Lawn by Season

Ohio Lawn Care Calendar — 2026

Published: April 21, 2026

USDA Zones 5a–6b · humid-continental · cool-season, season

Ohio lawn care follows a specific seasonal rhythm driven by Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, Perennial Ryegrass, USDA zones 5a–6b, and a humid-continental climate. This calendar breaks down the right task for every month — fertilizing, aerating, overseeding, pre-emergent timing, mowing, and winter prep — so you never apply the wrong product at the wrong time. Last-frost dates: May 7 (north), April 25 (central), April 15 (south). First-frost dates: October 15 (north), October 25 (central), November 5 (south). Use the quick table below to jump to the current month.

Quick Reference — Year at a Glance

MonthKey TaskMowingFertilizer
JanuaryDormant — no lawn workNoneNo
FebruaryPlan; service equipmentNoneNo
MarchSpring clean-up; soil testNone–first mowNo — wait
AprilPre-emergent at forsythia bloomBegin 2.5"–3"No — wait for growth
MayNowFirst fertilizer; start mowingWeekly 3"Yes — first fertilizer
JuneRaise mower height; deep-waterWeekly 3"–3.5"Light — or skip
JulyMow high; let it go dormant if dryWeekly at 3.5"–4"No — summer stress
AugustPlan aeration/overseed; buy seedWeekly 3.5"–4"No — summer stress
SeptemberAerate and overseed — THE monthWeekly 3"Yes — most important app
OctoberWinterizer fertilizerEvery 10–14 days 2.5"Winterizer
NovemberLeaf removal; final mowFinal mow 2"Optional late-fall
DecemberDormant — no lawn workNoneNo

Month-by-Month Lawn Care in Ohio

January in Ohio

Status: Dormant

Primary task: Dormant — no lawn work

January is a full-dormancy month for Ohio lawns. Cool-season grasses like kentucky-bluegrass, tall-fescue, perennial-ryegrass have stopped active growth and are protected by snow cover or mulched leaves. Avoid foot traffic on frozen or frosted grass — the blades are brittle and will leave footprints that stay visible into spring.

February in Ohio

Status: Dormant

Primary task: Plan; service equipment

February remains a planning month in Ohio. Service your mower (sharpen blades, change oil, replace spark plug), check irrigation valves, and order seed if you plan to overseed this year. The lawn itself needs no attention.

March in Ohio

Status: Greening up

Primary task: Spring clean-up; soil test

March is when the Ohio lawn-care calendar truly begins. Pre-emergent herbicide should be applied during the window of mid-April when forsythia blooms and soil reaches 50°F. Missing this window is the single most expensive mistake homeowners make — the crabgrass, goosegrass, and annual bluegrass seed bank in Ohio soils will germinate the moment soil temperatures cross 55°F for three consecutive days, and once those weeds are up you cannot stop them with pre-emergent this season.

Spring timing in Ohio can vary by 3 to 6 weeks from the north of the state to the south — use your local soil temperature reading rather than a calendar date to trigger pre-emergent and first fertilizer applications.

April in Ohio

Status: Actively growing

Primary task: Pre-emergent at forsythia bloom

April is the month cool-season lawns in Ohio fully wake up. Green-up is underway and the grass is resuming active growth. Apply pre-emergent herbicide at forsythia bloom if you did not apply in March, and start mowing once the grass reaches 3 inches. Do not fertilize yet — wait for consistent growth in May. Last-frost dates across the state: May 7 (north), April 25 (central), April 15 (south).

Spring timing in Ohio can vary by 3 to 6 weeks from the north of the state to the south — use your local soil temperature reading rather than a calendar date to trigger pre-emergent and first fertilizer applications.

May in Ohio

This MonthStatus: Peak growth

Primary task: First fertilizer; start mowing

May is the first fertilizer month for Ohio cool-season lawns. May — not March or April; wait for consistent growth is the standard recommendation — and critically, not before. Fertilizing in March or April when the grass has not yet resumed consistent growth wastes fertilizer and feeds weeds. Begin weekly mowing at 3 inches, raising the deck to 3.5 inches by month-end.

Ohio watering guidance: irrigate deeply and infrequently (1 to 1.5 inches per week total, including rainfall) rather than lightly and daily. Deep watering drives roots down; shallow watering keeps them at the surface where they dry out in the first heat wave.

June in Ohio

Status: Peak growth

Primary task: Raise mower height; deep-water

June is peak growing season in Ohio. Lawns are at maximum density and should be mowed weekly — or every 5 to 7 days for fast-growing Bermuda. Water deeply once or twice per week to encourage deep roots rather than shallow daily sprinklings. Aim for 1 to 1.5 inches of water total per week, including rainfall. If you see ruts from the mower, the soil is too wet to be mowing on.

