Pre-Emergent Herbicide Guide for Springfield, MA
Pre-Emergent Schedule for Springfield
Key Lawn Care Dates for Springfield
| Date | When | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Last frost date | April 7 | Soil safe for warm-season planting after this date |
| Mowing season | Early April through late october (198 growing days) | Cool-season grasses most active spring and fall |
| First mow | Around April 28 | When grass reaches 3 inches |
| Pre-emergent herbicide | Feb 24 – Mar 24 | Before soil hits 55°F |
| Spring fertilizer | April 7–28 | After soil hits 55°F–65°F |
| Turn on sprinklers | Around April 21 | After last hard freeze risk passes |
The pre-emergent window in Springfield opens around Late February and closes around Late March — the period when soil at 2-inch depth is in the 50–55°F range that triggers crabgrass germination.
In Springfield, both crabgrass and annual bluegrass (Poa annua) germinate in this window — pre-emergent stops both.
Why Timing Is Everything in Springfield
Pre-emergent forms a chemical barrier in the top inch of soil that prevents weed seeds from completing germination — it does not kill existing weeds and does not prevent seeds from sprouting. It kills the seedling as the root tip contacts the treated soil layer.
This barrier degrades over 8–12 weeks, which is why timing matters in two directions: too early and the protection breaks down before peak weed pressure; too late and crabgrass seeds are already germinating below the surface.
In Springfield (Zone 5b), the soil warms slowly after winter — the 50°F threshold typically arrives around Late February, giving you a 3-week window before germination pressure peaks.
What Pre-Emergent Stops in Springfield
In Springfield, the spring pre-emergent targets crabgrass and goosegrass that germinate in late spring. A second fall application (September) targets annual bluegrass (Poa annua) which germinates as soil cools to 70°F.
Spring targets: Crabgrass (Digitaria spp.), Goosegrass (Eleusine indica), Spurge (Euphorbia spp.), Yellow foxtail (Setaria pumila). Fall targets: Annual bluegrass (Poa annua), Henbit (Lamium amplexicaule), Chickweed (Stellaria media).
Pre-emergent does NOT control perennial weeds (nutsedge, dallisgrass) or any weed that has already emerged.
Choosing a Pre-Emergent Product for Springfield
Three active ingredients cover the vast majority of pre-emergent products available in the US. Your choice depends on whether your timing is ideal, slightly late, or whether you are splitting into two applications.
Prodiamine (Barricade)
Best for on-time applications. Longest residual (4–5 months), best season-long control from a single application. Safe on all established turf types including St. Augustine. Not for use on newly seeded areas. Common products: Scotts Halts, Fertilome Weed-Out.
Dithiopyr (Dimension)
Best for slightly late applications. Unique early post-emergent activity — controls crabgrass at 1-tiller stage (just-emerged seedlings). Apply up to 3 weeks after the window opens and still get control. Common products: Dimension 270G, Ferti-lome Crabgrass Preventer.
Pendimethalin (Scotts Step 1)
Widely available at box stores. Similar residual to prodiamine. Safe on Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, Fine Fescue, Perennial Ryegrass. NOTE: Avoid on St. Augustine — can cause discoloration. Common products: Scotts Step 1, Hi-Yield Weed and Feed.
How to Apply Pre-Emergent in Springfield
Before You Apply
Mow first — shorter grass means better product-to-soil contact. Do NOT dethatch or aerate after application — this breaks the barrier. Check soil moisture — slightly moist soil aids incorporation.
Application Steps
Apply at label rate for your lawn square footage — do not over-apply. Use a broadcast spreader for granular or a pump sprayer for liquid. Overlap passes slightly to avoid missed strips. Apply on a calm day (wind under 10 mph) to prevent drift.
After Application
Water in within 24–48 hours: 0.5 inches of irrigation or rain activates the barrier. Do not mow for 24 hours after watering in. Mark your application date — reapply after 8–10 weeks if crabgrass pressure is high in Springfield.
Split Application Strategy for Springfield
A split application — half rate at Late February, second half rate 8 weeks later around Late April — extends protection from early spring through midsummer without over-applying at once.
Use dithiopyr (Dimension) for the second application — its early post-emergent activity catches any seeds that slipped through the first barrier.
In Springfield, the compressed spring means soil temperatures can spike quickly after a cold snap, making a split approach more forgiving of timing errors.
If You Miss the Window in Springfield
If soil temperature has already passed 55°F in Springfield, switch to dithiopyr (Dimension) — the only pre-emergent with early post-emergent activity, effective on crabgrass at the 1-tiller stage.
Beyond the 1-tiller stage, switch to a selective post-emergent: quinclorac (Drive XLG) controls crabgrass up to the 4-tiller stage and is safe on most turf types including Kentucky Bluegrass and Tall Fescue. Check label for Fine Fescue, which can be sensitive.
If crabgrass has fully established (6+ tillers, mid-summer), spot-treat with glyphosate on the clumps, then overseed in fall to thicken turf density and crowd out next year’s germination.
A thick, dense lawn is your best long-term pre-emergent — crabgrass requires light to germinate and cannot establish in dense turf shade.
Pre-Emergent and Overseeding — What You Need to Know
Pre-emergent herbicide cannot distinguish between weed seeds and grass seed — it will kill both. Do not apply pre-emergent if you plan to overseed in the same season, and do not overseed a lawn that received pre-emergent within the past 8–10 weeks.
For Springfield lawns, fall is the primary overseeding window — skip the fall Poa annua pre-emergent application in years when you overseed. Spring pre-emergent is safe since overseeding happens 4–5 months later.
The exception: siduron (Tupersan) is a pre-emergent safe for use around newly germinating grass seed. It controls crabgrass without harming Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, or Bermuda seedlings.
Best Grass Types for Zone 5b in Springfield
More Lawn Care Guides for Springfield
Looking for the right pre-emergent product? See our guide to the best pre-emergent herbicides →
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I apply pre-emergent in Springfield?
In Springfield (Zone 5b), apply pre-emergent between Late February and Late March — when soil at 2-inch depth is in the 50–55°F range. Apply before you see any crabgrass seedlings — once germination starts, pre-emergent cannot stop it.
What temperature triggers crabgrass in Springfield?
Crabgrass begins germinating when soil temperature at 2-inch depth reaches 55°F for 4–5 consecutive days. In Springfield, soil typically reaches 55°F around Late March. Your pre-emergent must already be in the ground and watered-in before this date.
Can I apply pre-emergent and overseed at the same time in Springfield?
No. Pre-emergent blocks all seed germination — it cannot distinguish weed seeds from grass seed. Do not overseed for at least 8–10 weeks after a pre-emergent application. The exception is siduron (Tupersan), a pre-emergent safe for use around germinating Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, and Bermuda seedlings.
What happens if I apply pre-emergent too early in Springfield?
Pre-emergent degrades in the soil over 8–12 weeks. Applying more than 6 weeks before soil hits 55°F means the barrier breaks down before peak crabgrass pressure. The solution: a split application (half rate at Late February, second half 8 weeks later) extends protection through the full germination window.
What pre-emergent is safe for Kentucky Bluegrass in Springfield?
Prodiamine, dithiopyr, and pendimethalin are all safe on established Kentucky Bluegrass. Avoid during fall overseeding window. Fine Fescue can be sensitive to pendimethalin — use prodiamine instead.