Starter Fertilizer Calculator โ€” How Much Starter Fertilizer for New Lawn? (2026)
๐Ÿ“Š Starter fertilizer guidance reviewed from University of California IPM, University of Minnesota Extension, NC State Extension, UMass Extension, and current 2026 retail product listings. Use the calculator as an estimating tool, then follow your fertilizer label and local phosphorus rules.

Get exact bag counts, NPK nutrient delivery, and cost estimates for the most popular starter fertilizer products.

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6 popular starter fertilizer products โ€” Scotts, Pennington, Jonathan Green, and more.
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Custom NPK input โ€” enter any product's formulation for precise nutrient calculations.
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Bag count output โ€” exact bags needed with partial bag note.
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Nutrient delivery โ€” lbs of N, P, K applied per 1,000 sq ft.
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Seeding vs sodding vs hydroseeding mode โ€” slightly different application rates.
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Cost estimate โ€” per bag price ร— bags needed with total.
Popular Starter Fertilizer Products (2026): Scotts Turf Builder Starter: 24-25-4 โ€” covers 5,000 sq ft
Pennington UltraGreen Starter: 22-23-4 โ€” covers 5,000 sq ft
Jonathan Green Green-Up: 12-18-8 โ€” covers 5,000 sq ft
Average bag cost: $25โ€“$55 | Apply at seeding or sodding time
๐Ÿ“– Complete Guide

How Much Starter Fertilizer Do I Need? (2026)

Most starter fertilizer bags cover 5,000 square feet and cost $25โ€“$55 per bag. A 5,000 sq ft new lawn needs exactly 1 bag; a 10,000 sq ft lawn needs 2 bags; a quarter-acre (10,890 sq ft) needs 2.2 bags โ€” round up to 3. The key distinction from regular lawn fertilizer is the high middle number (phosphorus): starter fertilizers like Scotts 24-25-4 and Pennington 22-23-4 have nearly equal N and P, while standard fertilizers typically have very low P (e.g., 32-0-10).

Phosphorus drives root cell division and energy transfer in new seedlings. Without adequate phosphorus at establishment, new grass roots stay shallow, the lawn establishes slowly, and thinning or bare spots develop. Apply starter fertilizer before or at seeding time โ€” rake it into the top 2โ€“3 inches of soil for best contact. For sod installation, apply starter fertilizer to the prepared soil bed immediately before laying sod so roots grow into a nutrient-rich zone.

The recommended phosphorus application rate for new lawns is 1โ€“2 lbs of Pโ‚‚Oโ‚… per 1,000 sq ft. A bag of Scotts 24-25-4 at 15 lbs covering 5,000 sq ft delivers about 0.75 lbs of P per 1,000 sq ft โ€” within the target range. Soil with naturally high phosphorus (test before assuming deficiency) may need only the nitrogen component, so a pre-seeding soil test is always the best practice.

๐Ÿ’ก Always Apply Starter Fertilizer at Establishment โ€” Not After

The window for starter fertilizer effectiveness is narrow โ€” apply at seeding or sodding time, not 2โ€“3 weeks later after germination. Once grass is growing, it has already used whatever phosphorus was in the soil. Getting fertilizer into the root zone before or at establishment gives seedlings the best possible nutrition from day one. For overseeding after aeration, the aeration holes allow fertilizer to penetrate directly into the root zone โ€” apply starter immediately after aerating.

Starter vs Regular Fertilizer โ€” Key Differences

  • Starter fertilizer NPK: Roughly equal N and P, e.g. 24-25-4, 22-23-4, 18-24-12. High P for root development.
  • Regular lawn fertilizer NPK: High N, very low or zero P, e.g. 32-0-10, 28-0-6. Designed for established turf.
  • Organic starter fertilizers: Lower NPK numbers (e.g. 12-18-8) but with slow-release nutrients feeding seedlings over 6โ€“8 weeks.
  • Phosphorus restriction note: Some US states (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, New York) restrict phosphorus fertilizer use on established lawns. These restrictions typically do NOT apply to new lawn establishment โ€” always check local regulations.

