Calculate seed, sod, fertilizer, irrigation water, mowing height, and yearly service cost for Florida lawns. This guide is customized for St. Augustine, Bahia, Zoysia, Bermuda, and Centipede grass across North, Central, and South Florida.
Florida lawns are managed by climate, soil, turf species, and local rules. The same 5,000 sq ft lawn needs different decisions in Jacksonville, Orlando, Tampa Bay, and Miami.
A Florida lawn calculator should not simply copy a national fertilizer or seeding chart. Florida turf usually grows on sandy soil, loses nutrients quickly during heavy rain, and faces county-level fertilizer restrictions that many states do not have. A healthy Florida program uses smaller, better-timed inputs, slow-release nitrogen, correct mowing height, and irrigation only when the grass shows drought stress. The goal is not to force growth every week. The goal is a dense turf canopy that shades weeds, resists pests, and uses less water.
Start with the installation choice. St. Augustine is usually installed as sod or plugs because commercial seed is not practical for home lawns. Bahia, Bermuda, Centipede, and some Zoysia products can be seeded, but sod is still common where fast coverage is needed. If the calculator says “sod required,” it is not an error; it reflects the real market for Florida turf. For a clean result, measure only the turf area. Exclude patios, beds, pool decks, driveways, and mulched tree rings. Add 5% to 10% waste for sod cutting, irregular curves, and patch repairs.
Next, choose your fertilizer mode. For most Florida lawns, the safest routine is a slow-release fertilizer with little or no phosphorus unless a soil test shows phosphorus deficiency. St. Augustine often responds well to blends that provide nitrogen plus potassium, while Bahia and Centipede need much lower nitrogen than a high-performance Bermuda lawn. If your county has a rainy-season blackout, the best plan is to apply any allowed slow-release product before the blackout begins and then rely on mowing height, iron products where allowed, irrigation management, and natural rainfall during summer.
The watering mode converts inches of irrigation into gallons, which helps homeowners understand why short daily watering is wasteful. One inch of water on 1,000 sq ft equals about 623 gallons. A ½ inch irrigation event on a 5,000 sq ft lawn is about 1,557 gallons. That is why Florida-Friendly Landscaping guidance emphasizes watering only when the lawn actually shows drought stress. St. Augustine often folds leaf blades and turns a dull blue-gray before it wilts; Bahia may show footprints longer than normal. These visual cues are better than a fixed daily timer.
Set your irrigation controller to manual or “seasonal adjust,” watch the turf, and use tuna cans or catch cups to measure how long your zones take to apply ½ inch. Once you know the run time, you can water deeply without guessing or running every day.
| Situation | Best fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Typical sunny home lawn | St. Augustine | Fast cover, good Florida adaptation, broad blade look |
| Large rural sandy lot | Bahia | Low fertilizer, drought tolerant, seed available |
| Premium dense lawn | Zoysia | Fine texture, thick canopy, moderate inputs |
| Sports/full sun/traffic | Bermuda | Fast recovery, high traffic tolerance, frequent mowing |
| Low-input acidic soil | Centipede | Low fertility demand, slower growth, sensitive to overfeeding |
Many Florida soils already have enough phosphorus, and some counties restrict phosphorus year-round unless a soil test documents a deficiency. Use a soil test before applying phosphorus, especially near waterways, storm drains, canals, lakes, and coastal areas.
Use these regional windows with your local weather, soil temperature, rainfall, and county ordinances.
North Florida has the coolest winters and the greatest frost risk. Warm-season turf may go partly dormant, especially Bahia, Bermuda, Zoysia, and exposed St. Augustine. Begin fertilizer later than Central/South Florida and avoid pushing growth before warm-season turf is actively growing. Pre-emergent timing is usually later than South Florida, and irrigation demand is lower in winter.
Central Florida is the default setting for many homeowners. St. Augustine remains the dominant lawn, but Bahia, Zoysia, and Bermuda are common. Spring green-up typically starts earlier than North Florida. Fertilizer timing must be coordinated with local rainy-season restrictions, especially around Tampa Bay and nearby counties that have June 1 to September 30 blackout periods.
