Estimate how much St. Augustine sod or plugs you need, how much nitrogen fertilizer to apply, weekly watering volume, and likely annual service cost. This page is built for Florida, Gulf Coast, South Texas, coastal Carolinas, and other warm-region lawns where St. Augustine is a leading broad-bladed turfgrass.
St. Augustine is not a seed-based lawn like tall fescue or ryegrass. The correct planning question is usually: how many square feet of sod, how many plugs, how much fertilizer nitrogen, and how much water will the lawn need after installation?
St. Augustinegrass is a coarse-textured, warm-season turf that spreads by stolons. Those stolons make a thick carpet when the grass is healthy, but they also explain why mowing too low, excessive dethatching, and traffic damage can hurt it quickly. For most homeowners, a healthy St. Augustine lawn is built with a high mowing height, enough but not excessive irrigation, controlled nitrogen, and early detection of chinch bugs and root disease.
The calculator treats St. Augustine as a sod or plug lawn because viable commercial seed is not the normal establishment method. For sod, it multiplies your lawn area by a waste buffer and gives the number of square feet to order. For plugs, it converts spacing into approximate plug count. Closer spacing costs more, but it closes faster and leaves less open soil for weeds. Wider spacing can work in back yards, side yards, and budget installations, but it needs patience and careful weed control.
Water and fertilizer estimates use broad planning ranges, not a replacement for a soil test or local ordinance. Your exact nitrogen allowance may be limited by county fertilizer rules, especially in Florida coastal counties. Use the calculator for budgeting and material planning, then adjust the final program using soil-test results, product labels, and local law.
Use sod for the front yard or any highly visible area, and use plugs for low-traffic side/back areas if budget matters. St. Augustine plugs can fill in, but bare soil between plugs invites weeds and requires more care during the first growing season.
St. Augustine struggles in cold winter zones, compacted soil, heavy traffic, prolonged drought without irrigation, and deep shade. It also attracts chinch bugs in hot sunny areas. If your lawn has repeated dead patches in the same sunny spots, do not simply add fertilizer. Check irrigation coverage and test for chinch bugs first.
| Item | Planning Range | Use in Calculator |
|---|---|---|
| Sod | Area + 5β15% | Order sq ft |
| Plug spacing | 12β24 in | Plug count |
| Mowing | 3.5β4 in standard | Care note |
| Water | 1β1.5 in/week | Gallons/week |
| Nitrogen | 2β4 lb/1k/year | Annual N |
| Best install | Active growth | Spring/summer |
| Method | Pros | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|
| Sod | Instant coverage, fewer weeds | Highest material cost |
| 12 in plugs | Fastest plug fill-in | Many plugs needed |
| 18 in plugs | Balanced cost/time | Open soil for longer |
| 24 in plugs | Lowest upfront cost | Slowest, weed risk |
St. Augustine needs active-season care. Feeding too early, mowing too low, or watering too shallowly creates many of the problems homeowners later treat as pests or disease.
Start fertilizing only after the lawn is actively growing. In many regions this means after spring green-up and after the lawn has been mowed once. A moderate program uses controlled-release nitrogen during the growing season, with iron when color is needed but more growth is not wanted. Stop heavy nitrogen before cool weather in areas that go dormant.
Water deeply enough to wet the root zone, then wait until the lawn shows mild drought stress or the soil begins drying. Daily shallow watering keeps roots near the surface and favors disease. Newly laid sod is different: it needs frequent light watering until rooted, then gradually transitions to normal deep irrigation.
Scalping is one of the fastest ways to thin a St. Augustine lawn. Keep standard cultivars high, use sharp blades, and follow the one-third rule. A tall cut shades the soil, reduces heat stress, and helps the lawn compete with weeds.
| Month | Application | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Mar/Apr | Wait for green-up | First mow before feeding |
| May | 0.5β1 lb N/1k | Active growth |
| Jun | 0.5β1 lb N/1k | Slow-release preferred |
| Jul | Iron or light N | Watch gray leaf spot |
| Aug | Final light N | Region dependent |
| Sep+ | Stop N in dormancy zones | Follow local rules |
| Task | Target |
|---|---|
| Mowing height | 3.5β4 in standard, higher in shade |
| Remove per mow | No more than one-third of blade |
| Established water | 1β1.5 in/week total |
| New sod water | Frequent light watering, then taper |
| Best water time | Early morning |
Most St. Augustine failures look similar from a distance: brown or thinning turf. The correct treatment depends on whether the cause is insect, disease, drought, shade, scalping, or soil trouble.
Usually show in hot, sunny, dry areas. Look for irregular expanding brown patches and confirm with a flotation test before applying insecticide.
Common during humid, warm periods, especially after high nitrogen. Reduce stress, avoid night watering, and use fungicide only when pressure is severe.
Causes thinning and weak roots. Improve drainage, reduce stress, avoid over-liming, and use labeled fungicides where diagnosis supports it.
Looks like sudden brown streaks or high-spot damage after mowing. Raise the mower, sharpen blades, and level severe bumps during active growth.
Raise mowing height, reduce nitrogen, prune trees where appropriate, and choose more shade-tolerant cultivars for partial shade areas.
Brown areas matching sprinkler patterns usually need nozzle adjustment, pressure correction, or head cleaning rather than fertilizer.