โš ๏ธ Do Not Use Starter Fertilizer on Established Lawns

The high phosphorus content in starter fertilizers is designed for new seedlings and is inappropriate โ€” and potentially harmful โ€” for established lawns. Excessive phosphorus in established turf can interfere with micronutrient uptake (especially iron and zinc), promote algae growth in runoff, and may violate phosphorus fertilizer laws in many states. Use standard lawn maintenance fertilizer (high N, low or zero P) for established turf after the first growing season.

Application Rates by Method

  • Dry seeding: Apply starter fertilizer at standard bag rate; rake into top 2 inches before seeding.
  • Overseeding after aeration: Apply at standard rate; holes carry fertilizer directly into root zone.
  • Sodding: Apply to prepared soil bed before laying sod; roots grow into fertilized zone immediately.
  • Hydroseeding: Starter fertilizer is typically mixed directly into the hydroseed slurry โ€” confirm with contractor whether it's already included before applying separately.
  • Sprigging / plugging: Apply starter fertilizer to the soil bed before planting; follow up with a second application 3โ€“4 weeks after establishment.

๐Ÿงช Popular Starter Fertilizer Products (2026)

ProductNPKCoveragePrice
Scotts Turf Builder Starter24-25-45,000 sq ft$35โ€“$45
Pennington UltraGreen22-23-45,000 sq ft$18โ€“$40
Jonathan Green Green-Up12-18-85,000 sq ft$35โ€“$45
Espoma Organic Starter18-24-62,500 sq ft$20โ€“$25
Lesco Starter 18-24-1218-24-1212,500 sq ft$50โ€“$60

Retail pricing. Buy larger bags for better value per sq ft.

๐Ÿ“ Bags Needed by Lawn Size (5,000 sq ft/bag)

Lawn AreaBags (exact)Buy
2,500 sq ft0.551 bag
5,000 sq ft1.102 bags
7,500 sq ft1.652 bags
10,000 sq ft2.203 bags
10,890 sq ft (ยผ ac)2.403 bags
21,780 sq ft (ยฝ ac)4.805 bags
43,560 sq ft (1 ac)9.5810 bags

Includes 10% waste buffer. Always round up to full bags.

๐ŸŒฟ NPK โ€” What Each Nutrient Does

NutrientRoleStarter Rate
N โ€” NitrogenShoot & leaf growth0.5โ€“1 lb/1K sq ft
P โ€” PhosphorusRoot development โญ1โ€“2 lb/1K sq ft
K โ€” PotassiumStress resistance0.5โ€“1 lb/1K sq ft

P is the critical starter nutrient โ€” look for high middle number.

๐ŸŒฑ 2026 Starter Fertilizer Strategy

Starter Fertilizer Calculator: How to Use the Result Correctly

The bag count is only the first step. The real goal is to place the right amount of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium in the young root zone without burning new seedlings or wasting phosphorus where the soil already has enough.

1. Start With Area, Then Check the Label Rate

Starter fertilizer labels are written around coverage area, usually 1,000, 2,500, 5,000, 10,000, or 12,500 square feet per bag. The calculator converts your lawn area into bags, but the bag label is still the final rule. If your product says one 15-pound bag covers 5,000 square feet, spreading that full bag on only 2,500 square feet doubles the nutrient rate and increases burn risk. If you are working with small patches, weigh the product rather than guessing by handfuls.

For irregular lawns, measure the main rectangle first, then add side strips, tree lawns, curb strips, and bare patch zones separately. A 10 percent buffer is helpful for spreader overlap and small measurement errors, but it should not be used as permission to over-apply. Starter fertilizer works best when the total amount is accurate and spread evenly in two half-rate passes at right angles.

2. Understand What the N-P-K Result Means

The calculator shows nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium delivered per 1,000 square feet. On fertilizer labels, the three numbers are percentages by weight: nitrogen, phosphate (Pโ‚‚Oโ‚…), and potash (Kโ‚‚O). A 24-25-4 starter fertilizer is 24 percent nitrogen, 25 percent phosphate, and 4 percent potash. That means a 15-pound bag contains about 3.6 pounds of nitrogen, 3.75 pounds of phosphate, and 0.6 pounds of potash.

