Lawn Fertilizer Spreader Settings Calculator 2026 β€” Scotts, Drop & Broadcast Calibration Guide
πŸ“Š Setting data from Scotts, Earthway, Agri-Fab, Lesco, Andersons, Brinly, Chapin, Pennington, Jonathan Green, Milorganite product labels and manufacturer spreader charts β€” updated 2025/2026.

How Spreader Settings Work

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Settings are relative, not universal: A "4" on a Scotts spreader is not the same as a "4" on an Earthway spreader. Settings only mean something in relation to your specific spreader model.
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Product particle size matters: Fine particles (like some sulfur products) flow faster than coarse particles (prill fertilizers) at the same setting β€” always check the product-specific label setting first.
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Broadcast spreaders cover wider swaths (8–12 ft) but have less edge accuracy. Drop spreaders apply directly below the hopper (18–24") with higher precision but require more passes.
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Walking speed matters: Faster walking = less product per sq ft. Always calibrate at your natural walking pace β€” don't slow down or speed up to compensate for a wrong setting.
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When in doubt, calibrate: Label settings are starting points. Always do a calibration test on a tarp or hard surface before applying to your lawn.
πŸ“ Calibration Formula:

Actual output rate (lbs/1k) = oz collected Γ· 16 Γ— 1,000 Γ· test area (sq ft)

Example: You collected 6 oz over a 500 sq ft test pass
β†’ 6 Γ· 16 = 0.375 lbs collected
β†’ 0.375 Γ— (1,000 Γ· 500) = 0.75 lbs per 1,000 sq ft

If your target is 4 lbs/1k but you're getting 3 lbs/1k β†’ open the setting by ~25%

βš™οΈ Spreader Setting Calculator

Calculates starting setting based on target application rate
Always verify with label-recommended setting for your specific product
Settings Lookup

Fertilizer Spreader Settings β€” Popular Products & Brands

Manufacturer-recommended settings for the most popular fertilizer products on common spreader brands. Always confirm with current product label β€” formulations change.

Scotts EdgeGuard DLX / Elite Broadcast (Scale 1–15)

ProductSettingCoverage/bag
Scotts Turf Builder 32-0-10 (48 lb)5ΒΎ15,000 sq ft
Scotts WinterGuard 32-0-10 (48 lb)5ΒΎ15,000 sq ft
Scotts Starter 24-25-4 (14 lb)4Β½5,000 sq ft
Milorganite 6-4-0 (32 lb)82,500 sq ft
The Andersons 16-0-8 (40 lb)76,400 sq ft
Lesco 24-2-11 (50 lb)612,000 sq ft
Pennington Ultragreen 30-0-4 (14 lb)55,000 sq ft
Espoma Organic (18 lb)93,000 sq ft
Jonathan Green Green-Up (15 lb)65,000 sq ft
Pelletized Lime (40 lb)85,000 sq ft
Crabgrass Preventer (Dimension, 18 lb)3ΒΎ5,000 sq ft
Tall Fescue Seed (5 lb)15 (full)~500 sq ft new lawn

Earthway 2150 Commercial Broadcast (Scale 0–20)

ProductSettingNotes
Standard granular fertilizer (4 lbs/1k)12–14Verify with calibration
Milorganite (16 lbs/1k)17–18Heavy rate β€” 2 passes
Pelletized lime (5 lbs/1k)14–16Water in after
Crabgrass preventer (3.5 lbs/1k)10–12Check label setting
Fine grass seed8–10KBG, bermuda
Coarse grass seed14–16Fescue, rye

Scotts Drop Spreader (Scale 1–14)

ProductSettingNotes
Scotts Turf Builder 32-0-104Single pass
Milorganite 6-4-0 (32 lb)7Β½Single pass
Pelletized Lime6–7Single pass
Scotts Crabgrass Preventer3Single pass
Tall Fescue Seed (overseeding)10–122 perpendicular passes
Kentucky Bluegrass Seed3–4Very fine seed
Spreader Guide

Drop vs. Broadcast Spreader β€” Which Is Right for You?

Best: Precision
⬇️ Drop Spreader

Product falls directly through holes in the bottom of the hopper onto a 18–24" wide strip below. Excellent edge precision β€” product stays exactly where you walk. Requires more passes and careful overlap (50% wheel-to-wheel). Best for small-medium lawns, near beds and driveways, or when applying chemicals where drift matters. Most common: Scotts Classic Drop (20" width).