South Florida lawns may grow nearly all year, which changes mowing and fertilizer timing. Winter dormancy is limited, pest pressure can be year-round, and irrigation can often be reduced during wet periods. The lawn may need mowing in months when North Florida lawns are dormant, but fertilizer should still follow local ordinances and water-quality rules.
Month-by-month tasks for St. Augustine, Bahia, Zoysia, Bermuda, and Centipede lawns. Adjust earlier in South Florida and later in North Florida.
Active Growth Transition Slow/Dormant
Calendar dates are starting points. Soil temperature, rainfall, turf growth, drought stress, and county ordinances should override a fixed calendar date.
Choose turf by sun exposure, maintenance level, irrigation expectations, and appearance—not just by what looks good in a neighbor’s yard.
St. Augustine is Florida’s classic residential turf. It forms a coarse, attractive, fast-spreading lawn through stolons and is usually installed as sod or plugs. Floratam is common in full sun and has good vigor, while Palmetto and Seville are often used where partial shade exists. St. Augustine should usually be mowed high, often 3.5 to 4 inches, because lower mowing weakens the lawn, increases weed pressure, and makes drought stress worse. The biggest weaknesses are chinch bugs, gray leaf spot, thatch, and poor performance in heavy foot traffic.
Bahia is the practical choice for low-input Florida lawns. It tolerates sandy acidic soil, drought, and lower fertility better than most turf choices. It produces tall seedheads, so many homeowners mow Bahia mainly to remove seedheads rather than to cut leaf blades. The lawn may not look as dense or refined as St. Augustine or Zoysia, but it can survive with less fertilizer and less irrigation once established. Bahia seed is widely available, which makes it useful for large properties where sod cost would be high.
Zoysia creates a dense premium turf but grows and recovers more slowly than Bermuda. Bermuda is excellent in full sun and high-traffic areas but demands more frequent mowing and should not be chosen for shade. Centipede is a low-growing, low-fertility grass for acidic soil; it can decline if pushed with too much nitrogen or grown in high-pH soil. In Florida, the best grass is the one that matches your site conditions and your maintenance style.
| Grass | Mow | Water | Fertility | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. Augustine | 3.5–4 in | ½–¾ in as needed | Moderate | Sod/plugs; chinch bug watch |
| Bahia | 3–4 in | Low to moderate | Low | Seed available; seedheads common |
| Zoysia | 2–3 in | Moderate | Moderate | Dense; slower recovery |
| Bermuda | 1–2 in | Moderate | Moderate-high | Full sun; traffic tolerant |
| Centipede | 1.5–2 in | Low to moderate | Very low | Acidic soil; avoid overfeeding |
No Florida lawn grass loves deep shade. For dense shade under live oak, magnolia, or heavy palms, use mulch, groundcovers, stepping stones, or a reduced turf area instead of forcing grass to survive.
These rules prevent most Florida lawn problems: too much nitrogen, too much water, too short mowing, and ignoring local ordinances.
Many counties in Florida restrict fertilizer containing nitrogen or phosphorus from June 1 through September 30. The exact rule varies by county and municipality, but the intent is the same: reduce nutrient runoff during the rainy season. If your county has a blackout, the calculator’s fertilizer result is still useful for legal application windows outside the blackout. The safest strategy is to apply slow-release fertilizer before the restricted season if allowed, avoid phosphorus unless a soil test requires it, and use mowing height and irrigation management to keep turf healthy through summer.
Florida lawns fail quickly when cut too short. Taller St. Augustine and Bahia leaves shade soil, reduce weed germination, and support a deeper root system. Following the one-third rule is more important than mowing on a fixed day: never remove more than one-third of the leaf blade in one cut. In wet summer weather, you may need to mow more often, not lower. A sharp blade also matters; shredded tips turn tan and make the lawn look drought-stressed even when soil moisture is adequate.
| Item | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| St. Augustine sod | $0.35–$0.85/sq ft DIY material | Varies by cultivar and delivery |
| Bahia seed | $4–$8/lb | Large-area budget option |
| Fertilizer bag | $25–$55 | Slow-release blends cost more |
| Monthly service | $30–$80 per 1,000 sq ft/month | Mowing + basic care varies by area |
| Chinch bug treatment | $75–$250+ | Depends on severity and area |
The same brown patch can be drought, chinch bugs, gray leaf spot, take-all root rot, compacted soil, shade decline, or fertilizer burn.
