Lawn by Season

Bermuda Grass vs Zoysia Grass in Georgia

Published: April 21, 2026 · Updated: April 26, 2026

Quick verdict

Georgia's humid Piedmont summers favor Bermuda's disease resistance over Zoysia's susceptibility to large patch. North Georgia homeowners in Zone 7a often prefer Zoysia for its better cold hardiness than Bermuda. Metro Atlanta and the fall line are true Bermuda-vs-Zoysia tossup territory.

National recommendation: For most warm-season lawns: Bermuda if you have full sun and want the fastest recovery from damage. Zoysia if you have partial shade, want lower maintenance, or prize a finer texture underfoot.

Bermuda Grass vs Zoysia Grass at a Glance

FeatureBermuda GrassZoysia Grass
USDA Zones7b–10b7a–9a
Mowing height1"–1.5"1"–2"
Mowing frequencyEvery 5–7 days in peak seasonEvery 10–14 days
Drought toleranceVery highHigh
Shade tolerancePoor, full sun requiredModerate, 4–5 hrs sun
Foot trafficVery highHigh
Maintenance levelMedium–highLow
Establishes fromSeed, sod, or plugsPlugs or sod (seed limited)
Establishment speedFast (one season)Slow (1–2 seasons)
Cost to establishLowerHigher
Fertilizer needs4–5 lb N per year2–3 lb N per year
Winter dormancy4–5 months5–6 months

Bermuda Grass — What You Need to Know

Bermuda (Cynodon dactylon) is the most-planted warm-season lawn grass in the United States. It thrives in full sun, handles extreme heat, tolerates heavy foot traffic, and recovers from damage faster than any other turfgrass. The tradeoff is maintenance, Bermuda demands weekly mowing at 1 to 1.5 inches, monthly fertilization during peak growth, and aggressive edging to prevent it from invading flower beds and sidewalks. Bermuda performs poorly in shade and goes dormant (straw-brown) for four to five months in most of its range.

Full Bermuda Grass guide →

Zoysia Grass — What You Need to Know

Zoysia (Zoysia japonica) forms a dense, carpet-like turf with finer blades than Bermuda. It tolerates moderate shade, requires less fertilizer, and produces one of the most attractive residential lawns available in the warm-season and upper transition zones. The tradeoff is establishment speed, Zoysia from plugs takes one to two growing seasons to fill in, and sod is expensive. Once established, Zoysia outperforms Bermuda on almost every maintenance metric except cold hardiness and damage recovery.

Full Zoysia Grass guide →

Bermuda Grass vs Zoysia Grass: 5 Factors That Decide

Shade

Winner: Zoysia Grass

Zoysia handles 4 to 5 hours of direct sun. Bermuda needs 7+ hours and thins fast under tree canopy.

Drought

Winner: Bermuda Grass

Both are drought-tolerant but Bermuda recovers faster from prolonged drought stress, its deep roots and aggressive stolons rebuild density within weeks of rain.

Foot traffic

Winner: Bermuda Grass

Bermuda recovers from damage via both rhizomes and stolons, making it the best traffic-tolerant lawn grass in existence. Zoysia is durable but slow to repair.

Budget

Winner: Bermuda Grass

Bermuda establishes from seed at a fraction of Zoysia's sod cost, and fills in within one growing season. Zoysia plugs require patience and consistent irrigation for 1 to 2 years.

Maintenance

Winner: Zoysia Grass

Zoysia needs roughly half the mowing frequency of Bermuda, less fertilizer, and less edging. Once established, it is one of the lowest-maintenance lawn grasses available.

Bermuda Grass and Zoysia Grass in Georgia: What the Climate Decides

Georgia's humid Piedmont summers favor Bermuda's disease resistance over Zoysia's susceptibility to large patch. North Georgia homeowners in Zone 7a often prefer Zoysia for its better cold hardiness than Bermuda. Metro Atlanta and the fall line are true Bermuda-vs-Zoysia tossup territory.

