Sod Cost Calculator 2026 โ€” Pallets, Rolls, Delivery & Installation

Get realistic sod quantities and pricing before you call a supplier, order pallets, or hire a crew.

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Updated 2026 sod price ranges for Bermuda, zoysia, fescue, bluegrass, St. Augustine, centipede and Bahia.
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Converts square feet, square yards and acres into sod pallets, rolls, slabs and total order area.
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Includes a 10%, 15% or 20% waste buffer for curved beds, trimming, slopes and damaged rolls.
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Shows DIY material cost, estimated delivery, labor, installed cost and realistic project ranges.
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Works for small patch repairs, front-yard replacements, new construction lawns and full resod projects.
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Human-friendly guidance explains when sod is worth the premium over seed and when to hire a pro.
2026 Planning Benchmarks: Sod material often ranges from $0.35โ€“$1.00 per sq ft, with many standard jobs near $0.60 per sq ft before installation.
Professionally installed sod often lands around $1.50โ€“$2.75 per sq ft for ordinary projects, with higher prices when removal, grading, drainage, topsoil or difficult access is involved.
Formula: Total sod area = lawn area ร— waste buffer. Pallets = total sod area รท pallet coverage, rounded up.
๐Ÿ“– Complete Guide

How Much Does Sod Cost Per Square Foot in 2026?

Sod material usually costs more than seed but less than the total price of a fully installed lawn. In 2026, homeowners commonly see sod material pricing around $0.35 to $1.00 per square foot, with a practical middle estimate near $0.60 per square foot for many standard grass types. Installed sod often costs more because the contractor is not just dropping green rolls on the soil. A proper installation includes removing debris, preparing grade, laying tight seams, cutting around edges, rolling for root contact, cleaning up, and giving watering instructions.

The biggest budgeting mistake is comparing only the price of sod by the pallet. A $220 pallet may look cheaper than a $300 pallet, but pallet coverage can vary from 400 to 500 square feet. Some farms quote by square foot, some by roll, some by slab, and some by pallet. The calculator normalizes those units into square feet so you can compare true cost, not just headline price. For larger lawns, delivery and pallet coverage matter as much as the material price.

Professional installation can be the right choice when the lawn is large, the soil is compacted, or the project needs to be finished quickly. Sod is perishable. It should be installed as quickly as possible after delivery, especially in hot weather. If you can only lay one pallet per day, ordering ten pallets for a weekend may create waste. A trained crew can place, cut, water and roll thousands of square feet before the sod begins to heat on the pallet.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: Price Sod by Square Foot, Not Just by Pallet

Before ordering, ask the supplier three questions: exact square feet per pallet, grass cultivar, and harvest/delivery timing. Divide the pallet price by coverage to get true cost per square foot. A 400-square-foot pallet at $260 costs $0.65 per square foot. A 500-square-foot pallet at $290 costs $0.58 per square foot and may be the better deal.

What the Calculator Includes

This LawnsCal tool estimates the real planning quantities most homeowners need: total sod area after waste, number of pallets, approximate rolls, approximate slabs, material cost, delivery, and optional professional labor. It also handles acres and square yards, which helps when your property listing or landscaping plan is not written in square feet.

  • Waste buffer: 10 percent for most lawns, 15 percent for irregular yards, 20 percent for slopes and many obstacles.
  • Pallet coverage: stored by grass type because not all sod pallets contain the same square footage.
  • Delivery: estimated by distance or replaced by your custom supplier quote.
  • Labor choice: basic install for prepared soil or higher prep/removal mode for resodding and difficult yards.

โš ๏ธ Do Not Skip Soil Preparation

Fresh sod can look beautiful on day one and still fail later if it was installed over compacted construction fill, dry soil, old thatch, rocks, deep ruts or poor grade. Good soil contact, moist soil before installation, proper rolling and immediate watering are just as important as the sod variety you buy.

DIY vs Professional Sod Installation

DIY is best for small areas, simple rectangles, and homeowners who can prepare the soil ahead of delivery. You can save labor, but you need helpers, wheelbarrows, knives, irrigation, and time. Sod rolls are heavy, especially when wet, and every delay increases the risk of dry edges. Professional installation is usually better for full front lawns, new construction, steep grades, large pallet counts, poor drainage, old turf removal, or when the site must be completed in one day.

