The State of Lawn Care in America: 2025 — LawnStarter

LawnStarter Internal Data • Full Year 2025

The State of Lawn Care
in America: 2025

From 2M+ mows across 2K+ cities — the most comprehensive look at how America maintains its lawns.

2M+ mows analyzed 2K+ cities Avg mow: $53.59 Prices up +6.6% YoY Peak day: July 3 — 12,050 mows Biweekly is king: 72.9% of all mows

The Year in Numbers

What do professional lawn care services actually cost? LawnStarter crunched 2+ million mows across 2K+ cities — here's what the data reveals.

Avg Annual Lawn Care Spending
$407/yr
national average — $6.38 per 1,000 sq ft per mow across 2K+ cities
Priciest Market
$576/yr
Orlando, Florida — an 11-month mowing season drives the highest annual cost among tracked cities
Most Affordable
$258/yr
Detroit, Michigan — cold winters mean a short mowing season keeps annual costs the lowest in the nation
Biggest Tipper City
51.6%
Amarillo, Texas — tips on more than half of all mows
Peak Mow Day
12,050
mows in a single day — July 3, 2025
Longest Mowing Season
11 months
Florida, Texas, & Louisiana mow nearly year-round — Minnesota gets just 6 months
Price Gap by ZIP Code
$38
In Los Angeles, the cheapest and most expensive ZIP codes are $38 apart — same city, same mow, wildly different price

The Lawn Care Calendar: Summer is Everything

July is peak mow month. January barely exists. The industry runs on a 9-month active season — March through November — with a 3-month winter shutdown in December, January, and February.

Monthly Mow Volume — 2025

Total completed mowing jobs by month. December–February = off-season. March & November = shoulder months. April–October = peak mowing season.

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July is 6.5X busier than January

Peak summer demand dwarfs the off-season by more than 6X — a volume surge that hits like clockwork, every year.

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Prices rise with the temperature

Average price per mow climbs from $49.28 in January to $54.66 in August — a 10.9% premium just for being peak season. Prices per mow also rose +6.6% year-over-year vs. 2024. Demand-side pricing at work.

Florida Mows Nearly Year-Round. Minnesota's Season Wraps Up by October.

Your latitude determines your lawn care calendar. Gulf and Pacific Coast states run near-year-round. Upper Midwest and New England states race through a brief warm-weather window. The difference reshapes what homeowners spend and how pros plan their business.

Mowing Season Length by State — 2025

Based on 2025 completion data. Darker = longer active season. National average: 8 months.

Brief – 6 months Short – 7 months Mid – 8 months Long – 9 months Extended – 10 months ~Year – 11–12 months
🌴

The South & Gulf Coast: near-year-round mowing

Florida mows nearly every month of the year. Texas's long warm corridors, Louisiana's Gulf humidity, and Washington, D.C.'s mild winters keep lawns growing well into late fall. Homeowners in these states pay for lawn care almost continuously — and pros build their businesses around steady, uninterrupted demand.

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The Brief-Season States: 6 Months to Make It Work

Minnesota, Vermont, New Hampshire, Montana, and Wyoming all run just 6 months — the shortest mowing seasons in the country. Pros in these markets compress a full year's revenue into a sprint, which drives prices well above the national average despite lower year-round demand.

Thursday is America's Lawn Day

Thursday leads the week — but Wednesday is right behind it at 16.8%. All five weekdays cluster tightly between 15% and 17%. The real drop-off is the weekend: Saturday falls to 10.8% and Sunday bottoms out at just 7.2%.

Share of Mows by Day of Week — 2025

Completed mowing jobs, 2025

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Mon–Fri handle 82.1% of all mows

Weekdays dominate. Saturday adds 10.7%. Sunday is the industry's day off at just 7.2% — the lightest day despite homeowners being home.

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Wednesday nearly matches Thursday

Mon–Fri all land between 15.2% and 16.9%. Thursday leads at 16.9%, Wednesday follows at 16.8% — just 0.1 points behind, with Friday close at 16.7%. Then Saturday falls sharply to 10.8% and Sunday bottoms out at 7.2%. The five-day work week is real for pros.

America Mows Biweekly — By a Landslide

72.9% of all lawn mowing in 2025 runs on a biweekly schedule. Weekly customers are the power users. Monthly is more common than most assume.

Mowing Frequency Distribution

Share of 2025 mowing jobs by service frequency

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Biweekly dominates at 72.9%

Roughly 3 in 4 mows run every 8–21 days. This is the industry standard — enough time for meaningful growth, short enough to stay manageable. It's also the most profitable frequency for pros.