Chinch bugs are a major St. Augustine problem in Florida. Damage often appears as yellowing or brown patches in hot sunny areas and may be mistaken for drought. If watering does not help and the patch keeps expanding, inspect the boundary between healthy and damaged turf. Overfertilized, thatchy, drought-stressed St. Augustine is more vulnerable. Good mowing height, correct watering, and avoiding excessive nitrogen are part of prevention.
Warm, wet weather can trigger gray leaf spot in St. Augustine. It may thin the lawn, slow grow-in, and create lesions on leaves. Heavy nitrogen during humid rainy periods can make disease worse. This is one reason county blackout periods and Florida-Friendly guidance often align with better turf health: less nitrogen during the wettest months reduces lush growth that fungi exploit.
Dollarweed is often a symptom of wet soil or excessive irrigation. Before applying herbicide, correct the water problem. Run zones less often, repair heads that hit the same low area repeatedly, and improve drainage where water sits after storms. Once the lawn is no longer constantly wet, selective control is more effective and less likely to return.
| Symptom | Likely cause | First action |
|---|---|---|
| Brown full-sun St. Augustine patch | Chinch bugs or drought | Check soil moisture and inspect bugs |
| Leaf spots during rainy heat | Gray leaf spot | Reduce nitrogen, improve air/water management |
| Weeds in wet low spots | Overwatering/poor drainage | Fix irrigation before herbicide |
| Thin turf under oak shade | Too little light | Use mulch/groundcover instead of more fertilizer |
| Pale lawn during blackout | Nutrient timing or iron need | Use allowed iron/micronutrient products if permitted |
Use these examples to check your own result. Costs are planning ranges, not quotes; delivery, cultivar, access, labor, and county rules can change the final number.
Florida homeowners often underestimate how much the grass type changes the project. A 5,000 sq ft St. Augustine lawn is mostly a sod-ordering and establishment-watering project, while a 12,000 sq ft Bahia lawn is more likely a seed, erosion, and patience project. St. Augustine gives faster visual coverage but costs more upfront. Bahia costs less and handles rough conditions, but it will not create the same lush carpet without extra maintenance, and even then it keeps a more open texture.
Water examples also show why irrigation should be managed carefully. A single ¾ inch irrigation event on a medium Florida lawn can use thousands of gallons. During rainy season that water may be unnecessary, and during a county or water-management-district restriction you may only have specific watering days. Use a catch-can test to learn how long your system takes to apply ½ inch; then adjust by weather rather than letting the controller run the same schedule all year.
Fertilizer examples are only legal and agronomic if the timing is right. The calculator can estimate pounds of product, but it cannot override county ordinances, soil-test recommendations, label instructions, or weather restrictions. If a storm is forecast, fertilizer should not be applied even if the calendar says it is time. If the lawn is not actively growing, nitrogen will not fix the problem. In many Florida cases, the best “fertilizer decision” is to wait, mow correctly, irrigate only as needed, and diagnose pests or disease first.
Answers to common Florida lawn questions about grass choice, fertilizer bans, watering, pests, mowing, and year-round care.
When two recommendations conflict, follow this order: product label first, local ordinance second, UF/IFAS or extension guidance third, and generic national lawn advice last. Florida’s sandy soils, summer thunderstorms, county fertilizer rules, and warm-season grass biology make national cool-season schedules unreliable. A conservative Florida plan may look slower on paper, but it usually produces a stronger lawn with fewer pest, runoff, and disease problems. Keep written notes for each application date, product, rate, rainfall, mowing height, pest observation, and irrigation adjustment. Those records make next year’s Florida lawn schedule easier and help you avoid repeating the same expensive mistake. For rental homes or HOA neighborhoods, keep photos before and after each seasonal change so shade decline, irrigation gaps, and pest damage are easier to prove.
Fertilizer, pH, overseeding, sprayer, mower size, sod, irrigation cost — all in one place.
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