Best: Efficiency
πŸ“‘ Broadcast / Rotary

Spinning impeller throws product in a 6–12 ft swath. Covers large areas quickly β€” 3–4Γ— fewer passes than drop spreader. Good distribution uniformity. Less precise at edges β€” use EdgeGuard feature or turn off near flower beds, water, and sidewalks. Best for medium-large lawns (2,000+ sq ft). Most common: Scotts EdgeGuard DLX, Earthway 2150.

Best: Small Areas
βœ‹ Hand-Held Spreader

Crank-operated handheld spreader. Covers 3–5 ft swath. Good for small lawns under 1,000 sq ft, spot treatments, and touch-up areas. Very difficult to calibrate accurately β€” best used for products where precision is less critical (lime, fertilizer) rather than herbicides. Scotts Wizz battery-powered is the most consistent hand-held option.

πŸ“ How to Calibrate Any Spreader β€” The Tarp Method

1

Lay a plastic tarp or large sheet (at least 10 ft Γ— spreader width) on a flat hard surface. Mark the tarp's leading and trailing edge with tape.

2

Fill spreader with a known weight of product. Walk at your normal pace across the tarp, opening the spreader at the leading mark and closing at the trailing mark.

3

Collect and weigh the product on the tarp. Calculate: lbs per 1k = (oz collected Γ· 16) Γ— (1000 Γ· tarp sq ft)

4

Compare to your target rate. If too high, lower the setting by 1 notch. If too low, raise by 1 notch. Repeat until within Β±10% of target.

Application Pattern Best Practices

PatternBest ForSetting Adjustment
Single pass (parallel rows)Drop spreader, even lawnsFull rate setting
2 perpendicular passesBroadcast, seeds, limeSet to Β½ target rate per pass
Perimeter pass firstAll spreader typesFull rate; do edges before field
Half-rate header passesTurnarounds at lawn endsHalf-rate; prevents double-overlap

⚠️ Most Common Spreader Mistakes

β€’ Wrong scale: Using Scotts scale settings on an Earthway spreader β€” completely wrong
β€’ Skipping calibration: Label settings are starting points, not guarantees
β€’ Over-filling hopper: Increased weight changes particle flow rate at same setting
β€’ Variable walking speed: Slowing at turns doubles application rate in that area
β€’ Spreading on wet grass: Granules clump and distribute unevenly; can cause burn spots
β€’ Not cleaning after use: Fertilizer residue corrodes spreader parts β€” rinse after every use

2026 Calibration Guide

How to Use This Spreader Settings Calculator Correctly

Spreader settings are helpful starting points, but the final answer should always be confirmed with a quick calibration test. This section explains how to turn a bag rate, product label, and spreader model into an accurate real-world application.

A fertilizer spreader setting is not a fixed scientific unit. It is simply the opening size or gate position on one particular spreader model. That means a setting of 5 on a Scotts EdgeGuard, 5 on a Scotts drop spreader, 5 on an Earthway 2150, and 5 on an Agri-Fab broadcast spreader can all release different amounts of product. The product itself changes the output too: coated fertilizer prills, fine seed, pelletized lime, organic biosolids, pre-emergent granules, and small sulfur particles all flow differently through the same gate.

The safest method is to treat the calculator result as a starting setting, then verify it by measuring product output over a known area. If your fertilizer bag says to apply 4 pounds per 1,000 square feet, the spreader should release close to 4 pounds after you walk a 1,000-square-foot test area at your normal pace. If it releases only 3 pounds, open the setting slightly. If it releases 5 pounds, close the setting. The goal is not a perfect number; being within about 10 percent is normally close enough for a homeowner lawn application.

Why Product Labels Come First

Use the setting printed on the product bag or manufacturer page before using any generic conversion chart. Manufacturers test their own granule size, density, and recommended rate against common spreader models. Scotts, for example, directs users to find the specific product page, open the product information, and check the β€œSpreader Settings” or downloaded product label for the correct model-specific setting. If your exact spreader is not listed, use the nearest model as a starting point and then calibrate.

Half-Rate Two-Pass Method

For most broadcast applications, the cleanest pattern is two perpendicular half-rate passes. Put half the product in the hopper, apply north-to-south, then apply the remaining half east-to-west. This cross-hatch pattern reduces striping, softens small walking-speed errors, and improves edge-to-edge uniformity. It is especially useful for lawn fertilizer, overseeding, lime, and organic products such as Milorganite. For pre-emergent herbicides, follow the label carefully because even coverage is critical and under-applied strips may allow crabgrass or annual bluegrass to break through.