Weekly customers keep lawns show-ready year-round

13.2% of customers choose weekly mowing — a pristine, perfectly manicured lawn every single week. Meanwhile 13.9% mow monthly or less, typically for basic upkeep or seasonal properties.

The Most Weather-Disrupted Lawn Care Markets

Weather disrupts 1 in 10 mows in some states — and less than 1 in 30 in others. Here's where rain, wind, and storms cost homeowners and pros the most lost appointments.

Weather Disruption Rate by State — 2025

Based on 2025 mowing jobs. Darker = more weather-related disruptions. National average: ~5.7% disruption rate.

Rarely disrupted (<3%) Occasionally (3–5%) Frequently (5–7%) Often (7–9%) Highly disrupted (9%+)
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Connecticut and Alabama: Weather-Disruption Hotspots

Weather disruption clusters in two distinct regions: Connecticut leads nationally at 10.89%, joined by the Mid-Atlantic states, where coastal storms and nor'easters routinely interrupt service. Meanwhile, Gulf moisture drives high disruption across the South — Alabama (9.49%), Arkansas (8.95%), and Tennessee (8.53%) all rank among the most weather-affected states in the country.

☀️

Desert Southwest & Pacific Northwest: reliably on schedule

New Mexico's arid climate means mows almost always happen as planned. South Dakota's dry plains and Oregon's predictable patterns keep disruptions rare too. If you want a dependable lawn care schedule, the desert Southwest is hard to beat.

The Northeast Pays the Most. The West Pays the Least.

Regional geography drives pricing more than any other single factor. The Northeast averages $58.17 per mow — 14% above the West's $50.90. California, Arizona, and New Mexico pull the West's average down sharply despite Seattle and Denver's elevated prices.

Average Mow Price by U.S. Region — 2025

Weighted state averages grouped by census region (avg price/mow by state)

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Northeast: $58.17 avg per mow — America's priciest region

CT ($63.74) → NH ($63.22) → MA ($61.91) → NJ ($60.04). 6 of the 7 Northeast states exceed the national average. High labor costs, shorter growing seasons, and wealthier suburbs create a perfect storm of premium pricing.

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West: $50.90 avg per mow — most affordable, surprisingly

Despite Seattle ($55.71) and Denver ($54.23), average costs out West are brought down by California ($45.27), Arizona ($45.08), and New Mexico ($45.05) — 3 of the 4 cheapest states for lawn mowing in America.

Vermont Pays 75% More Than Arizona

When it comes to the cost of a mow, a $33.07 gap separates the most expensive state from the cheapest — Vermont at $78.15 compared with Arizona at $45.08.

Average Price per Mow by State — 2025

Based on 2025 completed mows. Most states 500+ jobs; smaller markets (AK, HI, VT, WY) included where sufficient data exists. MT excluded — insufficient volume. National average: $53.59 per mow.

Under $50 $50–$54 $54–$58 $58–$62 Over $62
Most Expensive State
$78.15
Vermont
Also: ME $76.27 · CT $64.62 · NH $64.00
vs
Cheapest State
$45.08
Arizona
Also: NM $45.30 · CA $45.73 · TX $50.33
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Why Vermont tops the chart at $78.15

Vermont’s high prices reflect large rural properties with expansive yards, limited contractor competition in a sparse market, and a compressed 6-month season that pushes pros to charge premium rates to cover annual overhead.

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Why Arizona bottoms out at $45.08

Arizona’s desert climate has driven a major shift away from traditional grass lawns. Water restrictions and xeriscaping trends mean fewer properties need regular mowing — those that do tend to be smaller suburban patches. Combined with fierce contractor competition in Phoenix and Tucson, prices settle at the nation’s lowest.

The States Where Mowing Costs Jumped Most: 2024 to 2025

City-level methodology: avg price ÷ avg yard size per city, aggregated to state. Only cities with sufficient completed mows in both years included. National average: +4.8% year-over-year. Montana, Hawaii, Alaska, Wyoming, and South Dakota excluded due to insufficient volume or single-city coverage.

Under +3% +3%–+6% +6%–+9% +9% or more

Southern Markets Are Consistently the Most Affordable, Regardless of Size

Atlanta, Nashville, Charlotte, Dallas, and Houston — all major metros — come in well below the national average of $6.30 per 1,000 sq ft. Raleigh sits at $5.30, roughly the same as Knoxville. Market size isn’t the driver here: region is.

