Systena frontalis (F.) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) is an important pest of many ornamental plants in container nurseries. Adult S. frontalis cause feeding damage on leaves and affected plants are not marketed. Systena frontalis adults are currently managed using insecticides, especially neonicotinoids, and growers are seeking alternative options as customers demand neonicotinoid-free plants after concerns associated with nontarget exposure to pollinators. Barrier fences could be an alternative tactic to protect high-value crops, such as panicled hydrangea (Hydrangea paniculata Siebold), from invading S. frontalis adults in container nurseries. Thus, the objective of this study was to determine the effect of overhang barrier fence using with and without insecticide-impregnated-netting on adult S. frontalis infestation and feeding damage on panicled hydrangea. In 2021 and 2022, a study using an overhang exclusion fence was conducted in a container nursery in Georgia, USA. The treatments were: 1) deltamethrin-impregnated enclosed barrier, 2) nontreated enclosed barrier, and 3) no barrier. Four containers of panicled hydrangea were placed in the center of each experimental plot. Both deltamethrin-impregnated and nontreated enclosed barrier treatments reduced the incidence and severity of adult feeding damage on the panicled hydrangea than no barrier treatment. There was no difference between deltamethrin-impregnated and nontreated enclosed barrier treatments. The results suggest that overhang barriers can protect container plants from invading adult S. frontalis.