Lawn by Season

Best Grass Types for Savannah, GA

USDA Zone 9a

Recommended for Zone 9a

Best Grass for Savannah's Climate

USDA Zone
9a
Summer Highs
95–100°F (35–38°C)
Annual Rainfall
50 inches
Dominant Grass
Bermuda grass

Savannah sits in USDA Hardiness Zone 9a, which means winter lows typically run between 20°F (-7°C) and 25°F (-4°C). Summer highs in Savannah usually peak in the 95–100°F (35–38°C) range, and the surrounding state of Georgia averages roughly 50 inches of rainfall a year. Frost is rare enough that lawns stay green through winter with light maintenance. Heat is the limiting factor — Bermuda, Zoysia, and St. Augustine are all heat-adapted and dominate the market.

The dominant lawn grass in and around Savannah is Bermuda grass. Bermuda grass is the dominant lawn grass across the Deep South — heat-tolerant, drought-resistant once established, and aggressive enough to crowd out weeds. If you're starting a new lawn or overseeding an existing one in Savannah, this is the grass to compare every alternative against — it sets the local benchmark for cost, drought response, and the look most neighbors are running.

Bermuda grass performs in Savannah the way it does because of the specific summer-stress profile here: zone 9a delivers roughly 100+ days of 90°F+ heat each year, summer highs in the 95–100°F (35–38°C) band, and the 50 inches of annual rainfall the state typically receives. Warm-season grasses like Bermuda grass are evolved for exactly this combination — they go dormant only in the brief winter cool-down and resume active growth as soon as soil hits 18°C in spring. Expect to mow every 5–7 days during peak season once the lawn is fully greened up.

The second-most-common lawn grass in Savannah is Zoysia Grass. Dense, carpet-like warm-season grass with good shade tolerance. Slower to establish but extremely durable once mature. Many homeowners use Zoysia Grass as a blend partner with Bermuda grass or as a primary grass on shaded portions of the yard. Regional sod farms typically carry both, and overseeding mixes blended for Georgia usually combine the two.

The growing season in zone 9a is essentially year-round, with last spring frost around January 30 and first fall frost around December 15. That window dictates everything from when to seed to when to apply pre-emergent. See our full grass type comparison, the Bermuda grass care guide, or the Georgia lawn care calendar for the seasonal details.

When to Aerate and Overseed in Savannah

Last Spring Frost
January 30
First fall frost: December 15
Best Overseed Window
October–November
Spring fertilizer: February

In Savannah, the ideal aeration window depends on which grass you have. Cool-season lawns (Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, Fine Fescue) aerate best in early fall, roughly 4–6 weeks before December 15 so the roots have time to recover before dormancy. Warm-season lawns (Bermuda, Zoysia, St. Augustine) aerate best in late spring or early summer, after the lawn has fully greened up — in zone 9a, that's usually after January 30.

Specific month windows for Savannah: cool-season grasses aerate October to mid-November; warm-season grasses aerate May through July. Soil should be moist but not wet — water the lawn the day before aeration so cores pull cleanly. Aim for soil temperature in the 13–24°C (55–75°F) range. Pull cores 5–7 cm (2–3 inches) deep with a hollow-tine aerator; spike aeration is mostly cosmetic and doesn't deliver the compaction relief most Savannah lawns need.

Overseeding in Savannah works best within the October–November window. That timing gives new seed soil temperatures warm enough to germinate but cool enough to avoid summer heat stress, and enough remaining growing season before December 15 for roots to anchor. The target soil temperature for overseeding is 10–18°C (50–65°F) at 5 cm depth — measure with a soil thermometer or use the lawn-mowing-calendar tool for Georgia. Skip overseeding outside this window — too early and seedlings cook; too late and they die back before establishing.

DIY vs. professional service: a homeowner with a rented core aerator can aerate a quarter-acre Savannah lawn in 2–3 hours for $60–$90 in rental costs plus seed and fertilizer if overseeding the same day. Professional aeration in Georgia typically runs $80–$200 for the same lawn, with overseeding adding another $100–$300 depending on seed quality and lawn size. Pros bring sharper tines, run a heavier machine that pulls deeper cores, and usually fold in a starter-fertilizer pass — worth the premium on compacted clay soils or larger lots.

For step-by-step timing, see when to aerate your lawn, the Georgia-specific aeration cost guide, and the overseeding cost guide. Local pricing and contractor ranges for both services are included.

Not Typically Recommended for Zone 9a

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