๐ŸŸซ Sod Cost by Unit โ€” 2026 Planning Ranges

UnitTypical PriceCoverage
Square foot$0.35 โ€“ $1.00Base material unit
Roll$3 โ€“ $10Often 8โ€“10 sq ft
Square yard$3.15 โ€“ $9.009 sq ft
Pallet$150 โ€“ $450Usually 400โ€“500 sq ft
Installed$1.50 โ€“ $2.75+Material + labor + basic prep

Actual supplier quotes vary by region, grass type, harvest availability and delivery terms.

๐ŸŒฑ Sod Price by Grass Type

Grass TypeMaterial PriceBest Climate
Bermuda$0.35 โ€“ $0.60/sq ftWarm, sunny
Centipede$0.35 โ€“ $0.65/sq ftWarm, low input
Tall Fescue$0.45 โ€“ $0.75/sq ftTransition/cool
Kentucky Bluegrass$0.50 โ€“ $0.85/sq ftNorthern lawns
Zoysia$0.65 โ€“ $1.00/sq ftWarm/transition
St. Augustine$0.70 โ€“ $1.10/sq ftWarm humid/shade

๐Ÿ“ฆ Installed Sod Cost by Lawn Size

Lawn SizeBasic InstalledWith Prep/Removal
500 sq ft$750 โ€“ $1,375$1,250 โ€“ $3,000
1,000 sq ft$1,500 โ€“ $2,750$2,500 โ€“ $6,000
5,000 sq ft$7,500 โ€“ $13,750$12,500 โ€“ $30,000
1/4 acre$16,000 โ€“ $30,000$27,000 โ€“ $65,000
1/2 acre$32,500 โ€“ $60,000$54,000 โ€“ $130,000

Large acreage projects often use discounted bulk pricing, but prep can dominate total cost.

๐Ÿงพ Budget Planning

What Changes the Final Sod Installation Price?

The sod itself is only one part of the budget. The final quote depends on site condition, access, soil preparation, delivery, waste, and how quickly the work must be completed.

Grass Variety

Specialty zoysia, St. Augustine and premium bluegrass can cost more than Bermuda, Bahia or basic fescue. The right grass for your sun and climate usually matters more than the cheapest pallet.

Old Lawn Removal

Resodding means killing or removing old turf, hauling debris and leveling the surface. That extra work can cost more than the new sod itself on neglected lawns.

Soil & Grade

Compacted soil, rocks, construction fill, drainage problems and low spots require correction before sod arrives. Smooth grading prevents scalping and puddles.

Access & Labor

A backyard with stairs, gates, slopes or long wheelbarrow routes takes more time than a front yard where pallets can be dropped near the installation area.

Delivery Timing

Fresh sod is perishable. Same-day installation protects the investment. Rush delivery, split deliveries or forklift placement can change the quote.

Irrigation Readiness

Sod needs immediate water. Broken sprinkler heads, poor coverage or missing hose access can lead to failure and may need repair before installation.

Human budgeting note: The cheapest sod quote may skip the work that makes sod root. Ask each contractor exactly what is included: removal, grading, topsoil, starter fertilizer, rolling, cleanup, irrigation check, and watering instructions. A slightly higher quote with proper preparation can be cheaper than replacing failed sod later.
๐Ÿ“‹ Installation Guide

How to Plan a Sod Project Without Wasting Money

Use these steps before ordering pallets so the sod is fresh, the soil is ready, and your budget is realistic.

1
Measure the lawn carefully

Break the yard into rectangles, triangles and circles. Subtract patios, beds, driveways and structures. Then add a waste buffer. For irregular lawns, a satellite measuring tool plus manual field measurement gives the best estimate.

2
Choose the correct grass type

Match sod to climate, sunlight, irrigation and use. Bermuda is strong in sun and heat. Zoysia is dense and premium. St. Augustine handles warm humid shade. Tall fescue is a practical transition-zone option. Bluegrass fits many northern lawns.

