Grass Seed Calculator for New Lawn 2026 โ€” How Much Seed Do I Need? | LawnsCal

Get the exact pounds of grass seed for your new lawn โ€” no over-buying, no under-seeding.

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10 grass types โ€” accurate lbs per 1,000 sq ft rates.
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New lawn vs overseeding vs repair โ€” 3 seeding modes.
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Dimensions-to-area auto-calculator built in.
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Bag count by common bag sizes (5, 7, 10, 25, 50 lb).
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10% waste buffer option for irregular lawns.
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Optional seed cost estimate with total project cost.
The Formula (University Extension Standard): Seed Needed (lbs) = (Lawn Area sq ft รท 1,000) ร— Seeding Rate (lbs/1,000 sq ft)
Example: 5,000 sq ft Tall Fescue new lawn:
(5,000 รท 1,000) ร— 8 = 40 lbs of seed needed
๐Ÿ“– Complete Guide

How Much Grass Seed Does a New Lawn Need?

For a new lawn seeded from bare soil, the amount of grass seed you need depends primarily on two things: your lawn's square footage and the grass type you're planting. Different grass species have dramatically different seed sizes โ€” Kentucky Bluegrass seeds are microscopic (around 2 million seeds per pound!) while Tall Fescue seeds are 10ร— larger, which is why they require completely different seeding rates. The standard formula used by university extension services is: (Lawn Area in sq ft รท 1,000) ร— Seeding Rate (lbs per 1,000 sq ft).

For a typical 5,000 sq ft new lawn, you'll need: Kentucky Bluegrass: 12โ€“15 lbs, Tall Fescue: 40โ€“50 lbs, Perennial Ryegrass: 27โ€“30 lbs, or Bermuda Grass: 7โ€“10 lbs. Always add a 10% waste buffer for irregular shapes, slopes, or uneven spreading. New lawns require roughly twice the seed of overseeding an existing lawn.

Buying the right amount of seed matters more than most homeowners realize. Too little seed results in thin, patchy coverage with bare spots that invite weeds. Too much seed causes seedlings to compete with each other, leading to weak, overcrowded plants that are more vulnerable to disease. Our calculator uses the exact rates recommended by university cooperative extension services โ€” the most trusted source for turf management science in the US.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: Split Your Seed into Two Half-Rate Passes

For the most even coverage, divide your total seed in half and make two passes over the lawn โ€” one north-to-south and one east-to-west (perpendicular). This criss-cross pattern fills in any gaps from the first pass and produces significantly more uniform germination than a single pass at full rate. This is the method used by professional turf managers on golf courses and sports fields.

Seeding Rate by Grass Type โ€” New Lawn (lbs per 1,000 sq ft)

  • Kentucky Bluegrass: 2โ€“3 lbs/1,000 sq ft (very fine seed, spreads by rhizomes)
  • Tall Fescue: 8โ€“10 lbs/1,000 sq ft (large seed, does not spread laterally)
  • Fine Fescue: 3โ€“5 lbs/1,000 sq ft (shade tolerant, low-maintenance)
  • Perennial Ryegrass: 5โ€“6 lbs/1,000 sq ft (fast germination โ€” 5โ€“7 days)
  • Annual Ryegrass: 4โ€“6 lbs/1,000 sq ft (temporary cover/erosion control)
  • Bermuda Grass: 1โ€“2 lbs/1,000 sq ft (hulled seed, spreads aggressively)
  • Bahia Grass: 5โ€“10 lbs/1,000 sq ft (low maintenance, Florida/Gulf Coast)
  • Zoysia Grass: 1โ€“2 lbs/1,000 sq ft (slow to establish from seed)
  • Centipede Grass: 0.25โ€“0.5 lbs/1,000 sq ft (very fine seed)
  • Buffalo Grass: 0.5โ€“1.0 lbs/1,000 sq ft (drought-tolerant native grass)

โš ๏ธ New Lawn vs Overseeding โ€” Different Rates!

Overseeding an existing thin lawn requires approximately 50% of the new lawn seeding rate. For example: new Tall Fescue lawn = 8โ€“10 lbs/1,000 sq ft. Overseeding thin Tall Fescue = 4โ€“5 lbs/1,000 sq ft. Using the full new-lawn rate when overseeding wastes seed and causes overcrowding. Use our calculator's "Overseeding" mode for existing lawn refresh projects.