πŸ’‘ Simple Rule

If the product has a label setting for your exact spreader, start there. If it does not, use the calculator's estimate at half rate, make two passes, and calibrate on a tarp before you treat the whole lawn. This lowers the risk of burn, streaks, missed areas, and wasted product.

Quick Calibration Targets

Target RateProduct Over 500 sq ftProduct Over 250 sq ft
1 lb / 1,000 sq ft0.5 lb / 8 oz0.25 lb / 4 oz
2 lbs / 1,000 sq ft1 lb / 16 oz0.5 lb / 8 oz
4 lbs / 1,000 sq ft2 lbs / 32 oz1 lb / 16 oz
6 lbs / 1,000 sq ft3 lbs / 48 oz1.5 lbs / 24 oz
10 lbs / 1,000 sq ft5 lbs / 80 oz2.5 lbs / 40 oz

Best Setting Strategy by Product

ProductBest PatternRisk if Wrong
Quick-release fertilizerTwo half-rate passesBurn streaks
Slow-release fertilizerOne or two passesUneven color
Milorganite / organicHeavy setting, slow paceLight feeding if under-applied
Grass seedTwo perpendicular passesPatchy germination
Pelletized limeMultiple lighter passesClumping, dusty residue
Pre-emergentLabel rate exactlyWeed breakthrough or turf stress
βœ… Before You Start

Measure the lawn area, read the product label, verify the target rate per 1,000 square feet, and make sure the spreader gate opens and closes freely.

βœ… During Application

Walk at one consistent pace, close the gate before turning, overlap broadcast rows by about half the swath, and avoid wet grass or windy conditions.

βœ… After Application

Blow or sweep granules off hard surfaces, water in if the product label requires it, clean the hopper, and store leftover product in a sealed dry bag.

βœ… When Results Look Uneven

Check for clogged holes, clumped fertilizer, low tire pressure, wrong walking speed, missed overlap, or using a setting from another spreader brand.

Troubleshooting

Common Spreader Setting Problems and How to Fix Them

Most fertilizer stripes, missed areas, and burn marks come from one of a few preventable setup mistakes. Use this guide before changing product or blaming the spreader.

Dark Green Stripes

Dark green stripes usually mean product was doubled along overlap lines, at turning points, or where the spreader gate stayed open while the operator slowed down. Broadcast spreaders throw more material in the center of the swath than at the edges, so overlap matters. For a 10-foot broadcast pattern, walking rows about 5 feet apart is a better starting point than trying to place swaths edge-to-edge. Drop spreaders create stripes when wheel tracks are not aligned correctly or when a user leaves a small gap between passes.

Light Green Stripes or Missed Rows

Light stripes mean under-application. Common causes include a setting that is too low, a partially clogged gate, walking too quickly, or leaving too much distance between broadcast passes. Fine grass seed can bridge in the hopper, while damp fertilizer may clump and stop flowing. Stop, close the gate, empty the hopper if needed, break up clumps, and recalibrate before continuing.

Fertilizer Burn Spots

Burn spots usually happen when quick-release nitrogen sits on leaf blades too long or when the same area receives too much product. Avoid applying granular fertilizer to wet grass, because granules can stick to blades and create concentrated burn points. After applying most granular fertilizer, water lightly to move nutrients off foliage and into the soil, unless the label says otherwise. Never use a higher spreader setting to β€œfinish the bag” if the lawn area is already covered.

Settings for Unlisted Spreaders

If your spreader is not listed on the bag, do not rely on a random conversion chart as the final answer. Start with a low-to-medium setting, apply a measured amount over a test area, and calculate the actual rate. For a product target of 4 pounds per 1,000 square feet, a 250-square-foot test area should use about 1 pound. Adjust the gate up or down and repeat until close. This method works for any brand, including older spreaders where the label scale no longer matches new product charts.

Problem β†’ Likely Cause β†’ Fix

ProblemLikely CauseFix
Dark bandsToo much overlapTwo half-rate passes
Light bandsNot enough overlapRows closer together
Burn spotsWet grass or double-doseWater in, close at turns
ClogsDamp productDry product, clean hopper
Too much leftoverSetting too lowOpen one notch
Bag runs out earlySetting too highClose one notch

Professional Calibration Shortcut

Measure a test strip equal to one-fifth of your lawn area. Load one-fifth of the total product. If the hopper empties almost exactly at the end of the strip, your setting and pace are close. If it empties early, close the setting; if product remains, open it.

