Spring Lawn Care Schedule for Ohio Yards: Month-by-Month Guide & Checklist

Nate Stuckey • March 2, 2026

A spring lawn care schedule for Ohio yards must account for cool-season grasses, late soil thaw, and a narrow fertilization window. In the Holland and Toledo area, spring prep typically runs mid-March through late May. Stuckey's Curb & Landscape helps northwest Ohio homeowners with aeration, overseeding, mulch installs, and seasonal cleanups.

 

Most northwest Ohio homeowners start spring the same way: the grass looks green, so they mow. That's the symptom, not the problem. The soil is still cold and compacted, and it won't respond to fertilizer or seed yet. Getting the sequence right distinguishes a thick June lawn from one that stays patchy all summer.



Here's the month-by-month breakdown you need to take good care of your lawn.


March: Wake the Lawn Up Before You Mow It

Lush green lawn with distinct, pale stripes from mowing patterns, set against a backdrop of mature trees.

March is a prep month, not a mowing month. In northwest Ohio, soil temperatures through early spring are usually too cold for grass roots to absorb fertilizer effectively. Cool-season grasses like Kentucky bluegrass and tall fescue need soil temperatures of at least 50°F before nutrients can do their work. Applying nitrogen to cold soil doesn't feed the grass; it mostly washes away unused.


Rake Out Dead Grass and Leaves

Start by raking out matted dead grass and leaf debris. This improves air circulation and reduces snow mold, a fungal issue common after Ohio's wet winters. Walk the yard and note any low spots where water pooled—those become problem areas once the ground thaws.



Don’t Mow Until Your Lawn is Ready

Hold off on mowing until the soil is firm underfoot and grass blades reach 3 to 3.5 inches. If your foot sinks when you step on the lawn, the ground is still saturated. Mowing saturated soil compacts it further and tears turf instead of cutting it.


April: Fertilize, Aerate, and Seed at the Right Time

A well-manicured lawn with a fire hydrant in the foreground leads to a stone house under a clear, bright blue sky.

April is the most consequential month of the spring lawn care schedule. Soil temps in northwest Ohio typically cross 50°F sometime in mid-to-late April. 


Apply a Slow-Release Nitrogen Fertilizer

This is when fertilizer actually produces results. According to Ohio State University Extension, cool-season lawns in northern Ohio benefit most from a slow-release nitrogen fertilizer applied once soil temps hold consistently above that threshold.



Focus on Core Aeration and Overseeding

April is also the right window for core aeration if the lawn shows compaction: thatch buildup, runoff on flat ground, or thin patches that didn't recover last fall. Aeration pulls small plugs from the soil, opening channels for water, oxygen, and fertilizer so they reach the roots. Paired with overseeding, germination improves because seed-to-soil contact is better.

For aeration, overseeding, and mulch installs in Holland and surrounding areas, Stuckey's Curb & Landscape services keeps the timing on track.


May: Mow Consistently and Address Bed Lines

Infographic comparing the seasonal costs and benefits of weekly ($1,430) versus bi-weekly ($845) lawn mowing in Ohio.

By May, the heavy prep work is done. 


Mow Every Week

Mow weekly, keeping cool-season grass at 3 to 4 inches. Cutting below 3 inches stresses roots, reduces drought tolerance, and gives crabgrass an opening as soil temps climb past 55°F.


Add Mulch and Clean Beds

May is also the last window before summer mulch goes down, making it the right time to clean bed edges. Decorative concrete curbing is a permanent fix: installed once, it holds the line between turf and beds without re-edging every season. For weekly and bi-weekly lawn mowing, a consistent May schedule sets the lawn up for a strong summer.


Frequently Asked Questions

When should I apply fertilizer to my Ohio lawn in spring?

Apply spring fertilizer once soil temperatures consistently reach 50°F, typically mid-to-late April in the Toledo and Holland area. Applying earlier produces little nutrient uptake and increases runoff risk. A soil thermometer, available at most garden centers, takes the guesswork out of the timing.


Do I need to aerate my lawn every spring in northwest Ohio?

Not every year. Aeration is most useful when the lawn shows compaction: water pooling on flat ground, thatch over half an inch, or thin patches that didn't fill in after overseeding. Lucas County's clay-heavy soils compact more readily than sandy soils, so many northwest Ohio lawns benefit from aeration every one to two years.



Can Stuckey's Curb & Landscape handle both spring prep and regular mowing?

Yes. Stuckey's Curb & Landscape offers aeration, overseeding, mulch installs, and weekly or bi-weekly mowing for homeowners across Holland, Toledo, Perrysburg, Maumee, and surrounding northwest Ohio communities. Bundling spring prep with a mowing schedule keeps the work coordinated and the timing consistent.


Get Your Northwest Ohio Lawn Ready This Spring

A view from a zero-turn mower cutting grass in a sunny, green backyard with a small playhouse in the distance.

The spring window in northwest Ohio is short and the sequence matters. Mow too early, fertilize cold soil, or skip aeration—and the problems surface in July when they're harder to fix. Follow the schedule above and your lawn will be in far better shape by summer.


Stuckey's Curb & Landscape serves homeowners across Holland, Toledo, Maumee, Perrysburg, and surrounding northwest Ohio communities. Owner Nathon Stuckey handles estimates personally. No pressure, no contracts—just honest work on the right schedule. Request your free estimate or call (419) 574-6136.

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