Avg Price per 1,000 sq ft — Selected Major Markets

Major markets with sufficient data, sorted lowest to highest price per 1,000 sq ft.

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: $18.60/1,000 sq ft — priciest per square foot

Philadelphia charges $18.60 per 1,000 sq ft — nearly 3× the national average of $6.38. Washington, D.C. ($17.80) and Chicago ($15.70) follow. Dense urban lots with small yard sizes drive the per-sq ft rate up sharply even when total job price looks moderate.

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Knoxville: Most affordable per square foot

$4.80/1,000 sq ft — Knoxville, Tennessee, delivers the lowest per-sq ft rate of all tracked markets. Raleigh, North Carolina ($5.30), Atlanta ($5.80), and Nashville, Tennessee ($5.80) are similarly affordable on a square-foot basis.

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What price per square foot tells you that price per mow doesn’t

A $55 mow in Chicago covers a tiny 3,400 sq ft lot — that’s $15.70/1,000 sq ft. The same $55 in Nashville covers a 9,500 sq ft yard — just $5.80/1,000 sq ft. Per-sq ft pricing reveals true market cost differences that the headline mow price obscures.

Average Annual Lawn Care Spending by Market — 2025

Annual cost = avg price/mow × avg mows per property per year. National average: $407/yr.

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Orlando homeowners spend $576/year. Detroit spends just $258.

Year-round growing seasons don’t just mean more mows — they mean $318 more per year. Orlando homeowners schedule mows across 11 months a year, totaling $576/yr. Detroit customers request mows across just a few months a year, totaling $258/yr. Climate, not price, is the biggest driver of total annual lawn care spend.

Where Lawn Care Costs the Least per 1,000 sq ft

Ranked by price per 1,000 square feet, these are the cities where you get the most lawn mowed for the least money. The lower the cost per square foot, the further your budget goes. National average: $6.38/1,000 sq ft.

Knoxville
Tennessee
$4.80/1,000 sq ft
Lowest per-sqft rate of any tracked market
$1.79 below national avg/sq ft
Raleigh
North Carolina
$5.30/1,000 sq ft
Large yards, competitive Carolinas market
$1.29 below national avg/sq ft
Lakeland
Florida
$5.70/1,000 sq ft
Year-round growing season, high volume market
$0.89 below national avg/sq ft
Atlanta
Georgia
$5.80/1,000 sq ft
Large lots, suburban growth keeps sqft costs low
$0.79 below national avg/sq ft
Nashville
Tennessee
$5.80/1,000 sq ft
Active market with spacious suburban yards
$0.79 below national avg/sq ft
Charlotte
North Carolina
$5.90/1,000 sq ft
Fast-growing metro, strong value per square foot
$0.69 below national avg/sq ft

Same City. Same Mow. Wildly Different Price per Square Foot.

Within a single city, lawn care prices per square foot can vary dramatically depending on the neighborhood. Suburban ZIP codes consistently run 30–60% above urban core ZIPs — driven by larger lot sizes, not service differences.

🤯

In Los Angeles, the same mow costs $38 more depending on your ZIP code

Los Angeles leads all tracked markets with a $38 gap between its cheapest and most expensive ZIP codes. Glendale, Arizona ($37), Euless, Texas ($33), and Woodinville, Washington ($30) aren’t far behind. In many cities, your neighborhood matters as much as your state — sometimes more.

Cities with the Widest ZIP Code Price Spread — 2025

Dollar price spread (max ZIP avg minus min ZIP avg per mow). ZIP codes with fewer than 25 completed mows or average yard sizes outside 2,000–20,000 sq ft excluded; prices filtered to $20–$200.

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The rule holds in every city

Suburban ZIP codes consistently price 30–60% above urban core ZIPs — driven by larger yard sizes, not service quality. The most variable cities show extreme intra-city gaps that dwarf even state-to-state price differences. Same company. Same mow. Different neighborhood.

Texas Tips Big: Inside America’s Lawn Care Tipping Culture

In Amarillo, Texas, more than half of all lawn care customers tip their pro. In Orlando, fewer than 1 in 5 do. The national average sits at 27% — but that number hides a map of extremes, from Texas generosity to Florida indifference. Which city’s pros actually earn the most in tips per job?

*LawnStarter matches customer tips for our Platinum-level lawn care pros — our highest-rated providers with the strongest track records of consistent, high-quality work. All LawnStarter pros keep 100% of their tips.

Part I

Who Tips?