3
Prepare before delivery

Remove old turf if needed, loosen compacted soil, correct grade, add amendments from a soil test, and lightly moisten soil before installation. The final surface should be firm enough to walk on but not dry, dusty or muddy.

4
Schedule same-day installation

Only order what can be laid quickly. Sod left stacked in heat can yellow or die. For large jobs, stage delivery so the crew can keep pace and water completed sections immediately.

5
Lay tight seams and stagger joints

Install sod like brickwork with seams staggered. Keep pieces tight without stretching them. Cut cleanly around curves, drains and sprinkler heads. Roll after laying to remove air pockets and improve root-to-soil contact.

6
Water immediately and protect the area

Water until the sod and topsoil below are moist. Keep the surface consistently moist during the first rooting period, then reduce frequency and increase depth. Limit foot traffic until sod is anchored.

๐Ÿ“Š Worked Examples

Sod Cost Calculator โ€” 6 Worked Examples

These examples show how waste, grass type, pallet size and installation style affect the final number.

Small Repair

600 sq ft Bermuda patch โ€” DIY

Area + 10%660 sq ft
Material rate$0.42/sq ft
Pallets2 pallets
Delivery$75
Estimated total$352 materials + delivery
Front Yard

2,500 sq ft tall fescue โ€” basic pro install

Area + 10%2,750 sq ft
Sod material$1,595
Labor$2,750
Delivery$150
Estimated total$4,495
Average Lawn

5,000 sq ft zoysia โ€” installed

Area + 10%5,500 sq ft
Sod material$4,290
Pallets13 pallets
Basic labor$5,500
Estimated total$9,940
Shade Warm Area

1,800 sq ft St. Augustine โ€” DIY

Area + 15%2,070 sq ft
Pallet coverage400 sq ft
Pallets6 pallets
Material cost$1,863
Best noteInstall same day
Resod

3,200 sq ft old lawn removal + sod

Area + 10%3,520 sq ft
Material$2,042 fescue
Prep/removal$7,200 estimate
Delivery$180
Estimated total$9,422
Large Yard

10,890 sq ft Bermuda โ€” bulk DIY

Area + 10%11,979 sq ft
Pallets27 pallets
Material$5,031
DeliveryMay be free/bulk
Labor riskNeeds crew
โœ… Before You Order

Sod Buying Checklist

Use this checklist to avoid wrong grass, missing pallets, delivery delays, and avoidable establishment problems.

Confirm pallet coverage

Ask whether each pallet covers 400, 450, 500 or another number of square feet. Enter that number in your project notes before comparing prices.

Ask harvest timing

Fresh sod roots faster. Ask whether it is harvested the same day, the day before, or transported from a distant farm.

Prepare water access

Have irrigation tested and hoses ready before delivery. The first watering should happen immediately after installation.

Check sun and shade

Do not buy full-sun Bermuda for deep shade or delicate cool-season sod for hot southern sun. Grass choice controls long-term success.

Plan labor honestly

A few rolls are manageable. Multiple pallets are heavy, fast-paced work. Have enough helpers or hire a crew.

Keep proof of variety

Save the invoice and variety/cultivar name. It helps with future repairs, fertilizing, mowing height and matching replacement pieces.

โ“ FAQ

Sod Cost Calculator โ€” Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most searched sod pricing, pallet, delivery, DIY and installation questions for homeowners planning a 2026 lawn project.