For new turf, phosphorus is the nutrient that separates a starter fertilizer from a maintenance fertilizer. Young seedlings need root growth before they can tolerate mowing, heat, traffic, and drought. UC IPM recommends applying starter before establishment and incorporating it into the top 2โ€“4 inches of soil, with no more than 1 pound of nitrogen and at least 1 pound of phosphorus per 1,000 square feet in the root zone at planting. In practical homeowner terms, this is why โ€œhigh middle numberโ€ formulas are used at seeding and sod installation.

Best Practical Rule

If you are renovating bare soil, apply starter fertilizer before seed and lightly rake it into the topsoil. If you are overseeding after core aeration, apply starter immediately after aeration so part of the product drops into the holes. If you are laying sod, spread starter on the prepared soil bed before the sod rolls go down. Do not wait until the lawn is already established; by then the most important root-starting window has passed.

3. Soil Test Rules for Phosphorus

Many lawns already have enough phosphorus, especially older yards, properties that received compost for years, and Midwestern soils with naturally high P levels. University of Minnesota Extension notes that established lawns usually show little response to added phosphorus, while phosphorus can still be beneficial when establishing new turf because it does not move easily through the soil. This is why a soil test is important before any large seeding, sod, or renovation project.

Use a soil test to answer three questions before you buy fertilizer: is phosphorus actually needed, is soil pH in the right range for nutrient availability, and is potassium low enough to require a stronger third number? If the report says phosphorus is high, choose a low-phosphorus starter approach or follow the lab recommendation exactly. If the report says phosphorus is low, a starter fertilizer with a strong middle number is usually worth the small extra cost.

4. Do Not Confuse Starter Fertilizer With Weed-and-Feed

Starter fertilizer should not include pre-emergent herbicide unless the product is specifically labeled as safe for new seeding. Standard crabgrass preventers and many weed-and-feed products can stop grass seed from germinating. This is a common reason new lawns fail: the homeowner applies seed and a weed control product in the same weekend, then wonders why germination is patchy. Use plain starter fertilizer for seeding. Save pre-emergent for later, after the new grass is mature enough according to the label.

For sod, plugs, and sprigs, the rules are slightly different because you are not relying on seed germination. Even then, the product label matters. Some herbicides are safe on established turf but stressful on newly laid sod. For a simple and safe establishment plan, prepare soil, apply starter, lay sod or seed, water consistently, mow only after the grass is rooted or tall enough, and delay weed control until the new lawn is strong.

Starter Fertilizer Decision Table

SituationBest Product ChoiceExtra Note
New seed on bare soilHigh-P starterIncorporate into top 2โ€“4 inches
Overseeding after aerationStarter at label rateApply after aeration, before/with seed
HydroseedingAsk contractor firstStarter may already be in slurry
New sodStarter on soil bedWater immediately after installation
Established lawn, no seedingMaintenance fertilizerUsually low or zero phosphorus
High-P soil testFollow lab recommendationDo not add extra phosphorus blindly

2026 Cost Planning by Lawn Size

ProjectTypical BagsEstimated Retail Cost
Small repair area, 1,000 sq ft1 small bag or partial 5K bag$15โ€“$35
Standard suburban lawn, 5,000 sq ft1 large 5K bag$25โ€“$45
Large lawn, 10,000 sq ft2 large 5K bags$50โ€“$90
Quarter acre, 10,890 sq ft3 bags with buffer$75โ€“$135
Half acre5 bags or pro 50-lb bag$125โ€“$275
One acre10 bags or bulk/pro-grade$250โ€“$550

Prices vary by retailer, bag size, region, and sale timing. Pro-grade 50-lb bags often reduce cost per 1,000 sq ft on large lawns.

Phosphorus Law Warning

Several states and local watersheds restrict phosphorus fertilizer on established lawns because runoff can contribute to water-quality problems. New lawn establishment is often treated as an exception, but the rules vary. When in doubt, keep your soil test result and product label handy, and follow local law over generic online advice.

โœ… Application Checklist

How to Apply Starter Fertilizer Without Burning New Grass

Starter fertilizer is safe when applied correctly. Problems usually come from doubling the rate, spilling piles, applying to dry soil without watering, or pairing seed with the wrong weed-control product.