Before treating, check three things: irrigation coverage, mower height, and insects at the edge of live/dead turf. Those three checks solve or clarify a large share of St. Augustine problems.
Use these examples to understand how sod, plug, fertilizer, and water estimates change by lawn size.
Choosing the right St. Augustine product matters as much as calculating the square footage. Two lawns with the same area can need different budgets if one is full sun with easy hose access and the other is shaded, sloped, or filled with tree roots.
Floratam is widely used in Florida and Gulf Coast markets because it performs well in full sun and warm weather, but it is not the best choice for every shaded yard. Palmetto is often chosen for a softer look and better partial-shade performance. Seville has a finer leaf texture and is commonly discussed for shade-tolerant St. Augustine plantings. Raleigh appears in some transition-zone markets, but cold tolerance, disease risk, and local availability vary strongly by region. The best cultivar is usually the one your local sod farm grows successfully in your county, not the one that sounds best in a national article.
When ordering sod, ask the supplier three questions before you buy: which cultivar is being delivered, how recently it was cut, and whether it was grown on sand, muck, clay, or a soil type similar to yours. Fresh-cut sod roots faster, handles transport better, and is less likely to dry on the pallet. If the sod sits in heat for too long, the center of the pallet can yellow or heat-damage before installation even begins.
For plugs, the most important choices are spacing and weed control. A 12-inch grid can fill faster and gives weeds less open soil, but it uses far more plugs. An 18-inch grid is a practical middle ground for many home lawns. A 24-inch grid is a budget option for large back yards, but it demands more patience, more mowing discipline, and more hand weeding while the grass spreads.
Many grass calculators are seed-first, but St. Augustine should be planned as a vegetative installation. A quote that only mentions seed pounds is not a true St. Augustine quote. Your real numbers are sod square feet, plug count, pallet delivery, soil preparation, irrigation setup, and the first six weeks of establishment care.
After installation, water enough to keep the sod and topsoil moist while roots knit into the ground. Then slowly transition from frequent shallow watering to deeper irrigation. Many new sod failures happen because watering stays too shallow for too long, which creates weak roots and disease-prone turf.
| Situation | Better Choice | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Full sun, Florida/Gulf Coast | Floratam or local standard | Strong warm-weather performance |
| Partial shade | Palmetto, Seville, shade-rated cultivar | Usually better shade response |
| Budget back yard | Plugs at 18β24 in spacing | Lower upfront material cost |
| Front yard curb appeal | Sod | Instant coverage and fewer weeds |
| Heavy dog traffic | Consider another grass | St. Augustine has poor traffic recovery |
| Deep shade under trees | Groundcover or mulch | No warm-season turf thrives there |
| Question | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| What cultivar is included? | Not all St. Augustine performs the same |
| Is soil prep included? | Prep often decides long-term success |
| Is delivery included? | Pallet delivery can change total price |
| How fresh is the sod? | Fresh sod roots faster |
| Will you level high spots? | Prevents mowing scalps |
| What warranty exists? | Clarifies watering responsibility |
St. Augustine advice changes by climate. A South Florida lawn that grows most of the year should not be managed exactly like a North Florida, Houston, or coastal Carolina lawn that has a clearer dormant season.
In the warmest areas, St. Augustine may remain green or semi-active for much of the year. The temptation is to keep fertilizing whenever the lawn looks pale, but color is not always a nitrogen problem. Iron deficiency, high pH, saturated soil, root disease, and winter stress can all create yellow turf. Follow county fertilizer rules, use soil testing, and consider iron when the grass needs color without extra growth.
Heat, humidity, chinch bugs, and irrigation coverage dominate care decisions. Sunny edges beside driveways and sidewalks often dry first and attract chinch bug activity. Check those edges before the entire patch turns brown. In humid coastal sites, avoid watering late in the evening, and do not overfeed nitrogen during disease-prone periods.
Cold tolerance becomes more important near the northern edge of St. Augustine adaptation. Stop late nitrogen early enough for the grass to harden before cool weather. Avoid major renovation just before dormancy. If winter injury is common, ask local extension or sod farms whether a different warm-season grass would be more reliable.
Many Florida counties and coastal communities have fertilizer blackout dates, phosphorus restrictions, or stormwater rules. The calculator gives planning amounts, but the legal application amount and date may be different where you live.
| Region | Main Risk | Management Focus |
|---|---|---|
| South Florida | Year-round pests/disease | Moderate N, iron, inspection |
| Central/North Florida | Chinch bugs and winter stress | Stop late N, monitor sunny areas |
| Gulf Coast | Humidity and drainage | Morning water, disease prevention |
| South Texas | Heat and drought | Deep watering, high mowing |
| Coastal Carolinas | Cold edge stress | Choose cultivar carefully |
Water depth sounds simple, but homeowners often underestimate volume. One inch of water over 1,000 square feet is roughly 623 gallons. That means a 5,000 square foot lawn needs about 3,115 gallons for a one-inch irrigation week. This does not mean you should water that amount every week regardless of rain; it simply shows the volume behind the one-inch rule.
Use rainfall, soil type, local restrictions, and drought stress signs to adjust. Newly installed sod needs more frequent watering at first, but established St. Augustine should transition to deeper irrigation cycles.
Practical answers for sod, plugs, mowing, watering, fertilizer, shade, chinch bugs, and repair.
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