Most homeowners should budget about $0.35 to $1.00 per square foot for sod materials, with many standard varieties landing near $0.60 per square foot before delivery or installation. Bermuda and centipede often sit at the lower end, while zoysia, St. Augustine, premium bluegrass, and specialty local cultivars can cost more. Installed sod is commonly much higher because the price includes soil preparation, delivery, layout, cuts, rolling, cleanup, and sometimes starter fertilizer. For a practical planning number, use $1.50 to $2.75 per square foot for a normal professional job and more if old turf removal, grading, irrigation repair, or topsoil is required.
A pallet of sod commonly costs about $150 to $450 depending on grass type, farm location, seasonal demand, delivery distance, and pallet coverage. Many suppliers use a 450-square-foot pallet, but some warm-season sod pallets cover 400, 500, or 504 square feet. Always ask for the exact square feet per pallet before comparing prices. A cheaper pallet can be more expensive per square foot if it contains less sod. The calculator uses pallet coverage stored by grass type and rounds up to whole pallets so you do not run short on installation day.
For a 5,000 square foot lawn, order about 5,500 square feet of sod when using a 10 percent waste buffer. At 450 square feet per pallet, that equals 13 pallets. Without the buffer you would need 12 pallets, but most projects have cuts around beds, curves, sprinkler heads, sidewalks, trees, and drains. Running short is more expensive than having a little extra because a second delivery may arrive from a different harvest batch with slightly different color or thickness.
A typical pallet covers about 450 square feet, but pallet coverage is not universal. Some farms sell 400-square-foot pallets, others sell 500-square-foot pallets, and certain regions use rolls or slabs with local sizes. St. Augustine and large slab sod may use different pallet coverage than Bermuda or fescue. The safest approach is to ask the sod supplier for the exact square footage per pallet, then enter that coverage in your own project notes. Our calculator uses common values and rounds up for a realistic purchase estimate.
Grass seed is much cheaper upfront, but it is slower and less predictable. Seed material may cost only a few cents per square foot, while sod material often costs ten times more. Sod buys time: you receive instant coverage, erosion control, fewer weed gaps, and a lawn that can look complete in a day. Seed is better for large low-budget areas where you can wait months for maturity. Sod is usually worth the added cost for front yards, slopes, new construction, rentals, HOA deadlines, drainage repairs, pet-damaged areas, and any project where immediate coverage matters.
Professional sod installation commonly falls around $1.50 to $2.75 per square foot for a normal job, including sod, labor, delivery, basic soil preparation, laying, cutting, rolling, and cleanup. Broad national ranges can be wider, especially when old lawn removal, grading, topsoil, drainage repair, irrigation work, or difficult access is involved. A simple 1,000-square-foot rectangular yard may be affordable, while a larger yard with tree roots, clay soil, and drainage issues can cost several times more. Always ask contractors to separate sod material, labor, prep, delivery, disposal, and warranty terms.
Resodding usually costs more than installing sod on prepared new soil because the old grass must be killed or removed, the surface must be regraded, and the soil often needs amendment before fresh sod arrives. Expect a normal resod project to cost more than a simple new-construction install. Old sod removal, debris haul-away, soil testing, compost or topsoil, leveling, starter fertilizer, and irrigation adjustments can add meaningful cost. The cheapest resod quote is not always the best if it skips soil preparation, because fresh sod placed over compacted or uneven soil often fails.
A 10 percent waste buffer is the standard planning number for most residential projects. Increase to 15 percent for irregular shapes, curved beds, narrow strips, slopes, utility boxes, stepping stones, drains, and heavy trimming. Use 20 percent only when the layout is very complex or when matching a specific harvest batch is critical. Waste is not only scrap; it includes unusable cuts, damaged rolls, pieces that dry on edges, and extra sod used to stagger seams. Ordering slightly more prevents patchwork and color mismatch later.
Install sod as soon as possible, ideally the same day it arrives. Sod is a living product with roots, soil, and moisture packed tightly on a pallet. Heat builds inside stacked rolls, and edges can dry quickly in sun or wind. If a delay is unavoidable, keep pallets shaded, mist them lightly, and prioritize installing the hottest or driest pallets first. Do not order more than your crew can lay in one day during hot weather. Good installation timing protects root viability and reduces the risk of yellowing seams.
The best time depends on grass type. Cool-season sod such as tall fescue, Kentucky bluegrass, and rye blends roots best in spring or fall when temperatures are mild. Warm-season sod such as Bermuda, zoysia, St. Augustine, centipede, and Bahia establishes fastest from late spring through summer while it is actively growing. Sod can often be installed outside the perfect window if irrigation is reliable and the ground is workable, but extreme heat, hard freezes, drought restrictions, or saturated soil increase risk.