Soil Preparation โ€” The Most Important Step

The best grass seed in the world will fail without proper soil preparation. Before seeding a new lawn: test your soil pH (target 6.0โ€“7.0 for most grasses), amend with lime if pH is below 5.5, and add starter fertilizer (high in phosphorus) to support germination. Till the top 4โ€“6 inches of soil, remove rocks and debris, and grade to eliminate low spots where water pools. Seed-to-soil contact is critical โ€” the seed must touch bare soil to germinate, not sit on top of thick thatch or mulch.

๐ŸŒฑ Seeding Rates by Grass Type (lbs per 1,000 sq ft)

Grass TypeNew LawnOverseed
Kentucky Bluegrass2โ€“3 lbs1โ€“1.5 lbs
Tall Fescue8โ€“10 lbs4โ€“5 lbs
Fine Fescue3โ€“5 lbs1.5โ€“2.5 lbs
Perennial Ryegrass5โ€“6 lbs3โ€“4 lbs
Annual Ryegrass4โ€“6 lbs2โ€“3 lbs
Bermuda Grass1โ€“2 lbs0.5โ€“1 lb
Bahia Grass5โ€“10 lbs3โ€“5 lbs
Zoysia Grass1โ€“2 lbs0.5โ€“1 lb
Centipede0.25โ€“0.5 lbs0.1โ€“0.25 lbs
Buffalo Grass0.5โ€“1.0 lbs0.25โ€“0.5 lbs

Source: University extension services + USDA turf management data.

๐Ÿ“ Seed Needed for Common Lawn Sizes (Tall Fescue @ 9 lbs/1,000 sq ft)

Lawn SizeSeed Needed7 lb Bags
1,000 sq ft9 lbs2 bags
2,500 sq ft22.5 lbs4 bags
5,000 sq ft45 lbs7 bags
10,000 sq ft90 lbs13 bags
1/4 acre~98 lbs14 bags
1/2 acre~196 lbs28 bags
1 acre~392 lbs56 bags

๐Ÿ’ฐ Professional Lawn Seeding Cost (2025/2026)

Lawn SizeProfessional Cost
1,000 sq ft$90โ€“$150
5,000 sq ft$400โ€“$750
1/4 acre$980โ€“$1,634
1/2 acre$1,960โ€“$3,267
1 acre$3,920โ€“$6,534

Includes labor, seed, soil prep, and starter fertilizer. DIY seed cost only: $0.03โ€“$0.15/sq ft.

๐Ÿ“… Timing Guide

Best Time to Plant Grass Seed โ€” by Season & Grass Type

Timing is one of the most critical factors in new lawn success. Plant at the wrong time and even the best seed preparation fails.

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Fall (Best for Cool-Season)
โญ Best Time
Late August โ€“ October. Soil is warm, air cools โ€” perfect for KBG, Fescue, Ryegrass germination. Less weed competition. Adequate time to establish before winter dormancy.
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Spring (Second Choice โ€” Cool)
โญ Good
March โ€“ May. Works for cool-season grasses but competes with crabgrass and other spring weeds. Cannot apply pre-emergent herbicide if seeding. New seedlings face summer heat stress.
โ˜€๏ธ
Late Spring (Best for Warm-Season)
โญ Best Time
April โ€“ June. Bermuda, Zoysia, Bahia, Centipede โ€” seed when soil temps reach 65โ€“70ยฐF consistently. Full summer ahead for establishment before fall dormancy.
๐ŸŒก๏ธ
Summer (Avoid โ€” Cool-Season)
โœ— Avoid
Avoid seeding cool-season grasses in summer. Heat stress, high evaporation, and weed competition make establishment nearly impossible without daily irrigation.
๐Ÿ“‹ Step-by-Step

How to Seed a New Lawn from Scratch โ€” 8 Steps

Follow this sequence for the best germination rate and the thickest, most even new lawn possible.

1

Test Your Soil pH Before Anything Else

Most grass species thrive at a soil pH of 6.0โ€“7.0. Soil test kits cost $10โ€“$25 at garden centers, or send a sample to your local university extension lab for $15โ€“$30. If pH is below 5.5, add lime. If above 7.5, add sulfur. Correcting pH before seeding is far more effective than doing it after establishment.

Ideal pH range: 6.0โ€“7.0 for most grasses | Bermuda: 6.0โ€“7.0 | Centipede: 5.0โ€“6.0
2

Kill Existing Weeds and Vegetation

Apply a non-selective herbicide containing glyphosate (Roundup) 2โ€“3 weeks before seeding. Wait until all vegetation is brown and dead, then rake it out. This prevents weeds from competing with new seedlings during the critical establishment period. Do NOT apply pre-emergent herbicides โ€” they will also prevent grass seed from germinating.

