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Warm-season grass • USDA Zone 7

Centipede Grass Lawn Care Schedule — USDA Zone 7

Centipede is a slow-growing, low-maintenance warm-season grass suited to the sandy, acidic soils of the Southeast. It needs little fertilizer and little mowing, but it is sensitive: too much nitrogen or too high a soil pH causes the dieback known as "centipede decline." This schedule is tuned for USDA hardiness zone 7 — mild transition-zone winters (average lows around 0 to 10°F). Green-up, fertilizing, and pre-emergent timing all shift with your winter low temperatures, so the windows below are tuned for this zone.

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
Moderate
Traffic tolerance
Low
Winter low
average lows around 0 to 10°F

Different zone?

See the Centipede schedule for another USDA hardiness zone, or the full Centipede care guide.

Key care windows for Zone 7

Timing windows are flexible (early / mid / late) and tuned to Zone 7's season — soil temperature and your local weather should always have the final say.

mid-February to mid-March

Spring pre-emergent (crabgrass)

Apply a pre-emergent herbicide as soil temperatures approach 55°F to stop crabgrass and other summer weeds before they germinate. 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.

mid-February to late March

Spring green-up & first mow

As soil temperatures reach about 55°F the lawn breaks dormancy and greens up. 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.

late April to mid-May

First feeding

Make the first fertilizer application 2–4 weeks after full green-up, once the lawn is actively growing. Less is more with centipede: only about 1–2 lbs of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft per year. Use iron rather than extra nitrogen to green it up. A soil test matters here because centipede prefers a slightly acidic pH (5.0–6.0).

Over-fertilizing is the most common way to kill centipede. Stay within the low 1–2 lb annual nitrogen budget and never exceed ~1 lb per 1,000 sq ft in one feeding; reach for iron, not 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.

early May to late June

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.

early June to late August

Summer feeding program

Summer is the warm-season growth peak. Less is more with centipede: only about 1–2 lbs of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft per year. Use iron rather than extra nitrogen to green it up. A soil test matters here because centipede prefers a slightly acidic pH (5.0–6.0). 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.

early June to late August

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.

early September to late September

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.

late September to mid-October

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.

early November to late December

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 Centipede grass in USDA zone 7, month by month.

MonthSeasonWhat to do
JanuaryWinter· dormant
  • Dormant season — no feeding; water lightly only during extended drought.
FebruaryWinter
  • Watch for green-up; do the first low mow to clear winter material.
  • Apply crabgrass pre-emergent before soil reaches ~55°F.
MarchSpring
  • Watch for green-up; do the first low mow to clear winter material.
  • Apply crabgrass pre-emergent before soil reaches ~55°F.
AprilSpring
  • Make the first feeding once the lawn is fully green and growing.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
MaySpring
  • Make the first feeding once the lawn is fully green and growing.
  • Core-aerate during peak growth; dethatch if thatch is heavy.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
JuneSummer
  • Core-aerate during peak growth; dethatch if thatch is heavy.
  • Continue the summer feeding program on schedule.
  • Spot-treat weeds and scout for pests; water deeply in heat.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
JulySummer
  • Continue the summer feeding program on schedule.
  • Spot-treat weeds and scout for pests; water deeply in heat.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
AugustSummer
  • Continue the summer feeding program on schedule.
  • Spot-treat weeds and scout for pests; water deeply in heat.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
SeptemberFall
  • Apply a fall pre-emergent for winter weeds before soil cools.
  • Make the final feeding of the year; take a soil test.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
OctoberFall
  • Apply a fall pre-emergent for winter weeds before soil cools.
  • Mow at 1–2" and water deeply as needed.
NovemberFall· dormant
  • Lawn is dormant — no feeding; water lightly only in extended drought.
DecemberWinter· dormant
  • Lawn is dormant — no feeding; water lightly only in extended drought.

Centipede at a glance

  • Very low fertilizer and mowing needs
  • Thrives in acidic, sandy, low-fertility soils
  • Tolerates light shade
  • Easily damaged by over-fertilizing (centipede decline)
  • Slow to recover from wear or scalping
  • Shallow roots reduce drought and cold tolerance

For the full Centipede mowing, watering, fertilizing, and weed-control guide that applies in every zone, see the complete Centipede lawn care schedule.

Safety first

Over-fertilizing is the most common way to kill centipede. Stay within the low 1–2 lb annual nitrogen budget and never exceed ~1 lb per 1,000 sq ft in one feeding; reach for iron, not 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.

Build my Centipede schedule

These windows are a great starting point. YardLedger turns them into a weather-aware, month-by-month plan for your exact yard — then tracks every treatment and reminds you what's next.

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