy: big mirrors and loaded floating shelves carry real weight — mention them when booking so the right anchors come along.
Typical Costs for Picture, Mirror & Shelf Installation
Here’s what South African homeowners can expect to pay in 2026:
- Pictures and standard frames: R120 to R250 each; cheaper per item in batches.
- Mirrors (standard): R250 to R650; large or heavy mirrors R450 to R950 with rated fixings.
- Floating shelves: R250 to R550 each, anchored for load.
- Standard bracket shelving: R200 to R450 per shelf.
- Gallery wall (6 to 12 frames, designed and hung): R650 to R1,500.
- Typical mixed visit: R650 to R1,800 all-in.
For a deeper breakdown of rates, see the Kandua Handyman Rates Cost Guide.
How Location Affects Costs in South Africa
Prices vary by region, driven by local labour rates, travel distances, and demand:
- Western Cape: R150 to R300 per picture; mixed visits R700 to R1,900.
- Gauteng (Johannesburg & Pretoria): R120 to R250 per picture; mixed visits R650 to R1,800.
- KwaZulu-Natal: R120 to R280 per picture.
Factors That Influence Your Final Quote
- Wall type: face brick and concrete need masonry drilling; drywall needs rated hollow-wall anchors or stud fixing — both are routine but affect time.
- Item weight: heavy mirrors and shelves need engineered fixings, not hooks — the hardware steps up with the load.
- Layout complexity: gallery walls and aligned sets take measuring and planning time that single items don’t.
- Height and access: stairwell mirrors and high walls need ladders and a second pair of hands.
Cost Examples by Job Complexity
- Straightforward job: Six framed prints hung level in a hallway. Time: About an hour. Typical cost: R650 to R1,100.
- Complex job: Gallery wall of ten frames, a 25kg mirror on drywall with rated anchors, and three loaded floating shelves. Time: Half a day. Typical cost: R1,500 to R2,600.
Customer Story
A homeowner in Fourways shared: “Two years in the house, art still on the floor. The pro laser-levelled a twelve-frame gallery wall up the staircase, hung the huge entrance mirror with proper anchors, and put floating shelves in both kids’ rooms — all in one morning. The house finally looks lived-in instead of half-moved-in.”
When to Hire a Professional
It’s quick work with two real risks — weight and what’s in the wall. Call a professional when:
- The item is heavy: mirrors and loaded shelves that fall are dangerous and expensive — fixings must be rated for the load and matched to the wall material, especially on drywall.
- You don’t know what’s behind the wall: pros scan for pipes and cables before drilling — hitting either turns a R200 hang into a call-out cascade.
- Alignment matters: a slightly crooked frame is invisible until you’ve seen it once, and then it’s the only thing you see. Laser levels and patience are the cure.
Checklist: Before Your Pro Arrives
- Gather every item to be hung, including the garage and cupboard stragglers.
- Decide rooms and rough positions (final heights with the pro).
- Note your wall types if known — drywall, brick, or concrete.
- Point out the heavy items when booking.
- For gallery walls, choose the frame arrangement beforehand if you have preferences.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How much does picture, mirror, and shelf installation cost in South Africa?
Pictures run R120 to R250 each, mirrors R250 to R950 depending on size and weight, floating shelves R250 to R550, and a designed gallery wall R650 to R1,500. A typical mixed visit clearing the whole backlog lands between R650 and R1,800.
How do you hang heavy mirrors and shelves on drywall?
With fixings rated for the load: heavy-duty hollow-wall anchors, toggle fixings, or screwing into the studs behind the board. A 20kg mirror on a picture hook in plasterboard is a falling mirror on a schedule. Matching fixing to weight and wall is the core of the job.
What’s the right height to hang pictures and mirrors?
The gallery standard is centring artwork at about 145 to 155cm from the floor — eye level — with mirrors positioned for their use (full-length, entrance, or over furniture). Consistent centring across rooms is what makes a home feel professionally finished, and it’s the kind of detail a pro applies by default.
How much weight can a floating shelf hold?
It depends almost entirely on the fixing: properly anchored into brick or studs, quality floating shelves hold 15 to 40kg; badly anchored into hollow drywall, a fraction of that before sagging or tearing out. Tell the pro what the shelf will carry — books are heavier than décor — and the fixings are chosen accordingly.
Can pictures be hung without drilling?
Light frames can go up with adhesive strips on smooth painted walls — good for rentals — but adhesives fail on textured walls and in humid rooms, and they can pull paint off on removal. Anything heavy, valuable, or glass-fronted should be mechanically fixed. A pro will mix both approaches sensibly.