3

Till the Soil 4โ€“6 Inches Deep

Rent a rototiller and till the top 4โ€“6 inches of soil. This breaks up compacted earth, improves drainage, and creates a loose seedbed for root penetration. Remove rocks, debris, and any large roots. This is the most physically demanding step but critical for deep root development in the new lawn.

4

Add Starter Fertilizer + Amendments

Incorporate a starter fertilizer (high in phosphorus โ€” look for N-P-K ratios like 10-20-10 or 12-12-12) into the tilled soil. Add 2โ€“4 inches of quality compost or topsoil to improve organic matter. Apply lime or sulfur if soil pH needs adjustment. Rake smooth and grade so water drains away from structures.

Starter fertilizer rate: typically 5โ€“10 lbs per 1,000 sq ft (follow bag instructions)
5

Calculate and Apply Seed (Two-Pass Method)

Use our calculator above to find your exact seed quantity. Divide the total seed in half and make one pass north-to-south, then a second pass east-to-west at 90ยฐ to the first. This criss-cross method fills in gaps from the first pass and produces 40โ€“50% more uniform coverage than a single pass. Use a drop spreader for maximum accuracy on edges and small areas; a rotary spreader for large lawns.

6

Rake Lightly to Improve Seed-to-Soil Contact

After spreading seed, rake very lightly (just barely disturbing the surface) to press seed into the soil. Ideal planting depth is 1/8 to 1/4 inch โ€” just barely covered. Seed buried more than 1/2 inch deep will fail to germinate. Then roll with a lawn roller (empty, or filled 25% with water) to ensure firm soil-seed contact across the entire seeded area.

7

Water 2โ€“3 Times Per Day for First 3 Weeks

Keep the top 1โ€“2 inches of soil consistently moist until germination is complete. Water lightly 2โ€“3 times per day โ€” morning and afternoon. Never let the seeded surface dry out completely; dry soil kills germinating seeds instantly. Once seedlings reach 1 inch tall, reduce to once per day. When established (2+ inches), transition to deep, infrequent watering (0.5 in, 2ร— per week).

Germination times: Ryegrass 5โ€“7 days | Fescue 7โ€“14 days | KBG 14โ€“28 days | Bermuda 10โ€“21 days
8

First Mow โ€” When Grass Reaches 3โ€“4 Inches

Wait until the new lawn reaches 3โ€“4 inches tall before the first mowing โ€” typically 4โ€“8 weeks after seeding depending on grass type. Set the mower to cut no more than 1/3 of the blade height (to 2โ€“2.5 inches for most cool-season grasses). Use a sharp blade and avoid mowing when the soil is wet to prevent pulling seedlings out by the roots. Avoid foot traffic and heavy equipment for the first 4โ€“6 weeks.

๐Ÿ“Š Examples

Grass Seed Calculator โ€” 6 Worked Examples

Real-world calculations for different lawn sizes and grass types โ€” all at standard university extension seeding rates.

Small โ€” KBG

2,500 sq ft new lawn โ€” Kentucky Bluegrass

Seeding rate2.5 lbs/1,000 sq ft
Base seed needed6.25 lbs
+10% waste6.9 lbs
Bags (7 lb bags)1 bag (7 lbs)
โœ… Buy1 ร— 7 lb bag
Average โ€” Tall Fescue

5,000 sq ft new lawn โ€” Tall Fescue

Seeding rate9 lbs/1,000 sq ft
Base seed needed45 lbs
+10% waste49.5 lbs
Bags (25 lb bags)2 bags (50 lbs)
โœ… Buy2 ร— 25 lb bags
Large โ€” Bermuda

10,000 sq ft new lawn โ€” Bermuda Grass

Seeding rate1.5 lbs/1,000 sq ft
Base seed needed15 lbs
+10% waste16.5 lbs
Bags (5 lb bags)4 bags (20 lbs)
โœ… Buy4 ร— 5 lb bags
Overseed โ€” Fescue

8,000 sq ft overseeding โ€” Tall Fescue thin lawn

Overseed rate5 lbs/1,000 sq ft
Base seed needed40 lbs
+10% waste44 lbs
Bags (25 lb bags)2 bags (50 lbs)
โœ… Buy2 ร— 25 lb bags
1/4 Acre โ€” Ryegrass

10,890 sq ft new lawn โ€” Perennial Ryegrass

Seeding rate5.5 lbs/1,000 sq ft
Base seed needed59.9 lbs
+10% waste65.9 lbs
Bags (50 lb bags)2 bags (100 lbs)
โœ… Buy2 ร— 50 lb bags
Fine Fescue โ€” Shade

3,500 sq ft new shady lawn โ€” Fine Fescue

Seeding rate4 lbs/1,000 sq ft
Base seed needed14 lbs
+10% waste15.4 lbs
Bags (7 lb bags)3 bags (21 lbs)
โœ… Buy3 ร— 7 lb bags
โ“ FAQ

Grass Seed Calculator โ€” Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most searched grass seed questions for new lawn planting โ€” based on university extension data and professional turf management practices.

