Bull panel fencing is used to handle cattle, horses, goats, and other livestock on Williamson County acreage. Heavy-gauge welded panels mount on tube steel posts at 8 to 16-foot spacing. Choosing the right panel grade depends on livestock type and acreage layout.
If you’ve got acreage in Liberty Hill, Leander, Georgetown, or anywhere across the rural Williamson County area, bull panel fencing is probably on your radar for livestock containment. The material has earned its reputation for good reason: heavy-gauge welded steel panels, virtually no maintenance, and a 30-plus-year service life when properly installed. We’ve installed thousands of linear feet of bull panel across Williamson County since 2012, and we’ll walk through the options, the panel grades, and what actually matters for ranch fencing.
Bull panel isn’t a single product. It covers different gauges, mesh patterns, and panel heights for different livestock and acreage configurations. The right choice depends on what you’re keeping in (or out), the terrain, and how hands-off you want your ownership to be. Most ranch owners we work with care more about durability and minimal upkeep than aesthetic refinement.
Bull Panel Grades and Options
Three core categories cover most ranch applications:
Standard Bull Panel (16 Foot, 4 Foot Tall)
The standard configuration: 16-foot-wide panels at 4 feet tall, with 6-inch-by-8-inch rectangular mesh. Heavy-gauge welded-steel construction handles cattle pressure, ATVs leaning against the panels, and standard ranch wear. This is the workhorse panel for cattle operations across Texas and the most common request we see from Williamson County ranches.
Combo Panel (Cattle + Horse)
Combo panels run smaller mesh openings (typically 4 inches by 4 inches) on the lower portion to prevent horse hooves from getting caught. Higher mesh remains for cattle visibility. Combo cattle-and-horse panel configurations from this combo style work well in mixed pastures where horses and cattle graze together.
Goat and Sheep Panel
Goat and sheep panels use even tighter mesh (typically 4 inches by 4 inches throughout) at 4 to 5 feet tall. Goats test fences relentlessly. They’ll find every weakness. Tight mesh prevents head-through escape attempts and the resulting injuries. Sheep similarly benefit from tighter spacing. Some ranchers use a goat panel as a base layer with a cattle panel above when running mixed herds.
Premium Heavy-Duty Panels
Premium panels increase wire gauge for harder use cases: bull pastures, working corrals, or high-pressure containment areas. Heavier wire and tighter mesh patterns cost more upfront but tolerate decades of livestock contact without bending. We recommend a premium panel for working pens even when a standard panel works for the broader perimeter.
Post Selection and Spacing
Bull panel performance depends as much on post selection as panel grade:
Tube Steel Posts (Recommended Standard)
Galvanized tube steel posts at 2 3/8 inch diameter handle most ranch conditions. Concrete-set at 24 to 36 inch depth, depending on soil type. Steel tube post installations are the standard for permanent ranch fencing because they last 30+ years without maintenance and resist livestock pressure better than wood.
Wood Posts (Lower Cost Option)
Cedar or pressure-treated pine posts cost less upfront but carry shorter service life (typically 15 to 20 years before rot at the ground line). Wood posts work for temporary or transitional fencing, but we’ve found that most ranches planning to stay put choose tube steel for the long-term value.
Post Spacing
Standard spacing runs 8 to 12 feet between posts. Tighter spacing (8 feet) handles high-pressure livestock and uneven terrain. Standard 16-foot panel spans require posts at 16 feet for panel-edge support, with optional intermediate posts for added rigidity. Williamson County’s mix of caliche and clay soils affects post stability; we adjust depth based on the specific lot during the property assessment.
Gate Placement and Hardware
Ranch gate placement matters more than most owners realize. Working pens need gates positioned for natural livestock flow. Driveway gates need a width matching equipment access (typically 12 to 16 feet for standard farm equipment, 20 feet for larger machinery). Tube steel gate installations use heavy-duty hinges, drop pins for closing security, and either chain-and-padlock or solar-powered automatic openers for high-traffic ranch entrances. Pedestrian gates run separately at typical entry points.
Working With Williamson County Terrain
Ranch fencing in this area faces specific terrain challenges:
Ranch fence work in the Liberty Hill limestone country runs across mixed limestone and rolling hills, complicating post setting. Georgetown rural acreage parcels along the western county side run heavy on cedar tree clearing before fence installation. Leander outer-area properties include working ranches outside the master-planned community boundary. Taylor Blackland prairie acreage runs on heavy clay soil that holds posts well once set. Each terrain type affects the installation approach.
Common Bull Panel Applications on Williamson County Ranches
Beyond perimeter fencing, bull panel handles several specialized needs:
Working Corrals and Pens
Heavy-duty corral panels handle cattle handling, vaccinations, and loading operations. Corral pens use shorter panel runs (typically 8 to 10 feet) with heavier-gauge construction than perimeter fencing. Catch pens at the head of working chutes need extra-heavy panels because cattle pressure peaks during sorting.
Property Perimeter Containment
Perimeter runs prioritize cost-efficient coverage of long distances. A standard 16-foot panel with 12-foot post spacing efficiently covers the ground. Property perimeter typically runs around the full acreage with strategic gate placement at access points and shared boundaries with neighboring ranches.
Cross-Fencing and Paddock Subdivision
Cross-fencing divides large pastures into managed paddocks for rotational grazing. Lower-cost configurations use shorter panels with wider post spacing since paddock fences see less concentrated livestock pressure than perimeter or working pens.
Predator Exclusion
Some Williamson County ranches battle coyote pressure on smaller livestock. Tighter-mesh panels with electric wire augmentation address most predator-exclusion needs. A bull panel alone won’t stop a determined coyote, but combined with a proper hot-wire setup and gate hardware, it forms a strong deterrent. We can scope predator-resistant configurations during the property visit.
Maintenance and Long-Term Care

Bull panel earns its reputation partly because it needs almost zero maintenance. Galvanized panels resist rust for decades. Annual walk-throughs to check for bent panels and post-settlement handle most issues before they become problems. Bull panel repair work typically involves single-panel replacement after equipment impact rather than systemic wear. Compared to wood ranch fencing on a 15- to 20-year cycle, bull panel often outlasts the property’s ownership cycle.
HOA and Restriction Considerations
Most rural Williamson County properties aren’t subject to HOA restrictions, but some master-planned communities adjacent to ranch land have restrictions on visible fencing. Liberty Hill, Leander, and Georgetown all have communities where rural-style bull panel may need approval before install. Send a question via the form early in the process if your property sits in a community with potential restrictions, so we can confirm what’s allowed.