21 Common Lawn Care Mistakes
Maintaining a lush, healthy lawn requires more than just regular mowing and watering. This article highlights common lawn care mistakes that even seasoned gardeners might overlook. Drawing from the expertise of lawn care professionals, these insights will help you avoid pitfalls and achieve a vibrant, thriving yard.
- Avoid Mowing Wet Grass
- Maintain Proper Grass Height
- Prevent Harmful Tree Topping
- Use Professional Equipment for Brush Clearing
- Conduct Soil Analysis Before Fertilizing
- Test Well Water for Lawn Irrigation
- Rotate Dog Play Areas to Prevent Damage
- Water Deeply and Less Frequently
- Schedule Watering for Early Morning Hours
- Mow Regularly with Sharp Blades
- Address Weeds Early and Consistently
- Warm Up Before Operating Lawn Equipment
- Follow Fertilizer Instructions Carefully
- Trim Grass Edges at Proper Height
- Avoid Mixing Incompatible Lawn Chemicals
- Aerate Compacted Soil for Better Growth
- Choose Region-Appropriate Grass Types
- Water in Morning to Prevent Fungal Growth
- Use Protective Gear When Applying Fertilizer
- Prioritize Soil Health for Vibrant Lawns
- Optimize Crew Scheduling for Efficiency
Avoid Mowing Wet Grass
As a Lawn Care Expert at a company that has been growing and supplying our own turf for over two decades, one common mistake I see is people trying to mow wet grass.
Wet grass is heavier and denser than dry grass, making it more likely to clump together when mowed. This can damage your mower by clogging its deck and blades. It can also negatively affect the engine or motor by putting extra strain on it, resulting in overheating and machine failure. If this happens, it is likely that a new mower will need to be purchased.
Cutting wet grass also often produces uneven results. The mower may struggle to get a good grip on the wet grass, potentially tearing it instead of giving it a clean cut. This can cause your turf to look untidy and make it more susceptible to multiple fungal infections and diseases, including red thread and fusarium patch. Red thread is a pink fungus that forms on the grass blades, making them look like red needles. If not treated, it will damage the grass, making it more susceptible to other diseases in the future. Fusarium patch, on the other hand, first appears as small, yellow, circular patches that turn brown later. These patches can vary in size and often join together, covering a large part of your lawn. Over time, it can kill the affected areas and leave your lawn with bare spots.
Instead, always make sure that the grass is fully dry before mowing it to the point where you can walk through the lawn without getting your shoes wet.
Angelika Zaber
Lawn Care Specialist & Gardening Expert, Online Turf
Maintain Proper Grass Height
One of the most common mistakes I see with lawn care is mowing the grass too short. Many people think that cutting their lawn very short means they won’t have to mow as often, but in reality, it stresses the turf and invites weeds to take over. Short grass blades can’t photosynthesize effectively, and they leave the soil exposed to heat and moisture loss.
For example, I once worked with a homeowner whose lawn had become patchy and overrun with crabgrass because they were cutting it down to an inch every weekend. Once we adjusted their mower height to keep the grass around three inches tall, the lawn bounced back within a season—thicker, healthier, and with far fewer weeds.
The rule of thumb I always share is: never cut more than one-third of the blade at a time.
Jackie Sons
Owner, Native Wildflowers Nursery
Prevent Harmful Tree Topping
As a co-founder of Rent A Monkey Tree Service with years in the field, the biggest lawn care mistake I see is homeowners over-pruning their trees, especially the “topping” approach where they cut off massive portions of the canopy. I’ve seen countless properties where DIY tree trimming turned healthy trees into weakened, unstable hazards.
Just last month, we had a client in Salt Lake City who topped three mature maples himself to “make them smaller.” Within weeks, the trees started rapid, weak regrowth that made them more dangerous than before. The original healthy structure was destroyed, and now those trees are prone to breakage during our harsh Utah winters.
The fix is simple: never remove more than 25% of a tree’s canopy at once, and always cut just outside the branch collar for proper healing. Most people think bigger cuts mean faster results, but trees don’t work that way – they need their leaf structure to stay healthy and strong.
From my Marine background and years as a line clearance arborist, I learned that proper technique always beats brute force. Clean, selective cuts during the dormant season will give you healthier trees that actually improve your property value instead of becoming expensive problems.
Gregg Nelson
Owner, Rent A Monkey Tree Service
Use Professional Equipment for Brush Clearing
The biggest mistake I see property owners making is trying to tackle overgrown brush and invasive vegetation themselves with basic equipment like chainsaws and brush hogs. They think they’re saving money, but they’re actually creating bigger problems.