It depends on your lawn size and grass type. At standard seeding rates: a 5,000 sq ft new lawn needs approximately 12โ€“15 lbs of Kentucky Bluegrass seed, 40โ€“50 lbs of Tall Fescue, 27โ€“30 lbs of Perennial Ryegrass, or 7โ€“10 lbs of Bermuda Grass. Use our calculator above โ€” enter your lawn area and select your grass type for an instant, precise result including bag count and cost estimate.
Standard new lawn seeding rates per 1,000 sq ft: Kentucky Bluegrass: 2โ€“3 lbs. Tall Fescue: 8โ€“10 lbs. Fine Fescue: 3โ€“5 lbs. Perennial Ryegrass: 5โ€“6 lbs. Bermuda Grass: 1โ€“2 lbs. Zoysia: 1โ€“2 lbs. Centipede: 0.25โ€“0.5 lbs. These rates are established by university cooperative extension services and account for the individual seed size, germination rate, and tillering characteristics of each grass species. Always check the seeding rate on your specific seed bag as well.
Per acre (43,560 sq ft) seeding rates: Kentucky Bluegrass: 87โ€“130 lbs/acre. Tall Fescue: 350โ€“435 lbs/acre. Fine Fescue: 130โ€“220 lbs/acre. Perennial Ryegrass: 218โ€“260 lbs/acre. Bermuda Grass: 44โ€“87 lbs/acre. Zoysia: 44โ€“87 lbs/acre. Bahia: 218โ€“435 lbs/acre. These are the recommended rates for new lawn establishment from bare soil. Overseeding rates are approximately 50% of these values. Professional seeding contractors use commercial bulk seed priced per pound or per 50 lb bag.
The best grass seed depends on your climate zone: Cool-season (northern US โ€” USDA zones 3โ€“7): Tall Fescue (best all-round โ€” drought tolerant, shade tolerant, durable), Kentucky Bluegrass (most beautiful, self-repairs, but water intensive), or a Fescue/Bluegrass blend. Warm-season (southern US โ€” zones 7โ€“11): Bermuda (toughest, best for traffic), Zoysia (fine texture, good shade tolerance), St. Augustine (not available as seed โ€” must be sodded), Centipede (low maintenance, acidic soil). Transition zone (zones 6โ€“7): Tall Fescue or Turf-type Tall Fescue blends perform best year-round.
Best seeding times: Cool-season grasses (KBG, Fescue, Ryegrass): Late summer to early fall (late August โ€“ October) is ideal. Soil is warm, air cools, and there's adequate time to establish before winter. Spring (Marchโ€“May) is the second-best option but competes with weed germination. Warm-season grasses (Bermuda, Zoysia, Centipede): Late spring to early summer (Aprilโ€“June) when soil temperatures consistently exceed 65โ€“70ยฐF. Avoid seeding cool-season grasses in summer โ€” heat stress and competition from crabgrass make establishment very difficult.
Germination times by grass type (at optimal soil temperatures): Annual Ryegrass: 3โ€“5 days (fastest). Perennial Ryegrass: 5โ€“7 days. Tall Fescue: 7โ€“12 days. Fine Fescue: 7โ€“14 days. Bermuda Grass: 10โ€“21 days. Kentucky Bluegrass: 14โ€“28 days (slowest cool-season grass). Zoysia: 14โ€“21 days. Centipede: 14โ€“21 days. These times assume optimal conditions โ€” proper soil temperature, consistent moisture, and good seed-to-soil contact. Cold soil, dry conditions, or buried seed will significantly delay or prevent germination.
Both work well for different situations. Drop spreader advantages: more precise placement, less seed waste, better for edges and borders, ideal for small or irregularly shaped lawns. Rotary (broadcast) spreader advantages: covers large areas much faster, better for open lawns over 5,000 sq ft, more even distribution across wide areas. For new lawns, many professionals use a rotary spreader for the main area and a drop spreader for edges along beds and sidewalks. Regardless of spreader type, always make two perpendicular half-rate passes for the most uniform coverage.
For rectangular or square lawns: Length ร— Width = Square Footage. Example: 100 ft ร— 50 ft = 5,000 sq ft. For L-shaped lawns: Divide into two rectangles, calculate each separately, then add. For circular lawns: ฯ€ ร— radiusยฒ = square footage. Example: 25 ft radius circle: 3.14159 ร— 625 = 1,963 sq ft. For irregular shapes: Use the satellite view in Google Maps โ€” right-click and select "Measure distance" to trace your lawn perimeter, or use Google Earth's "Measure area" tool. Always subtract driveways, garden beds, and paved areas from your total lawn area before calculating seed needed.