Step-by-Step Application

  • Measure the area: Use the calculator, then round the final bag count up only to the next bag for purchasing. Do not spread the extra bag just because you bought it.
  • Read the label: Confirm coverage, spreader setting, grass compatibility, and whether the product is designed for seeding, sodding, plugs, or sprigs.
  • Prepare soil first: Rake out rocks, loosen compacted topsoil, correct grade, and add compost or topsoil before fertilizer. Fertilizer cannot fix poor seedbed preparation.
  • Split the application: Put half the product in the spreader and walk north-south. Put the second half in and walk east-west. This prevents stripes and low-density patches.
  • Keep fertilizer off hard surfaces: Sweep granules from sidewalks, driveways, patios, and streets back into the lawn. Do not rinse them into storm drains.
  • Water immediately: Water lightly after application so granules begin dissolving into the root zone. Then keep seed moist through germination.
  • Wait before the next feeding: Most new lawns do not need a second feeding until after germination and early establishment, often 4โ€“8 weeks depending on grass type and product label.

New Seed vs Sod vs Hydroseeding

For new seed, starter fertilizer supports the seedling as soon as roots emerge. For sod, it encourages the sod roots to knit into the prepared soil. For hydroseeding, the contractor may already include fertilizer in the slurry, so the correct question is not โ€œshould I add starter?โ€ but โ€œis starter already included, and at what rate?โ€ Duplicate applications can push too much salt into the seed zone.

Warm-season plugs and sprigs are also establishment projects. They need some starter nutrition, but excessive nitrogen too early can create weak, leafy growth before roots spread. For plugs, water is usually more limiting than fertilizer. Keep soil evenly moist, then begin light follow-up feeding only after visible rooting and growth.

Spreader Calibration Shortcut

Measure a 1,000 sq ft test area, weigh the amount of product that should cover that area, and adjust the spreader until that amount is used evenly. This is more accurate than blindly trusting a spreader setting printed for a different spreader model or walking speed.

Common Mistakes and Fixes

MistakeWhy It HurtsFix
Using weed-and-feed with seedCan block germinationUse plain starter fertilizer
Double-applying because โ€œmore is betterโ€Salt injury and seedling burnFollow label rate exactly
Applying after germination onlyMisses early root windowApply at or before seeding
Skipping soil testMay add phosphorus where not neededTest before large projects
Poor seedbed prepFertilizer cannot overcome compactionLoosen soil and improve contact
No watering after applicationGranules sit on surfaceWater lightly and consistently

When to Switch to Regular Fertilizer

Grass TypeStarter WindowFirst Maintenance Feeding
Tall FescueAt seedingAfter 2โ€“3 mows or 6โ€“8 weeks
Kentucky BluegrassAt seedingAfter establishment; avoid rushing
Perennial RyegrassAt seeding4โ€“6 weeks if actively growing
Bermuda seedAt planting in warm soilAfter coverage begins to fill
SodBefore laying sodAfter rooting, usually 4โ€“6 weeks
HydroseedConfirm slurry contentsFollow contractor schedule
๐Ÿ“Š Examples

Starter Fertilizer โ€” 6 Worked Examples

Real-world bag count and cost calculations for different lawn sizes and popular starter fertilizer products.

Small Lawn

3,000 sq ft New Seed โ€” Scotts 24-25-4

Coverage per bag5,000 sq ft
Area (+10%)3,300 sq ft
Bags needed0.66 โ†’ 1 bag
Bag price$35
๐Ÿ’ฐ Total cost$35
Average Lawn

7,500 sq ft Sod โ€” Pennington 22-23-4

Area (+10%)8,250 sq ft
Bags needed1.65 โ†’ 2 bags
Bag price$30
N delivered0.66 lbs/1K sq ft
๐Ÿ’ฐ Total cost$60
Quarter Acre

10,890 sq ft New Seed โ€” Scotts 24-25-4

Area (+10%)11,979 sq ft
Bags needed2.40 โ†’ 3 bags
P delivered~0.75 lbs/1K sq ft
Bag price$35
๐Ÿ’ฐ Total cost$105
Organic

