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What does a year of lawn care actually cost?

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Understanding lawn care costs

How much does lawn care cost?

National homeowner ranges before the regional adjustments below. Use the calculator above for a precise estimate based on your ZIP, lawn size, and the specific services you actually want.

For a typical U.S. homeowner, full-service professional lawn care runs roughly $100-$400 per month during the growing season, or about $1,200-$4,000 per year for a 5,000 sq ft yard. Mowing alone usually costs $30-$80 per visit depending on region and lawn size. Treatments (fertilizer, weed control, aeration) add another $400-$1,200 per year if you hire them out.

DIY lawn care is materially cheaper because labor is roughly half the total. The same 5,000 sq ft lawn typically costs $200-$600 per year in materials (fertilizer, weed control, occasional aeration rental). The trade-off is your time — 20+ mowings plus a handful of treatment applications.

Pricing varies a lot by region. Southeast and Southwest run lower than Northeast and West, mostly because of labor rates and seasonal length. The calculator above adjusts for your ZIP code instead of using national averages. For independent third-party ranges, HomeGuide and Angi publish similar homeowner-side breakdowns.

What you'll actually spend

Annual DIY materials cost by region and lawn size. Based on four fertilizer applications at the basic grade, two weed-control passes, and a one-day aerator rental. Mowing and equipment are separate.

Region1,000 sq ft5,000 sq ft10,000 sq ft
Northeast$127$335$595
Southeast$116$300$530
Midwest$118$302$532
Southwest$132$348$618
West$140$380$680

Numbers are computed from regional prices in the app's cost model. Actual local prices can vary ±15-30%.

These figures are materials only. If you hire a service, labor and markup typically double the number for a 5,000 sq ft lawn. DIY owners should also factor in a one-time equipment outlay for a mower and spreader, which is amortized across many seasons.

What goes into a lawn care budget

Five cost categories, each scaling differently with lawn size. Use the regional unit prices below to sanity-check any local quote.

RegionFertilizer (basic) /1kWeed control /1kMowing /visitWater /monthAerator rental
Northeast$8$10$45$35$75/day
Southeast$7$9$40$45$70/day
Midwest$7$9$42$30$72/day
Southwest$8$11$48$55$78/day
West$9$12$52$50$80/day

Fertilizer, weed control, and aeration are materials costs and scale per 1,000 sq ft. Mowing is per visit (usually the biggest line) and water is utility cost. Equipment (DIY only) amortizes across 5+ seasons, so the first year always runs higher.

DIY vs professional service: worked example

A 5,000 sq ft lawn in the Northeast. Same materials; the difference is labor.

DIY (materials only): 4 fertilizer applications × $8/1k × 5 = $160. Two weed-control passes × $10/1k × 5 = $100. One aerator rental day = $75. Annual DIY materials total: $335.

Professional service: 20 mowing visits × $45/visit = $900. Fertilizer, weed, and aeration services add roughly $713 in labor + materials + markup. Annual pro service estimate: around $1613.

The difference (≈$1278) is almost entirely labor: 20 mowings, application time, and contractor margin. DIY saves the labor cost but spends your time and assumes you own or rent equipment and apply products correctly.

Hybrid is often the best value: DIY the mowing (it's the biggest labor line) and hire a pro for 4-6 treatment applications per year. You save most of the labor cost while getting professional timing and product selection.
Three ways to spend less
  • Hire a pro for treatments, DIY the mowing. The mowing line (20+ visits at the regional per-visit rate) is usually the single largest cost in a pro quote. Doing it yourself removes most of the labor premium.
  • Mulch your clippings instead of bagging. Grass cycling returns roughly 25% of your lawn's annual nitrogen need, which directly reduces the fertilizer line.
  • Raise your mowing height. Taller grass grows deeper roots and needs less water, cutting the monthly water cost in half in some climates during peak summer.
Frequently asked questions

How much does lawn care cost on average?

For a typical U.S. homeowner with a 5,000 sq ft yard, full-service professional lawn care runs $1,200-$4,000 per year, or roughly $100-$400 per month during the growing season. DIY costs $200-$600 in materials annually for the same lawn, because labor is the biggest line. The calculator above adjusts for your ZIP and lawn size, which usually moves the estimate ±15-30% from these national ranges.

How much does lawn care cost per month?

Full-service pro lawn care averages $100-$400 per month during the April-October growing season for an average residential lawn. Mowing alone is $30-$80 per visit and usually drives most of the monthly cost (typical schedule: every 1-2 weeks). Winter months are much lower because mowing stops; the only off-season cost is usually a fall fertilizer/aeration treatment.

Is professional lawn care worth the cost?

If you value your time more than the labor premium, yes. The roughly $1,000-$3,000 annual difference between DIY and pro service is almost entirely the cost of mowing visits and application labor. Many homeowners get the best value with a hybrid approach: DIY mowing (the largest labor line) and pay a pro for 4-6 seasonal treatments where timing and product selection matter more.

How accurate are these cost estimates?

Our estimates are based on regional pricing data and industry averages. Actual costs can vary by 15-30% depending on local market conditions, specific service providers, and seasonal promotions. Use these estimates as a baseline for budgeting purposes.

When should I budget for lawn care expenses?

Plan to spend 60-70% of your annual lawn care budget from April to September (growing season). Spring fertilization and summer maintenance are the biggest expenses. Save money by purchasing fertilizer and seed during off-season sales (typically 20-30% off in fall/winter).