DIY seed cost only (2025/2026 prices): Kentucky Bluegrass: $3โ€“$6 per lb ($150โ€“$300 for 5,000 sq ft lawn). Tall Fescue: $1.50โ€“$4 per lb ($60โ€“$200 for 5,000 sq ft). Perennial Ryegrass: $1.50โ€“$3 per lb ($40โ€“$90 for 5,000 sq ft). Bermuda Grass: $4โ€“$8 per lb ($60โ€“$120 for 5,000 sq ft). Professional lawn seeding (labor + materials): $0.09โ€“$0.15 per square foot or $400โ€“$750 for a 5,000 sq ft lawn. The seed cost is a small fraction of the total project โ€” soil preparation and labor are usually the biggest expenses in professional new lawn installation.
Yes โ€” grass seed blends and mixtures are common and often outperform single-species lawns. Common effective combinations: Tall Fescue + Kentucky Bluegrass (5โ€“10% KBG) โ€” KBG fills in bare spots via rhizomes while Fescue provides drought and shade tolerance. Perennial Ryegrass + Kentucky Bluegrass โ€” Ryegrass germinates quickly to protect soil while KBG slowly establishes. Fine Fescue blend (Creeping Red + Chewings + Hard Fescue) โ€” excellent for shady, low-maintenance lawns. Do NOT mix cool-season and warm-season grasses โ€” they have incompatible growing seasons and one will always outcompete the other.
Complete soil preparation process: (1) Test soil pH โ€” adjust to 6.0โ€“7.0 if needed with lime (low pH) or sulfur (high pH). (2) Kill existing weeds with non-selective herbicide 2โ€“3 weeks before seeding. (3) Till the soil 4โ€“6 inches deep using a rototiller. (4) Incorporate 2โ€“4 inches of compost or quality topsoil. (5) Add starter fertilizer (high phosphorus). (6) Grade to eliminate low spots and improve drainage. (7) Rake smooth to a fine, crumbly texture. (8) Water lightly and allow to settle for 24 hours before seeding. Good soil prep is responsible for 60โ€“70% of new lawn establishment success.
Water new grass seed lightly 2โ€“3 times per day (morning and midday) to keep the top 1โ€“2 inches of soil consistently moist. Apply about 0.1โ€“0.15 inches per watering โ€” just enough to wet the surface without causing runoff. The seeded surface should never fully dry out before germination is complete. Continue this schedule for 2โ€“3 weeks until seedlings are 1โ€“2 inches tall. Then reduce to once per day. At 2+ inches tall, transition to deeper, less frequent irrigation (0.5 inch, twice per week) to encourage deep root growth.
Wait until your new lawn reaches 3โ€“4 inches tall before the first mowing โ€” typically 4โ€“8 weeks after seeding. Do NOT mow based on a time schedule; mow based on actual grass height. For the first mow: set the blade to cut no more than one-third of the grass height (cut to 2โ€“2.5 inches for most cool-season grasses). Use a very sharp mower blade โ€” a dull blade will pull seedlings out by the roots rather than cutting cleanly. Avoid mowing when soil is wet. Stay off the new lawn for at least 4โ€“6 weeks to prevent soil compaction and seedling damage.
Overseeding requires approximately 50% of the new lawn seeding rate: Kentucky Bluegrass: 1โ€“1.5 lbs/1,000 sq ft. Tall Fescue: 4โ€“5 lbs/1,000 sq ft. Perennial Ryegrass: 3โ€“4 lbs/1,000 sq ft. Fine Fescue: 1.5โ€“2.5 lbs/1,000 sq ft. Bermuda Grass: 0.5โ€“1 lb/1,000 sq ft. Our calculator has an "Overseeding" mode that automatically applies the correct 50% rate. Best overseeding prep: mow lawn short (1.5โ€“2 inches), core aerate to improve seed-to-soil contact, then spread seed. Water 2ร— per day until germination is complete.
Over-seeding a new lawn causes seedling competition โ€” too many seedlings competing for the same water, nutrients, and light. This results in weak, spindly plants that are more susceptible to disease, drought stress, and damping off (a fungal disease that kills overcrowded seedlings). Overcrowded seedlings also produce thinner, finer blades with weaker root systems than properly spaced plants. A slightly under-seeded lawn can be filled in with a follow-up overseeding in 6โ€“8 weeks, but an overcrowded seeding is much harder to correct and may require starting over in bare patches.
