Warm-season grass
Carpetgrass Lawn Care Schedule
Carpetgrass is a warm-season grass suited to the wet, acidic, sandy soils of the Deep South and Gulf Coast, where its tolerance of poor drainage sets it apart from other lawns. It forms a dense, low, light-green turf with very low fertility needs — but it is coarse, sends up seedheads constantly in summer, and has poor drought and cold tolerance, so it is a practical ground cover for damp problem areas more than a showcase lawn.
- Type
- Warm-season
- Mowing height
- 1–2″
- Nitrogen budget
- 1–2 lbs N / 1,000 sq ft / yr
- Growth habit
- Spreading (self-repairs)
- Shade tolerance
- Moderate
- Drought tolerance
- Low
- Traffic tolerance
- Low
- USDA zones
- 8–10
Get region-specific timing
Pick your USDA hardiness zone for a Carpetgrass schedule with timing shifted to your local season:
Key care windows
Timing windows are flexible (early / mid / late) and tuned to a typical transition-zone season — soil temperature and your local weather should always have the final say.
Spring pre-emergent (crabgrass)
Apply a pre-emergent herbicide as soil temperatures climb through the low 50s°F — before they reach the ~55°F at which crabgrass germinates — to stop summer weeds before they start. A second application 6–8 weeks later extends control through the season.
Don't apply a pre-emergent if you plan to seed — it blocks grass seed too. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Spring green-up & first mow
Warm-season turf begins breaking dormancy as soil temperatures reach about 55°F, but it isn't actively growing until the soil warms to roughly 65°F. Once it's about half green, mow low to clear dormant material and let sunlight reach the crowns. Don't fertilize until it's at least 80% green and growing.
First feeding
Make the first fertilizer application 2–4 weeks after full green-up, once the lawn is actively growing. Very little nitrogen is needed — about 1–2 lbs per 1,000 sq ft per year. Carpetgrass grows on low-fertility soils by nature, and excess nitrogen mostly means more mowing without a better lawn. Use iron rather than extra nitrogen if you want deeper color.
Carpetgrass wants the acidic, low-fertility soil most lawns do not — do not over-lime or over-feed it. Keep nitrogen at or below ~1 lb per 1,000 sq ft per feeding, and reach for iron, not more nitrogen, for color. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Aeration & dethatching
Core-aerate (and dethatch if the thatch layer is over about ½") during the peak growing season, when warm-season turf recovers fastest. Avoid aerating dormant or drought-stressed turf.
Summer feeding program
Summer is the warm-season growth peak. Very little nitrogen is needed — about 1–2 lbs per 1,000 sq ft per year. Carpetgrass grows on low-fertility soils by nature, and excess nitrogen mostly means more mowing without a better lawn. Use iron rather than extra nitrogen if you want deeper color. Spread the annual budget across the season rather than applying it all at once.
Never exceed ~1 lb of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft in a single feeding. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Summer weed & pest watch
Spot-treat broadleaf weeds during active growth, never on drought-stressed turf. Watch for insect and disease pressure in hot, humid weather and treat problem areas rather than the whole lawn.
Final feeding & soil test
Give a final feeding in early fall, then stop nitrogen — late-season nitrogen pushes tender growth into frost. Fall is also the best time to take a soil test so amendments are ready before spring.
Stop nitrogen about 6 weeks before your first expected frost. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Fall pre-emergent (winter weeds)
A fall pre-emergent applied before soil cools below about 70°F controls winter annual weeds like Poa annua and henbit.
Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Winter dormancy
Expect a brown, dormant lawn from first frost until spring green-up. Hold off on fertilizer and pre-emergent. A light watering during extended winter drought helps prevent desiccation.
Month-by-month schedule
A quick at-a-glance plan for Carpetgrass, month by month.
| Month | Season | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| January | Winter· dormant |
|
| February | Winter |
|
| March | Spring |
|
| April | Spring |
|
| May | Spring |
|
| June | Summer |
|
| July | Summer |
|
| August | Summer |
|
| September | Fall |
|
| October | Fall |
|
| November | Fall· dormant |
|
| December | Winter· dormant |
|
Carpetgrass care guide
Mowing
Mow carpetgrass at 1–2", and expect to mow often in summer just to keep its fast, tall seedheads down — those seedstalks are its most-complained-about trait. A sharp blade keeps the coarse leaves from shredding.
Watering
Carpetgrass likes moisture and has poor drought tolerance — it is chosen for wet spots for a reason and browns quickly where it dries out. Give it about 1" of water per week in dry weather; it will not thrive on the low irrigation a grass like bahiagrass shrugs off.
Fertilizing
Very little nitrogen is needed — about 1–2 lbs per 1,000 sq ft per year. Carpetgrass grows on low-fertility soils by nature, and excess nitrogen mostly means more mowing without a better lawn. Use iron rather than extra nitrogen if you want deeper color.
Weed control
A dense carpetgrass stand shades out many weeds on its own. Time a spring pre-emergent for crabgrass and use only products labeled for carpetgrass; on the acidic soils it prefers, do not lime to 'fix' it — carpetgrass actually likes the low pH.
Strengths
- Tolerates wet, poorly drained, acidic soils that drown other grasses
- Very low fertilizer needs
- Dense, low growth that crowds out many weeds
Watch out for
- Coarse texture and constant summer seedheads mean frequent mowing
- Poor drought tolerance — browns quickly in dry spells
- Not cold-hardy and slow to green up in spring
Common Carpetgrass lawn problems
Browning, patches, or pests on a carpetgrass lawn? These guides help you diagnose what's actually wrong and what to do about it — safely, before you treat.
- Chinch bugsSpreading brown in the hottest, driest part of the lawn.
- ArmywormsGreen to brown in days — the late-summer caterpillar that eats lawns.
- GrubsSpongy turf that lifts like carpet — and how to confirm it.
- Lawn fungus & diseaseBrown patch, dollar spot, and the conditions that cause them.
- Brown patchesRound, spreading, or random — what brown patches are telling you.
- Dead or dormant?Tell a stressed-but-alive lawn from one that won't come back.
A starting point — your plan adjusts to your yard
This Carpetgrass schedule is a research-based template for your grass type. Your lawn is one of a kind, though: the right timing and amounts also depend on your soil test, sun and shade, irrigation, lawn size, and the goals you set — a low-input yard, the deepest possible color, or just crowding out weeds. YardLedger takes this template and adjusts it to your yard's specific needs, then keeps refining it from the history of what you've actually done and how the lawn responded — so every recommendation gets more personal over time.
Safety first
Carpetgrass wants the acidic, low-fertility soil most lawns do not — do not over-lime or over-feed it. Keep nitrogen at or below ~1 lb per 1,000 sq ft per feeding, and reach for iron, not more nitrogen, for color.
Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.