Why β€œOne Bag Covers 15,000 sq ft” Can Mislead

Bag coverage assumes the manufacturer's intended application rate. If your soil test, nitrogen target, or state fertilizer rule requires a different rate, the actual coverage changes. Use the coverage statement as a label reference, then verify with the product rate calculator.

Accuracy Notes

How We Build Spreader Setting Estimates

This calculator combines fertilizer math, manufacturer label practices, and real-world calibration logic. It is designed to help homeowners start safely, then confirm the final setting before treating the whole lawn.

First, we calculate the amount of product your lawn needs from the target rate per 1,000 square feet. That part is straightforward: total product equals the target rate multiplied by your lawn area in thousands of square feet. If a fertilizer recommendation is written as actual nitrogen instead of product weight, use the lawn fertilizer calculator first, then bring the product rate into this spreader settings calculator.

Second, we map the target product rate onto the approximate scale of your selected spreader model. Broadcast spreaders usually have a wider gate and larger swath, while drop spreaders deliver a narrow measured strip. Hand-held spreaders are the least precise and should be used mainly for small lawns, spot treatments, or light touch-up work. Because no online calculator can know your walking speed, product moisture, particle size, or the condition of your spreader gate, the result is labeled as a starting setting rather than a guaranteed setting.

Third, we recommend a calibration check. This is the step many homeowners skip, but it is also the step that prevents the most expensive mistakes. A quick test over 250 or 500 square feet tells you whether the spreader is actually releasing the amount you think it is releasing. If the test rate is close, you can continue with confidence. If it is far off, adjust the setting before any damage or waste happens.

For regulated products such as herbicide, pre-emergent, weed-and-feed, insect control granules, or fungicide, the product label controls the legal maximum rate and required safety instructions. Use this calculator only as a planning and calibration helper. The label rate, PPE instructions, re-entry interval, water-in requirement, and state-specific restrictions always come first.

What the Calculator Can and Cannot Do

Can Help WithStill Requires You
Estimate a starting settingVerify with product label
Calculate total product neededMeasure actual lawn area
Choose overlap and pass patternWalk at consistent speed
Plan hopper fillsClean and maintain the spreader
Reduce striping riskCalibrate on tarp or test strip

⚠️ Label First, Calculator Second

The calculator is not a replacement for a product label. If the label gives a lower rate, a restricted application window, a water-in requirement, or a warning for your grass type, follow the label exactly.