Georgia spans USDA zones 6a–9a with a humid-subtropical climate. Green-up in most of the state occurs mid-April (north), early April (Atlanta), late March (south), and dormancy runs November–March. Both Bermuda Grass and Zoysia Grass are dominant choices in parts of the state — the right one for your lawn depends on local shade, soil, water budget, and traffic.

2026 drought note: 100% of Georgia is in drought as of April 2026; the driest spring recharge since 1895. View current Georgia water restrictions →

Bermuda Grass vs Zoysia Grass: Which Climate Wins?

Bermuda's optimal range (USDA Zones 7b through 10b) covers the Deep South, Southwest, and most of California, while Zoysia's range (7a through 9a) shifts slightly cooler, a critical difference for upper transition zone homeowners. In Zone 7a (Northern Virginia, Tennessee mountains, Northern Arkansas), Zoysia's superior cold tolerance gives it a clear advantage. Bermuda survives Zone 7a but thins regularly each winter, requiring overseeding. In Zone 7b through 8a (Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis), both species perform well and the choice comes down to shade and maintenance preference. South of Zone 8a, Bermuda's faster establishment, lower establishment cost, and superior heat tolerance make it the dominant choice for most homeowners, Zoysia performs well but the price premium and slower fill-in are hard to justify when Bermuda thrives. Zone 10b (South Florida, Coastal California) is rarely Zoysia territory; the species needs winter chilling to perform optimally and tropical conditions favor more aggressive warm-season options.

In the transition zone (Zone 6b–7a), particularly Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee, both grasses grow but Bermuda dominates in full-sun lawns while Zoysia handles the shade under trees that Bermuda cannot. Bermuda's cold sensitivity means it dies back completely in Zone 6 winters, while Zoysia goes dormant but survives reliably to Zone 5.

Cost to Establish and Maintain

Establishment costs differ dramatically. Bermuda from seed costs $0.05 to $0.15 per square foot for materials, establishing in one growing season. Common Bermuda sod runs $0.30 to $0.50 per square foot installed. Hybrid Bermuda sod (Tifway 419, TifTuf) costs $0.40 to $0.80 per square foot. Zoysia sod runs $0.50 to $1.20 per square foot installed, typically 50 to 100 percent more than equivalent hybrid Bermuda. Zoysia plugs are a budget alternative at $0.15 to $0.30 each, but require 1 to 2 full growing seasons for full coverage. Over a 10-year horizon, the cost picture flips: Bermuda's higher fertilizer needs (4 to 5 pounds of N per year) and weekly mowing cost more annually than Zoysia's 2 to 3 pounds of N and bi-weekly mowing. A 5,000-square-foot Bermuda lawn typically costs $200 to $400 more per year in fertilizer, mowing, and pre-emergent than the equivalent Zoysia lawn. The break-even point on the higher Zoysia establishment cost is typically year 6 to 8 for most homeowners.

5-Year Cost Comparison (5,000 sq ft lawn): • Establishment (sod): Bermuda $800–$1,500 vs Zoysia $1,200–$2,000 • Annual fertilizer: Bermuda $80–$150 vs Zoysia $50–$100 • Annual mowing (hired): Bermuda $600–$900 vs Zoysia $500–$800 • Annual irrigation: Bermuda $200–$400 vs Zoysia $150–$300 • 5-year total: Bermuda $4,380–$7,250 vs Zoysia $3,950–$6,500 Zoysia's lower maintenance requirements offset its higher establishment cost over a 5-year horizon.

Annual Maintenance Compared

Bermuda's maintenance schedule is intensive: weekly mowing at 1 to 1.5 inches from April through October, monthly nitrogen applications, edging weekly to control aggressive spread, and pre-emergent herbicide twice yearly. Zoysia's schedule is significantly lighter: bi-weekly mowing at 1 to 2 inches, 2 to 3 nitrogen applications per year, less frequent edging because of slower spread, and similar pre-emergent timing. The single largest maintenance difference is mowing frequency, over a typical 30-week growing season, Bermuda needs 25 to 30 mowings while Zoysia needs 12 to 15. For homeowners doing their own mowing, the time savings on Zoysia (roughly 15 hours per year on a 5,000-sq-ft lawn) is significant. For lawn services, Zoysia accounts cost 30 to 40 percent less than equivalent Bermuda accounts. Both species need annual core aeration; Zoysia needs it more urgently because of its dense thatch buildup.