5,000 sq ft Seed โ€” Espoma 18-24-6

Coverage per bag2,500 sq ft
Area (+10%)5,500 sq ft
Bags needed2.2 โ†’ 3 bags
Bag price$22
๐Ÿ’ฐ Total cost$66
Half Acre

21,780 sq ft โ€” Lesco 18-24-12

Coverage per bag12,500 sq ft
Area (+10%)23,958 sq ft
Bags needed1.92 โ†’ 2 bags
Bag price$55
๐Ÿ’ฐ Total cost$110
1 Acre

43,560 sq ft Hydroseeding โ€” Jonathan Green

Area (+10%)47,916 sq ft
Bags needed9.58 โ†’ 10 bags
P delivered~0.54 lbs/1K sq ft
Bag price$35
๐Ÿ’ฐ Total cost$350
โ“ FAQ

Starter Fertilizer โ€” Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most common starter fertilizer questions for new lawn seeding and sodding.

Starter fertilizer is a specially formulated lawn fertilizer with high phosphorus (the middle NPK number) designed to promote root development in newly seeded or sodded lawns. Regular lawn fertilizers are high in nitrogen for shoot growth but have little or no phosphorus (e.g., 32-0-10). Starter fertilizers like Scotts 24-25-4 have nearly equal nitrogen and phosphorus because new seedlings need root establishment far more than top growth. Using regular fertilizer instead of starter on a new lawn will result in slower establishment and weaker root systems.
Most starter fertilizer bags are formulated to apply at rates delivering 0.5โ€“1.0 lb of nitrogen and 1โ€“2 lbs of phosphorus per 1,000 sq ft. For a standard 15 lb bag covering 5,000 sq ft, that's 3 lbs of product per 1,000 sq ft. Scotts 24-25-4 at this rate delivers 0.72 lbs N and 0.75 lbs P per 1,000 sq ft โ€” within the ideal range for new lawn establishment. Always follow the specific bag label rate; do not double-apply thinking more is better as over-application can burn seedlings.
Apply starter fertilizer at or immediately before seeding or sodding โ€” not after. For seeding: broadcast starter fertilizer, rake lightly into the top 2โ€“3 inches of soil, then spread seed. For overseeding after aeration: apply starter immediately after aeration so it falls into the holes, then spread seed. For sod: apply starter to the prepared soil bed, then lay sod on top so roots grow into the fertilized zone. For hydroseeding: confirm with your contractor whether starter fertilizer is already in the slurry mix before applying separately to avoid over-application.
No โ€” starter fertilizer is not appropriate for established lawns. The high phosphorus content is designed for seedlings that need root development help. Established lawns have mature root systems that don't benefit from extra phosphorus, and excess phosphorus can interfere with iron and zinc uptake, causing micronutrient deficiencies. Many states also restrict phosphorus fertilizer application on established turf due to water quality concerns. Use a standard lawn maintenance fertilizer (high N, low or zero P) for established turf after the first growing season.
Scotts Turf Builder Starter (24-25-4) is the best-selling starter fertilizer in the US and performs very well for most new lawn applications. Its high phosphorus content and wide availability make it the go-to choice for homeowners. Pennington UltraGreen (22-23-4) is a strong comparable alternative at a slightly lower price. Jonathan Green Green-Up (12-18-8) is preferred for more organic-leaning applications with its lower synthetic nutrient concentration. For large projects (1/4 acre+), the Lesco 50 lb bag provides significantly better value per square foot than retail bags.
NPK stands for Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P), and Potassium (K) โ€” the three primary macronutrients. The numbers on the bag (e.g., 24-25-4) represent the percentage by weight of each nutrient: 24% nitrogen, 25% phosphorus (as Pโ‚‚Oโ‚…), and 4% potassium (as Kโ‚‚O). A 15 lb bag of 24-25-4 contains: 3.6 lbs N, 3.75 lbs Pโ‚‚Oโ‚…, and 0.6 lbs Kโ‚‚O. For starter fertilizers, the key number to look for is the middle number (P) โ€” it should be high (18โ€“25+) to ensure adequate phosphorus for root establishment.
A soil test before new lawn establishment is always ideal. Some soils โ€” particularly in agricultural areas or established garden beds โ€” already have high phosphorus levels from years of organic matter or fertilizer applications. Applying starter fertilizer to already high-P soil wastes money and increases runoff risk. University extension services and commercial labs offer soil tests for $15โ€“$30. The test will tell you your existing P level and whether starter fertilizer is truly needed. In most typical residential soils from construction sites or new subdivisions, starter fertilizer is almost always beneficial.