FAQ

Spreader Settings β€” Frequently Asked Questions

Use the setting printed on the product label or Scotts product page first. Scotts explains that spreader settings are product-specific: open the product page, check β€œSpreader Settings,” or download the label under product details. As common starting points, Scotts EdgeGuard broadcast spreaders often use mid-range settings for standard fertilizer, lower settings for fine pre-emergent granules, and higher settings for organic products such as Milorganite. Always calibrate, because a Scotts Mini, DLX, Elite, and Classic Drop do not all spread the same width or output.
Conversion charts are only rough starting points. They cannot account for granule size, humidity, tire pressure, walking speed, hopper fill level, spreader age, or whether the gate linkage is worn. A chart can help you choose an initial setting, but a tarp test or measured-area test is the only reliable way to verify output. For products with burn risk or legal label rates, such as fertilizer with herbicide or pre-emergent, calibration is strongly recommended.
Measure a test area, weigh the product before spreading, apply at a consistent walking pace, then weigh what remains. Subtract the remaining weight from the starting weight to find how much was applied. Convert the test area to thousands of square feet and divide applied pounds by that number. Example: if you applied 2 pounds over 500 square feet, the actual output is 4 pounds per 1,000 square feet. Adjust the setting up or down and repeat until close to target.
Stripes usually come from uneven overlap, inconsistent walking speed, turning with the gate open, or using a spreader setting that releases too much product. Broadcast spreaders need overlap because the swath is heavier in the center and lighter at the edges. Drop spreaders need exact wheel-track alignment. The easiest fix is to apply half the product in one direction and the other half at 90 degrees.
Use a drop spreader when precision matters: small lawns, tight borders, sidewalks, flower beds, and products where drift must be controlled. Use a broadcast spreader for larger lawns because it covers far more area per pass. Most homeowners with 2,000 to 12,000 square feet prefer broadcast spreaders for fertilizer and lime, while drop spreaders are useful for edges, narrow strips, and small front lawns.
Yes. Broadcast spreaders work well for tall fescue, ryegrass, and other coarser seeds. For fine seed such as Kentucky bluegrass, bermuda, centipede, or zoysia, use a lower starting setting and calibrate carefully because fine seed flows quickly. For best coverage, divide the seed into two halves and spread in perpendicular passes.
Milorganite publishes its own spreader setting guidance and recommends checking its chart or calibrating. Its general application target is one 32-pound bag over 2,500 square feet for established lawns, and it notes that calibration is important because spreader models vary. Organic products are bulky and often need wider gate openings than synthetic high-nitrogen fertilizers, so do not compare settings directly.
A 50 percent overlap is a practical homeowner rule for most broadcast spreaders. If the spreader throws an effective 10-foot swath, walk rows about 5 feet apart. This overlap blends the heavy center of one pass with the lighter edge of the next pass. For higher accuracy, use two perpendicular half-rate passes.
Most spreader labels assume a steady brisk walking pace, around a normal purposeful walk. The exact speed matters less than consistency. If you calibrated while walking fast, use the same speed on the lawn. Do not slow down at the ends with the gate open because that double-applies fertilizer at turnarounds.
For most granular fertilizer, apply to dry grass and water in afterward if the label recommends it. Wet blades can hold granules, creating burn spots and uneven nutrient release. Some weed-and-feed labels require moist foliage so the herbicide granules stick to broadleaf weeds; in that case, follow the label exactly. Product label instructions override general advice.
Pelletized lime is usually applied at heavier rates than fertilizer, so it often needs a more open setting or multiple passes. Because lime rates vary with soil pH and buffer pH, use a soil test recommendation first. For large lime rates, split the application into two or more lighter passes to avoid clumping and uneven white trails.
Use the setting printed on the pre-emergent label for your exact spreader, then calibrate. Pre-emergent products depend on even coverage; missed strips can allow crabgrass or annual bluegrass to germinate. Do not intentionally under-apply or over-apply. Most labels also require irrigation or rainfall after application to activate the barrier.
The bag coverage is based on the manufacturer's intended application rate. The calculator may use your target product rate, nitrogen rate, lawn size, or calibration rate. If you choose a different target than the bag assumes, coverage changes. Always follow label limits when the product contains herbicide, insecticide, fungicide, or other regulated active ingredients.
For a full lawn, hand spreading is not recommended because it is difficult to apply evenly. It often causes clumps, streaks, and burn spots. Hand spreading can work for tiny repair areas if you weigh the product, divide it evenly, and broadcast lightly in multiple directions. For anything larger than a few hundred square feet, use a hand-held, drop, or broadcast spreader.
Empty leftover product back into the bag, brush granules from the hopper, rinse the spreader, and dry it before storage. Fertilizer salts are corrosive and can damage metal axles, gates, springs, and screws. Lubricate moving parts if the manufacturer recommends it. Cleaning after every use keeps settings more consistent over time.
Yes, they can. A full hopper may press granules into the gate differently than an almost-empty hopper. Some products bridge or funnel as the level drops. Keep the spreader moving before opening the gate, avoid bouncing over rough ground, and refill before the hopper is completely empty when applying products that require precise coverage.
Lower settings are safer only if you plan multiple passes and still apply the correct total amount. A low setting with one pass under-feeds the lawn and may leave pre-emergent gaps. A high setting with one pass can burn grass or exceed label rates. The best approach is the correct total rate, applied evenly, often through two half-rate passes.
No. Seed and fertilizer have different particle sizes, densities, and flow rates. Fine grass seed can pour through a gate much faster than fertilizer, while coarse fescue seed may bridge in the hopper. Use separate label settings or calibration tests for each product. Never assume the fertilizer setting is safe for seed.
Use the calibration method instead of trying to guess. Start with a small gate opening, collect product over a tarp or measured area, calculate actual pounds per 1,000 square feet, then adjust. Once you find the correct position, mark it with tape or permanent marker for that product and rate.
Measure the lawn, calculate total product, divide it into two equal portions, apply the first half in one direction, and the second half perpendicular to the first. Keep a steady pace, close the gate before turns, sweep granules off hard surfaces, and water in according to the label. This method prevents most homeowner fertilizer mistakes.