Ohio watering guidance: irrigate deeply and infrequently (1 to 1.5 inches per week total, including rainfall) rather than lightly and daily. Deep watering drives roots down; shallow watering keeps them at the surface where they dry out in the first heat wave.

July in Ohio

Status: Summer semi-dormancy

Primary task: Mow high; let it go dormant if dry

July is a survival month for cool-season lawns in Ohio. kentucky-bluegrass and related cool-season grasses naturally slow or enter summer semi-dormancy when daytime temperatures stay above 85°F. Raise the mower to 4 inches, stop fertilizing until fall, and accept some browning. Dormant grass is not dead — it will recover in September. Do not overseed or aerate in July.

August in Ohio

Status: Summer semi-dormancy

Primary task: Plan aeration/overseed; buy seed

August is planning month for Ohio cool-season lawns. Order seed for September overseeding, plan aeration with a core aerator rental, and scout the lawn for bare spots that need re-establishment. The lawn itself is still in summer survival mode and needs no fertilizer. In Ohio, the overseeding window opens September.

September in Ohio

Status: Fall peak growth

Primary task: Aerate and overseed — THE month

September is the single most important lawn-care month of the year for Ohio cool-season lawns. Aerate and overseed on the same day, September. Apply the fall starter fertilizer at overseeding. Fall roots develop more rhizomes and tillers than any other season — lawns that are fall-overseeded outperform spring-overseeded lawns every year for density, disease resistance, and winter survival.

Sharpen your mower blade before the final mows. A dull blade shreds rather than cuts, leaving fringed tips that brown out and give disease a foothold over winter. Clean cuts heal quickly even in cooling weather.

October in Ohio

Status: Slowing

Primary task: Winterizer fertilizer

October is winterizer month across Ohio. Apply the winterizer fertilizer in October–November — a fertilizer with higher potassium than nitrogen — to build cold tolerance in the grass crown. Cool-season lawns are growing hard in October; mow weekly and continue removing leaves as they fall. Heavy leaf litter on wet grass will smother the lawn.

If you have not done a soil test in three years, October is a good month to pull samples and submit them to your state Extension Service. Results come back in 2 to 3 weeks and will tell you exactly what to apply next spring.

November in Ohio

Status: Pre-dormancy

Primary task: Leaf removal; final mow

November is the end of the active lawn-care season in Ohio. Do your final mow at 2 inches — not shorter, which exposes crowns to winter damage, and not taller, which mats down under snow and encourages snow mould.

December in Ohio

Status: Dormant

Primary task: Dormant — no lawn work

December is a fully dormant month in Ohio. No mowing, no fertilizing, no watering. Clean and store your mower for winter. Dormant grass is easily damaged by foot traffic on frozen mornings — keep off the lawn when frost is visible on the blades.

Lawn Care Calendar by Grass Type in Ohio

Different grass species on the same lawn follow different calendars. Match the row below to whatever you actually have growing.

GrassGreen-UpMow HeightFertilizeAerateOverseed
Kentucky BluegrassMarch–April2.5"–3.5"May, September, OctoberSeptember (primary window); April as a secondary optionSeptember
Tall FescueMarch–April3"–4"May, September, OctoberSeptember (primary window); April as a secondary optionSeptember
Perennial RyegrassMarch–April2.5"–3.5"May, SeptemberSeptember (primary window); April as a secondary optionSeptember

Critical Lawn Care Windows in Ohio

Pre-emergent herbicide

mid-April when forsythia blooms and soil reaches 50°F. Miss this window and you will fight crabgrass all summer.

First fertilizer application

May — not March or April; wait for consistent growth.

Aeration window

September (primary window); April as a secondary option. Aerating outside this window stresses the lawn without producing a density benefit.

Overseeding window

September.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I fertilize my lawn in Ohio?

In Ohio, first fertilize May — not March or April; wait for consistent growth. Apply winterizer in October–November. The most important fertilizer application of the year for cool-season lawns is in September — the fall starter applied with overseeding.

When is the best time to aerate in Ohio?

Aerate in September (primary window); April as a secondary option. Fall aeration (September) combined with overseeding is the standard program — this is the single most impactful lawn-care task of the year for cool-season lawns.

When should I overseed in Ohio?

September. September is the only window in which cool-season lawns reliably establish new seed before winter.

When do I apply pre-emergent herbicide in Ohio?

Apply pre-emergent herbicide mid-April when forsythia blooms and soil reaches 50°F. The reliable biological trigger across most of Ohio is forsythia bloom — when the first forsythia bushes in your neighborhood are in full yellow bloom, your soil has reached the 50–55°F threshold that triggers weed germination.

What month should I stop mowing in Ohio?

Cool-season lawns in Ohio continue mowing until the grass stops growing — usually late October or early November. Do the final mow at 2 inches. Not shorter (exposes crowns to winter damage) and not taller (mats down under snow).

Related Ohio Lawn Care Guides

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