Sod delivery often ranges from about $50 to $200 for local residential orders, but it depends on distance, pallet count, truck access, forklift requirements, and supplier policy. Some farms include delivery above a minimum order, while retailers charge separately. Delivery can become expensive for one or two pallets because the truck cost is almost the same as for a larger order. Ask whether delivery includes curbside drop, driveway placement, forklift unloading, exact-day scheduling, and whether the driver can place pallets near the work area.
The biggest cost drivers are grass variety, total square footage, local availability, delivery distance, soil preparation, labor rate, and site complexity. Zoysia and St. Augustine often cost more than Bermuda or basic fescue. Small orders cost more per square foot than full pallets. Hard-to-access backyards, steep slopes, curved beds, old grass removal, rocky soil, grading, and irrigation repair all increase labor. Season also matters: sod can be more expensive during peak landscape demand or after weather events that reduce harvest supply.
Choose grass type by climate, sun, traffic, shade, and maintenance style. Bermuda is durable, affordable, and excellent for full sun in warm regions. Zoysia is dense, attractive, and more shade tolerant than Bermuda but slower to recover and usually more expensive. St. Augustine performs well in warm humid areas and moderate shade but is commonly sold as sod rather than seed. Tall fescue is a strong transition-zone choice for cooler regions and mixed sun. Kentucky bluegrass is beautiful and self-repairing in northern climates but needs more water and fertility.
A good quote should list the sod variety, square feet, pallet count, material price, delivery cost, old lawn removal if needed, soil preparation, grading, topsoil or compost, starter fertilizer, labor, rolling, cleanup, warranty, watering instructions, and timeline. It should also explain who is responsible for irrigation startup, sprinkler head height adjustments, utility marking, and disposal. Avoid vague quotes that only say โ€œinstall sodโ€ without specifying preparation. Preparation quality is often the difference between sod that roots quickly and sod that declines after the first month.
You do not always need imported topsoil, but you do need a prepared, smooth, firm, moist seedbed with good soil contact. If the existing soil is compacted, rocky, nutrient-poor, uneven, or mostly construction fill, topsoil or compost may be necessary. Too much loose topsoil can settle unevenly, while too little preparation leaves air pockets and poor rooting. Soil testing is ideal before large projects because pH, phosphorus, potassium, and organic matter can affect establishment. The final grade should slope away from buildings and drain without puddles.
New sod should be watered immediately after installation until the sod and the top few inches of soil below it are moist. During the first week, the goal is to keep the root zone consistently moist without creating puddles. In hot or windy weather, that may mean several light waterings per day. After the sod begins to root, gradually reduce frequency and water more deeply. By about three to four weeks, many lawns can transition toward a normal deep-and-infrequent watering schedule, depending on grass type, season, and soil.
Mow new sod only after it has rooted enough that the pieces do not lift when gently tugged. Under good growing conditions, this may happen in about two to three weeks, but temperature, grass type, water, and soil contact affect timing. Let the surface dry enough to support the mower without ruts. Use a sharp blade, mow high, and never remove more than one-third of the blade height. Avoid heavy riding mowers for the first cuts if the soil is still soft.
Yes, many homeowners can lay sod themselves, especially on smaller rectangular lawns. The main challenges are timing, physical labor, soil preparation, watering, and installing all pallets before the sod deteriorates. A pallet can weigh hundreds to thousands of pounds depending on moisture content, so plan helpers, wheelbarrows, knives, a roller, and immediate irrigation. DIY saves labor but mistakes can be expensive. Hire a professional for large areas, steep slopes, complicated grading, poor drainage, or when sod must be installed very quickly.
Compare suppliers by square footage per pallet, grass cultivar, harvest freshness, farm location, delivery schedule, warranty policy, minimum order, pallet deposit, price per square foot, and whether the sod is cut thick or thin. Ask when the sod will be harvested, not just when it will be delivered. Fresh local sod usually roots better than sod that has spent too long in transit. Also check whether the supplier sells the grass type that matches your sunlight, climate, and intended use.
Yellowing usually comes from delayed installation, dry edges, insufficient watering, poor soil contact, heat inside stacked pallets, compacted soil, or too much foot traffic before rooting. Mild yellowing can recover if roots are still alive and irrigation is corrected quickly. Severe browning, sour smell, slimy leaves, or pieces that pull apart may indicate heat damage or rot from sitting too long. Check moisture under the sod, roll loose areas for contact, water early in the morning, and avoid mowing or traffic until the sod anchors.