I had a client near Plymouth who spent two summers trying to clear a 5-acre overgrown blueberry field with a rented brush hog. By the time he called us, the invasive species had spread even more, and the soil was compacted from multiple passes with inadequate equipment. What should have been a straightforward project became a much more expensive restoration job.
The root issue is that most people don’t understand that different vegetation requires different approaches. Dense brush needs forestry mulching equipment that can actually grind everything into beneficial mulch, not just chop it up and leave debris everywhere. When you use the wrong equipment, you’re essentially pruning the problem vegetation and encouraging it to grow back stronger.
My advice: if you’ve got more than an acre of serious overgrowth, or if you’re dealing with invasive species, call professionals first to get a realistic assessment. We often save clients money by doing it right the first time, plus our mulching process actually improves the soil instead of damaging it.
Leon Miller
Owner, BrushTamer
Conduct Soil Analysis Before Fertilizing
One of the most common mistakes I see, especially from lawn enthusiasts who genuinely care about their turf, is skipping a soil analysis before the growing season. It’s a bit like taking medication without ever seeing a doctor first: you’re hoping for the best, but you’re flying blind.
Time and time again, I’ve seen people head to the store, grab a bag of the most popular fertilizer, and spread it generously, only to be disappointed when the results aren’t what they expected. Lawns rarely need the exact same nutrient mix, and homeowners will often make misinformed assumptions. I’ve reviewed soil reports where nitrogen levels were already high, but magnesium and potassium were critically low. In that case, the lawn didn’t need more nitrogen; it needed something targeted, like Epsom salts. Without that data, the owner spent months feeding the wrong thing and wondering why the grass still looked tired.
Through conversations with Grassmaster Gus users, we see this pattern constantly: people investing time and money into their lawns without the right starting information. It’s not to say that they don’t know they should do soil analysis, just that it’s perceived as an added step towards fixing the problem that they don’t feel motivated to do. If only they knew truly how valuable the step was. That’s why we’re developing a feature to let users upload their soil analysis results directly into the app, so it can interpret the data and create a tailored nutrient plan. The goal is to turn lawn care from guesswork into a precise, data-driven process that’s simple for anyone to follow.
The best way to avoid the mistake is simple in my mind: Get a soil test before the season starts, understand the results, and let that guide your season. That one step can be the difference between a lawn that struggles year after year and one that thrives and is the envy of your neighbors.
Angus McDonald
Founder, Grassmaster Gus
Test Well Water for Lawn Irrigation
As someone who has been in the groundwater business for generations, I have observed homeowners making a significant irrigation mistake: overwatering their lawns without understanding their actual soil and water conditions. They believe that more water equates to greener grass, but it often creates the opposite problem.
Last spring, a customer called us because their lawn was yellowing and patchy despite running sprinklers daily. When we tested their well water, we discovered high mineral content that was actually damaging their grass when overused. The excess watering was concentrating salts in the soil and creating root rot conditions.
We installed a water conditioning system and helped them reduce their irrigation schedule to every other day. Within six weeks, their lawn was healthier than it had been in years, and their water bills decreased significantly. The key was quality over quantity – treating the water first, then using less of it more strategically.
Most people focus on timing and frequency but ignore what’s actually in their water. If you’re on well water especially, get it tested before you blame your lawn care routine.
Chelsey Christensen
Director of Operations, Eaton Well Drilling and Pump Service
Rotate Dog Play Areas to Prevent Damage
Last month, I had a client whose golden retriever had carved out a beige racetrack along the fence line. I showed her how to scatter two daily play sessions and rotate the toy spots so that now the dog’s energy goes there instead of into the sod. We also set the sprinkler timer for ten minutes after each potty break to dilute the urine. As a result, her lawn is returning to green quicker than she expected—just two inexpensive tweaks, and the dog is still happy.
Mark Spivak
Founder, Comprehensive Pet Therapy (CPT)
Water Deeply and Less Frequently
The most common mistake I see is overwatering. Homeowners often think more water equals healthier grass, but in reality, it creates shallow roots, fungus, and weak turf. I’ve seen clients spend thousands on irrigation systems only to end up with patchy, disease-prone lawns. In one case, a homeowner in Orange County was watering daily, yet their lawn looked worse than a neighbor who watered deeply just twice a week. Once we adjusted their schedule to less frequent but longer sessions, the transformation was immediate: stronger roots, greener blades, and fewer weeds.