Summary of Picture, Mirror & Shelf Installation Costs (2026)
- Budget jobs: from R120
- Average jobs: around R900
- High-end jobs: R2,600+
- Typical range: R120 to R2,600+
Ready to get it sorted? Post your job on Kandua and receive quotes from vetted, reviewed pros near you — fast, free, and with secure payment from start to finish.
Handymen in South Africa: what to know before you book
Every home has a list. The door that sticks, the tap that drips, the shelf that never went up, the silicone that’s gone black around the bath. None of it is urgent — until the list is 15 items long and the small stuff has started causing bigger stuff.
Kandua helps you get through it by matching you with a vetted handyman for your job — whether it’s one repair, a move-in list, or a full day of catching up on maintenance.
A few quick answers (so you don’t have to scroll)
How do I choose a good handyman?
Pick someone who asks for photos before quoting, is upfront about what they can and can’t do (a good handyman refers specialist work out), prices as call-out + labour + materials, and has verified reviews for the type of work you need.
What can a handyman legally do in South Africa?
General repairs and maintenance — carpentry, painting, mounting, sealing, tiling, minor fixes — are all fair game. But electrical work that affects the installation must be done by a registered electrician (it needs a Certificate of Compliance), gas work must be done by a registered gas installer, and significant plumbing should go to a qualified plumber. More on this below.
What should handyman work cost?
Most handymen charge a call-out fee + hourly labour + materials, with day rates available for longer lists. (There’s a pricing guide further down.)
Is it cheaper to bundle jobs?
Almost always. One visit means one call-out fee, and a half-day or full-day booking usually beats the same jobs priced separately. Keep a running list and book once it’s worth a visit.
Jobs a handyman handles well
The classic handyman scope is wide — that’s the point. Common jobs include:
- Doors and windows: sticking doors, dropped hinges, handles and locks (non-specialist), draught seals, window stays
- Mounting and hanging: TVs, shelves, curtain rails, blinds, mirrors, artwork — with the right anchors for your wall type
- Carpentry and cupboards: hinges, runners, shelving, skirtings, small built-in repairs, furniture assembly
- Painting and plaster: touch-ups, single rooms, filling and repainting cracks, fascia boards and window frames
- Sealing and wet areas: silicone around baths, showers, and counters, regrouting, small waterproofing repairs
- Minor plumbing-adjacent fixes: tap washers, toilet seats, showerheads — anything more serious belongs with a plumber
- Exterior upkeep: gutter cleaning and realignment, fence and gate repairs, ceiling boards and cornices, small roof tile fixes
If you’re not sure whether a job is “handyman-sized”, describe it with photos — a good pro will tell you honestly whether it’s theirs or a specialist’s.
What a handyman shouldn’t do — and who to call instead
This is the part that protects you legally and for insurance. In South Africa, some work is regulated regardless of how simple it looks:
1) Electrical work
Any work on the electrical installation — new plugs or circuits, DB work, moving points, light fittings beyond a straight swap — must be done by a registered electrician, because additions and alterations require a Certificate of Compliance (CoC). Uncertified electrical work can void insurance claims and cause problems when you sell. A handyman changing a bulb is fine; a handyman wiring a new plug point is not.
2) Gas
All gas installations and repairs (hobs, geysers, braais plumbed to a line) must be done by a registered gas installer, who issues a gas CoC. No exceptions — this one is a safety and insurance issue.
3) Plumbing
Simple like-for-like fixes (a washer, a toilet seat) are handyman territory. But geysers, drainage, and anything touching the water supply or municipal connections should go to a qualified plumber — several municipalities require registered plumbers for notifiable work, and geyser installations must comply with SANS 10254 for insurance purposes.
The good news: you don’t have to figure out the boundary yourself. Describe the job to Jess, and you’ll be matched with the right type of vetted pro — handyman, electrician, or plumber — for what the job actually needs.
When it’s a DIY job — and when it isn’t
DIY is fine when the cost of getting it wrong is low: assembling furniture, tightening a handle, filling a small nail hole.