With starter fertilizer applied correctly and consistent watering, germination timelines are: Perennial Ryegrass 5โ€“10 days, Tall Fescue 7โ€“14 days, Kentucky Bluegrass 14โ€“30 days, Bermuda Grass 10โ€“21 days. If you're not seeing germination within the expected window, the most common causes are: insufficient watering (seed bed dried out), temperature too cold or too hot for the species, seeding too deep, or poor seed-to-soil contact. Starter fertilizer improves establishment speed but cannot overcome fundamental germination problems from poor soil prep or watering.
Yes โ€” applying starter fertilizer and grass seed in the same general operation is the standard practice. The recommended sequence is: till or loosen soil โ†’ broadcast starter fertilizer โ†’ rake lightly to incorporate โ†’ spread grass seed โ†’ drag or roll lightly for seed-to-soil contact โ†’ water. The fertilizer and seed do not need to be in separate applications, but avoid mixing them in the same spreader hopper if one is a granular and the other is a fine seed โ€” the different particle sizes cause uneven distribution. Use two separate spreader passes for best results.
Starter fertilizer costs $25โ€“$55 per bag for most retail products that cover 5,000 sq ft. That works out to $5โ€“$11 per 1,000 sq ft โ€” a very affordable part of the total new lawn establishment cost. Scotts Turf Builder Starter runs $40โ€“$45 per bag, Pennington UltraGreen $35โ€“$42, and Jonathan Green $30โ€“$38. For large areas, the Lesco 50 lb bag covering 12,500 sq ft at $50โ€“$60 provides the best per-square-foot value at around $4โ€“$5 per 1,000 sq ft.
Maybe, but do not assume. Compost improves soil structure and moisture holding, but its nutrient analysis is usually low and inconsistent. Some composts are high in phosphorus, while others add very little available phosphorus at the time seedlings need it. For a small repair, starter fertilizer is usually simpler. For a full renovation, use a soil test. If phosphorus already tests high, use a lower-phosphorus establishment plan and focus on seedbed preparation, water, and correct timing.
Yes, any fertilizer can burn seedlings if it is over-applied, spilled in piles, placed directly against seed at excessive concentration, or left dry in hot conditions. The safest method is to follow the label rate, split the application into two passes, lightly rake or water it into the root zone, and keep the seedbed moist. Do not double the rate to โ€œspeed upโ€ germination; seed germination is driven mainly by seed quality, soil temperature, seed-to-soil contact, and moisture.
For bare soil seeding, apply starter fertilizer before or at the same time as seed, then lightly rake so fertilizer and seed have good soil contact. Do not bury grass seed too deeply. For overseeding after aeration, many homeowners aerate first, apply starter fertilizer, then seed, because the holes help move fertilizer into the root zone. For sod, starter should go on the soil before the sod is installed.
Not always. New turf often benefits from phosphorus because it supports early rooting and does not move easily through soil, but high-phosphorus fertilizer is not automatically better on every property. If a soil test shows high phosphorus, adding more may waste money and increase runoff risk. The best starter fertilizer is the one that matches your soil test, grass type, and project type while staying within the label rate.
Use the setting printed on the bag for your spreader model as a starting point, then calibrate. Spreader settings are approximate because walking speed, humidity, granule size, and spreader wear change output. For the most accurate approach, calculate how many pounds should cover 1,000 sq ft, mark a 1,000 sq ft test area, and adjust until the spreader empties the correct amount evenly.
Yes. Starter fertilizer can be used with a light topdressing as long as the seed is not buried too deeply. Apply starter and seed, then cover with a thin layer of clean straw, compost, or peat alternative to retain moisture. The topdressing should be light enough that you can still see some soil and seed through it. A heavy layer blocks light, traps too much moisture, and can reduce germination.