The real fix isn’t expensive fertilizers or constant care; it’s restraint. Treating lawns more like vineyards, stressing them slightly so roots dig deeper, produces resilience and beauty. Most people think neglect kills a lawn, but in my experience, it’s overindulgence that does the most damage.
Erwin Gutenkunst
President and Owner, Neolithic Materials
Schedule Watering for Early Morning Hours
Managing multiple properties through my renovation group taught me that the biggest landscaping mistake isn’t about cutting—it’s about watering timing. I’ve seen countless apartment complexes waste thousands on water bills while killing their grass by watering during peak sun hours.
Last year at one of our Houston complexes, the property manager was running sprinklers at 2 PM daily because “that’s when it looked driest.” The water was evaporating before reaching the roots, creating brown patches everywhere while their utility bill hit $800/month just for irrigation.
We switched them to early morning watering (5-7 AM) and cut their water usage by 40%. The grass stayed greener through Texas heat, and they saved over $3,200 annually. The key is watering when grass can actually absorb it instead of feeding the sun.
Most people see dry grass and immediately blast it with water during the hottest part of the day. You’re literally burning your lawn and your wallet at the same time.
Moe Shariff
Business Owner, American S.E.A.L Patrol Division LLC
Mow Regularly with Sharp Blades
The moment we standardized on sharp, weekly mowing instead of letting grass become a jungle and then scalping it, the ‘where did the lawn go?’ calls basically vanished from our Monday CRM. I had this duplex off Livingston where the DIY owner would wait three weeks, then give it a buzz-cut so low we could see dirt—two seasons of that killed half the yard and ate a $900 reseed budget. My field manager posted a simple picture on the utility room door: a calendar with three dog-toy magnets marked ‘MOW DAY’, plus the gas station that sharpens blades for six bucks; problem solved and neighbors stopped calling with complaints.
Brooks Humphreys
Founder, 614 HomeBuyers
Address Weeds Early and Consistently
When I approach a house in Citrus Heights with a contract in hand, the first thing I notice is the army of dandelions waging war across the yard. I once measured a lawn that had three-foot weed clumps from curb to porch–buyers reduced their offer by $15,000 because the front view on Zillow looked abandoned. My go-to solution: hit the weeds with spot-spray every Saturday while the kids ride bikes, and mow the grass high so the healthy grass shades out the weed seedlings; it costs about thirty dollars and two hours a month. Address the weed problem early, or you’ll end up paying professionals and watching your closing date slip away.
Ahmad Altahan
Founder, Sell My House Fast Sacramento – Ummah Homes
Warm Up Before Operating Lawn Equipment
The biggest mistake I spot every spring is patients grabbing a lawn mower by the handle and yanking the starter cord with a straight back, no warm-up, and boots designed for fashion rather than traction. Last May, a 62-year-old hobby gardener strained his lumbar disc doing exactly that; after three physical therapy sessions, he now swears by simple knee bends first, stretching the hamstrings on the porch rail, and using his legs to roll the mower forward like a wheelbarrow instead of lifting with the spine. Those three quick habits reduced his pain level from a stabbing eight down to a dull one, allowing him to garden again without my daily ibuprofen warnings. My rule now: Treat the mower preparation like a workout warm-up, because your back will thank you just as much as your lawn will.
Lori Leonard
Chief Medical Officer, Mindset & Body Reset
Follow Fertilizer Instructions Carefully
Last spring, we fixed a flip in Clintonville where the first-time owner decided extra fertilizer would give him golf-course stripes overnight. Two weeks later, the Kentucky bluegrass was yellow and crunchy like shredded wheat, so we had to rake out dead thatch, spread a light compost top-dressing, and lay new seed on half the yard—adding $1,250 and two weeks to the rehab schedule. Measure your fertilizer like you measure paint: read the bag, divide the lawn into 1,000-sq-ft chunks, and never pour straight from the spreader hopper.
Barry L Smith
Founder and CEO, Homesmith
Trim Grass Edges at Proper Height
I noticed our Zinfandel Grille patio looked parched every July until we instructed the landscaping crew to stop scalping the edging strips with the weed-whacker. Those small dirt rings made the entire seating area feel neglected. After setting the trimmer guard to leave two fingers of blade height and watering immediately after the lunch rush, the brown halo disappeared, and guests started requesting tables near the lawn instead of under the umbrellas. It took one overcast Saturday with the crew and a six-pack of sodas; now that curb-strip feels as welcoming as the front door.