Side-by-Side Appearance

Side by side, Bermuda and Zoysia produce visibly different lawns. Bermuda's texture is fine to medium, most hybrid Bermuda blades are 1 to 2 mm wide. Zoysia's texture varies by cultivar: Emerald Zoysia matches the finest hybrid Bermuda for blade fineness, while common Meyer Zoysia is closer to medium-blade Bermuda. Zoysia's natural color tends slightly darker green with a richer, more uniform appearance. Bermuda's color is bright green during peak growth but lightens as it cycles through dormancy preparation in fall. Both species produce dense turf when properly maintained, but Zoysia's density is more carpet-like and uniform, while Bermuda's density depends on aggressive lateral spread that creates subtle directional patterns visible at low mowing heights. For a manicured residential look, Zoysia generally edges out Bermuda; for a sports-field or golf-course aesthetic, Bermuda mowed at 0.75 inches is unmatched.

How to Switch Between Bermuda Grass and Zoysia Grass

Switching from Bermuda to Zoysia takes 2 to 3 growing seasons because Bermuda's aggressive rhizomes and stolons re-establish from any surviving plant material. Step 1 (year 1, May-June): Apply glyphosate at 2x label rate to the entire lawn. Wait 4 weeks for any regrowth, then apply a second glyphosate treatment. Step 2 (year 1, late summer): Once no green tissue remains, install Zoysia sod or plugs. Step 3 (year 1-2): Aggressive spot-treat any escaping Bermuda runners with fluazifop or selective Bermuda herbicide labeled for Zoysia (sethoxydim is sometimes used despite being slightly off-label for Zoysia). Expect to spend 2 to 3 years monitoring and treating Bermuda escapes. The reverse switch (Zoysia to Bermuda) is faster (one season) because Zoysia is less aggressive at re-establishment. Glyphosate, wait 30 days, seed Bermuda, and the new Bermuda will dominate any surviving Zoysia within 12 months in full sun.

Choose Bermuda Grass if…

  • Full-sun yard with heavy foot traffic from kids, dogs, or sports
  • Zones 8–10 with mild winters and low cold-tolerance concerns
  • Low-budget establishment (seed is available and fast)
  • You want a sports-field or golf-course look with short mowing
  • Lawn damage recovery speed matters more than maintenance hours

Choose Zoysia Grass if…

  • Partial shade from mature trees (4 to 5 hours of direct sun)
  • Zone 7a or 7b where Bermuda marginally overwinters
  • Low-maintenance preference, you want fewer mowing and fertilizer applications
  • You prize a soft, carpet-like feel underfoot
  • Upper transition zone where winter cold damages Bermuda

Frequently Asked Questions

Can Bermuda and Zoysia grow together?

Bermuda will eventually out-compete Zoysia in full sun, and Zoysia will out-compete Bermuda in partial shade. Mixed-species lawns exist but tend toward one species or the other over 3 to 5 years depending on conditions.

Which spreads faster, Bermuda or Zoysia?

Bermuda spreads three to five times faster than Zoysia. Bermuda can fill a 10-square-foot bare patch in 6 to 8 weeks during peak growth; Zoysia takes a full growing season or longer for the same area.

Which is more drought-tolerant?

Both are highly drought-tolerant, but Bermuda has the edge in extended drought due to its deeper root system and faster recovery once rain returns. Zoysia holds color longer in moderate drought before going dormant.

Can I switch from Bermuda to Zoysia?

Yes, but it is a 2 to 3 year project. Kill the Bermuda completely with glyphosate in two applications 4 weeks apart, wait for any regrowth, kill again, then install Zoysia sod or plugs. Any surviving Bermuda will quickly re-dominate.

Which is more expensive to establish?

Zoysia sod costs roughly 2 to 3 times what Bermuda sod costs, and Zoysia plugs require 1 to 2 years of care to fill in. Bermuda seed is the cheapest way to establish a warm-season lawn, often under $0.10 per square foot including soil prep.

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