Yes โ€” fall is the BEST time to seed cool-season grasses (Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, Fine Fescue, Perennial Ryegrass). Ideal timing is late August through mid-October in most of the northern US (adjust by 2โ€“4 weeks for your specific climate zone). Why fall is best: soil is still warm from summer (aids germination), air temperatures cool (reduces heat stress on seedlings), fall rains reduce irrigation needs, and there's 6โ€“8 weeks of growing time before winter dormancy. The new lawn will emerge from dormancy in spring as a strong, well-established turf.
Timeline for a new lawn from seed: Days 5โ€“28: Germination (varies by grass type โ€” Ryegrass fastest, KBG slowest). Weeks 4โ€“6: First mowing when grass reaches 3โ€“4 inches. Months 2โ€“3: Lawn looks reasonably full and green. Months 4โ€“6: Lawn reaches near-full density for most grasses. Months 6โ€“12: Lawn fully established and dense. Kentucky Bluegrass takes the longest โ€” up to 12โ€“18 months to achieve full density due to its slow tillering rate. Perennial Ryegrass is the fastest to establish โ€” full density in 3โ€“4 months. Warm-season grasses seeded in spring should reach full density by late summer.
Yes โ€” lightly raking seed into the top 1/8 to 1/4 inch of soil significantly improves germination rates by ensuring seed-to-soil contact. After spreading seed, use a leaf rake (tines up) to scratch lightly across the surface โ€” just enough to partially cover the seed without burying it deeply. Follow this with a lawn roller filled 25% with water to press seed firmly against the soil. Seed sitting on the surface without soil contact dries out quickly and fails to germinate. For small areas, simply walking back and forth across the seeded area provides enough pressure for adequate soil contact.
Straw mulch after seeding is optional but beneficial for large areas and slopes. Benefits: reduces moisture evaporation, protects seed from birds and wind, moderates soil temperature, and prevents erosion on slopes. Apply at 1 bale per 1,000 sq ft โ€” spread thinly (50% soil still visible through the straw). Use clean, weed-free straw โ€” NOT hay, which contains weed seeds. Remove straw once grass reaches 2+ inches tall. Alternatives to straw: biodegradable erosion control blankets (for steep slopes), Penn Mulch or similar cellulose products, or leave unseeded soil bare in flat areas with no wind or rain erosion risk.
Professional lawn seeding costs $0.09โ€“$0.15 per square foot for standard work, including labor, seed, starter fertilizer, and basic soil preparation. Cost by lawn size: 1,000 sq ft: $90โ€“$150. 5,000 sq ft: $400โ€“$750. 1/4 acre: $980โ€“$1,634. 1/2 acre: $1,960โ€“$3,267. 1 acre: $3,920โ€“$6,534. For hydroseeding (slurry of seed, mulch, fertilizer, and water sprayed onto prepared soil): $0.06โ€“$0.20 per sq ft โ€” faster than broadcast seeding on large areas. DIY seed-only cost is dramatically less: $0.03โ€“$0.15 per sq ft for the seed itself.
Seed vs sod comparison: Cost โ€” Seed: $0.03โ€“$0.15/sq ft (DIY materials). Sod: $0.35โ€“$2.00/sq ft installed. Time to use โ€” Seed: 6โ€“12 weeks before light use, 12โ€“18 months for full establishment. Sod: 2โ€“3 weeks before light use, 6โ€“8 weeks for full establishment. Best for โ€” Seed: large areas, budget-conscious projects, specific grass variety selection, any season except midsummer. Sod: instant results, high-traffic areas, slopes, small to medium areas, when time is critical. Failure risk โ€” Seed: higher (requires consistent moisture for weeks). Sod: lower once installed (if watered properly). For most homeowners doing a new lawn, seed is 5โ€“10ร— cheaper and produces an equally good result with more patience.