Allen Kou
Owner and Operator, Zinfandel Grille
Avoid Mixing Incompatible Lawn Chemicals
Last spring, my neighbor poured a nitrogen fertilizer and a weed-and-feed in the same spreader because “it saves a trip.” Ten minutes later, his lawn was smoking like dry ice—turns out the iron in the weed killer reacts with the ammonium sulfate and releases acid. Now we all mark spray bottles with colored tape, and I send folks a simple one-page compatibility chart so no one repeats his crispy-yard moment.
David Cornado
Partner, French Teachers Association of Hong Kong
Aerate Compacted Soil for Better Growth
I once flipped a South Linden duplex that sat on clay so hard the water just puddled and killed the grass around the ‘For Sale’ sign. My crew broke it up with a pitchfork the first afternoon and spread a $7 bag of topsoil mixed with seed. Two rainy weeks later, buyers were driving by just to see the thick green stripe that made the house pop. If the soil won’t drink, poke holes before you blame the seed.
Sean Grabow
Owner, Central City Solutions
Choose Region-Appropriate Grass Types
There are so many people who pick grass types just because it looks pretty in photos or works well in another state. That’s a mistake I made too. I once planted a fine-textured cool-season grass in a warm climate because I thought that it would stay lush and soft all throughout the year. It looked so good at first but then it turned brown because of the heat and no amount of watering could save it. After a single season, it was replaced. I ended up replacing it after just one season.
The grass has to suit the weather in your region. So if you plant the wrong type, it will very likely struggle despite all the attention you give it. I have since started asking what grows well in the area, and I have noticed a huge impact on how healthy and less labor-intensive the lawn is. It just becomes easier when the grass is matched to the region. Less watering, fewer chemicals and less time in the garden fixing problems that never needed to happen in the first place.
Meera Watts
Founder and CEO, Siddhi Yoga
Water in Morning to Prevent Fungal Growth
I notice how property owners water their lawns late in the evening, believing that doing so helps save moisture. However, leaving grass wet overnight tends to cause fungal growth, and this is especially true in a damp area such as the Lake District. One of our Ambleside properties continued to have brown spots despite our best efforts to water the lawn frequently. When I went there, I could see that there were sprinklers set to run at 9:30 p.m. every night. It was okay in spring, but it deteriorated very quickly in the middle of summer.
We reset the time to begin at around 6 a.m. twice a week and to last long enough to ensure deep saturation. This slight change gave the blades time to dry during the day, without losing the moisture they still required. In three weeks, the brown spots disappeared, and the lawn grew in thicker and stronger. It also withstood the busy turnover days better, when the suitcases and people caused additional strain.
Marta Pawlik
Creative Director, Interior Designer, Co-Founder & Director, Laik
Use Protective Gear When Applying Fertilizer
One Saturday morning, I caught my own installer’s helper flinging triple-strength fertilizer around my front yard wearing nothing but sneakers, and by lunch, his ankles looked like spotted tomatoes. Now I duct-tape gloves and safety glasses to every spreader box–my guys laugh, but I haven’t sent anyone to urgent care since.
Pablo Cavalcante
Owner, Legacy Countertops
Prioritize Soil Health for Vibrant Lawns
I often notice that people neglect soil health, which is crucial for a vibrant lawn. Many homeowners focus solely on surface care, like mowing and watering, without considering the underlying soil quality. Poor soil can lead to nutrient deficiencies, resulting in discolored or sparse grass. Without proper aeration and organic matter, the soil can become compacted, restricting root growth and water absorption.
To counter this issue, I advocate for regular soil testing to understand nutrient levels and pH balance. Based on the results, homeowners can amend their soil with organic compost or targeted fertilizers to restore vitality. They should practice aeration, especially during peak growth seasons, to help alleviate compaction and allow air, water, and nutrients to penetrate deeper.
Josh Qian
COO and Co-Founder, LINQ Kitchen formerly BestOnlineCabinets
Optimize Crew Scheduling for Efficiency
The most significant lawn care mistake I observe is businesses manually scheduling crews without considering drive time between jobs. I worked with a landscaper during ServiceBuilder’s beta who was losing 2-3 hours daily due to unnecessary travel between appointments.
His crew would complete a morning job on the north side of town, then drive 45 minutes south for the next appointment, only to head back north again. We mapped out his actual routes and discovered he was wasting over $200 weekly just in fuel and lost productivity.
The solution was straightforward: geographic clustering. We redesigned his scheduling system to group jobs by area and time of day. His fuel costs decreased by 40% in the first month, and his crew could handle two additional jobs per day without working longer hours.
Most service businesses think scheduling is merely about filling calendar slots, but it’s really about optimizing movement. Even a basic routing system is superior to manually juggling appointments in spreadsheets.
Andrew Leger
Founder & CEO, Service Builder