Call a handyman when:
- the job involves ladders, roofs, or gutters — falls are the most common DIY injury
- you’re drilling into walls without knowing what’s behind them (pipes and cables don’t forgive)
- the fix has failed before — repeat failures usually mean the cause wasn’t addressed
- it involves water — sealing, waterproofing, and leak-adjacent work done badly gets expensive quietly
- you need it done straight and level and once — TV mounts, shelves, and rails are cheap to do right and annoying to redo
- the list is long — a pro’s day rate often beats your whole weekend
Pricing: what to budget for a handyman in South Africa
Pricing varies by city, travel distance, and the skill level a job needs — but most homeowners will see a familiar structure:
Typical cost structure
- Call-out fee (travel + often the first hour)
- Labour (hourly, or a day rate for longer lists)
- Materials/parts (often with a small sourcing markup)
- After-hours premium (nights, weekends, public holidays)
- Disposal/clean-up where the job creates rubble or waste
Typical ranges you’ll see (guideline)
- Labour: roughly R300 – R550/hour for general work, with skilled jobs like tiling, waterproofing, or built-in repairs reaching R600 – R800+/hour
- Call-out/first hour: often around R450 – R750 depending on area and travel
- Day rates: commonly R1,600 – R4,800 for a full day — usually the best value for a long list
The bundling rule
The call-out fee is the same whether the pro does one job or eight. If you have several small fixes, batching them into one visit is the single biggest saving available — and it’s why keeping a running list pays.
10 Genuinely helpful handyman FAQ’s
- What’s the difference between a handyman and a contractor?
Scale and regulation. A handyman handles repairs and small improvements; a contractor manages structural work, additions, and projects involving multiple trades, permits, or plans. If the job changes the building rather than maintains it, it’s contractor territory. - Can a handyman install a new plug point or light fitting?
A like-for-like light fitting swap is a grey area many handymen will do; a new plug point, new circuit, or anything at the DB legally needs a registered electrician and a CoC. If in doubt, ask: “Will this work need a CoC?” — if yes, it’s not a handyman job. - Should I supply my own materials?
You can, and it avoids sourcing markups — but agree it upfront, buy exactly what the pro specifies, and accept that wrong materials on the day means paying for the time anyway. For specialised items, letting the pro source is usually worth the markup. - How do I get an accurate quote for a list of small jobs?
Photograph every item, note sizes and wall types where relevant, and share the full list upfront. Pros quote tighter when they can plan the sequence and bring the right materials in one trip. - What does a half-day vs full-day booking get through?
As a rough guide: a half-day clears 4–6 small jobs (mounting, sealing, adjustments); a full day handles a room’s painting, a long snag list, or one bigger job plus the small stuff. Your pro can sequence the list to fit the time. - Why does the same job get such different quotes?
Usually scope assumptions: one pro is quoting a patch, the other a proper fix; one includes materials, the other doesn’t. Compare what’s included, not just the number — and be wary of quotes given without photos or a visit. - Is a warm socket, tripping power, or burning smell a handyman job?
No — that’s a registered electrician, and it’s urgent. Switch the circuit off at the DB and book an electrician; a handyman shouldn’t open electrical work like this. - Can a handyman fix damp and mould?
Often, yes — if the cause is failed silicone, blocked gutters, cracked plaster, or poor ventilation, a handyman can fix the source, treat the mould, and repaint properly. Rising damp or leaks inside walls need specialist assessment first. - Do handymen guarantee their work?
Reputable pros stand behind workmanship for a reasonable period — ask what’s covered and for how long before work starts, and keep the invoice. Materials carry the manufacturer’s warranty separately. - What should I ask a handyman before they start?
Three questions cover most issues:
- “Is this priced as call-out + hourly + materials, and what counts as after-hours?”
- “Is any part of this job regulated work that needs an electrician, plumber, or gas installer instead?”
- “What do you guarantee on workmanship, and for how long?”
Why use Kandua when you book a Handyman in South Africa
When you book through Kandua, you’re not just finding a pro – you’re getting a safer, simpler and more reliable way to sort out jobs around your home

Vetted for your safety
AI that actually understands
A perfect match. Zero spam
Payments made simple
Pay only via the Pay Now button on Kandua invoices. We can't help with off-platform payments.
Booked. Matched. Protected
The moment you post, we share your job with vetted and verified Pros near you. Your safety is our biggest priority.

Your whole job. In one place.
Create a free account, track and manage your job from start to finish: follow each step, approve quotes, pay invoices securely, and keep every document. No more chasing EFTs or wondering what happens next.
Please settle the deposit so your pro can prepare for the work.
Built to keep you in control
Every part of your job lives in your account: visible, secure, and a tap away.
Watch your job move from posted, to matched, to completed, with a clear status at each stage.
Review your quote and approve it right in the app. No back and forth and no paperwork.
Pay deposits and invoices securely in one tap. No time-consuming EFTs or strange requests.
Every quote and invoice stays saved against your job. Revisit or download whenever you need.