🏆 Top 10 Tipping Cities — 2025

Highest tip rates nationally among all cities with 500+ completed 2025 mows — not just the largest metros. Smaller markets with strong tipping cultures dominate this list. Texas cities highlighted.

1Amarillo, TX 🥇
51.6%
2McAllen, TX 🥈
49.4%
3Corpus Christi, TX 🥉
38.9%
4El Paso, TX
37.9%
5Spartanburg, SC
37.7%
6Colorado Springs, CO
37.7%
7Tyler, TX
37.2%
8Seattle, WA
36.3%
9Abilene, TX
35.5%
10Lubbock, TX
35.4%

Part II

How Much Do They Tip — and What Does It Mean for a Pro’s Paycheck?

💸 Tip Rate: Which Big City Actually Tips?

% of mowing jobs that got a tip, among the 20 largest markets. Not small towns — these are major metros doing thousands of jobs each. Knoxville leads at 32.2%; Orlando is dead last at 17.6%. Major-market avg: 24.8%.

💰 When They DO Tip — How Big Is the Check?

Avg tip dollar amount, only counting jobs that received a tip. Chattanooga leads at $11.68; Houston comes in lowest at $7.92 — a nearly $4 gap between the top and bottom markets.

📊 How Generous Are Tips, Relative to the Total Bill?

When customers tip, how much are they actually leaving? Measured as a share of the total job cost, San Antonio customers tip the highest — 19.4% of the bill on average. Lakeland tips the smallest share at 16.4%. The national average is 17.9%, shown here across 20 major markets.

Tip Rate vs. Avg Tip Amount — Major Markets, 2025

Each dot is a city. X-axis: tip rate (% of mows tipped). Y-axis: avg tip amount when tipped. The quadrants reveal why tip rate alone doesn’t predict earnings. Hover over any dot for full stats.

🏆 The Number That Actually Matters: Effective Tip Per Mow

Tip rate × avg tip amount, spread across all mows — tipped or not. This is the tip amount pros pocket, on average, per mow. Chattanooga ($3.47) earns more than double what Orlando pros make ($1.45). That $2.02/mow gap adds up: at 6 mows/day over a 35-week season, it's worth over $2,100 in additional take-home pay.

Tipping Myths — Busted

Myth #1

“Pricier markets tip more”

Orlando charges more per sq ft than Charlotte — but tips at a smaller rate (17.6% vs. 27%).

Myth #2

“Big cities tip the most”

New York, LA, and Chicago all hover near the national average. It’s mid-size Texas cities and Spartanburg, SC that dominate the top 10.

Myth #3

“Warm weather = generous tips”

Seattle (36.3%) and Colorado Springs (37.7%) outperform every Florida city. Tipping culture is regional habit, not climate.

Myth #4

“High tip rate = high tip earnings”

Rate and amount are independent. A city with a 35% rate and a $9 avg tip earns less per mow than one with 30% and $11. Effective tip per mow is the number that matters.

Tipping Rate by State — 2025

% of completed mowing jobs that received a tip, by state. States with fewer than 290 mows excluded. National average: ~27%.

Under 25% 25–30% 30–35% 35–45% 45%+
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Pros Weigh In: Tips, Reviews, and Homemade Cookies

“I'm usually surprised by the tips, positive comments, and 5-star ratings,” says LawnStarter pro David Beach (Westside Mowing) in San Antonio. “As long as you take pride in your work and are professional, I think the accolades, whether they are monetary or documented praise, come on their own without having to make a concentrated effort.”

Beyond cash tips, our pros share that they appreciate courtesy gifts like water and snacks the most. Another San Antonio LawnStarter pro, Gabriel Sosa (At Your Service), says, “I did receive home-baked Christmas cookies once.” For many pros, these gestures are a bonus — not an expectation. “I try to treat all my customers exactly the same, tip or no tip,” Sosa shares.

More Americans Tipped Their Lawn Pros in 2025 Than Ever Before

Something shifted in 2025 — across more than 2,000 cities, the national tip rate jumped from 19.1% to 26.7% in a single year, with 4 in 5 markets posting gains. What’s surprising is that the average tip dollar barely budged. This wasn’t existing tippers spending more — it was an entirely new wave of people starting to tip their lawn pros for the first time.

Markets Where Rate Rose
80%
1,700+ out of 2,200+ cities analyzed
More Customers Tipping
+40%
19.1% → 26.7% of all mows — biggest single-year jump on record
Avg Tip When Given
$9.55
Up from $9.42 in 2024 · +$0.14
Tip as % of Job
17.9%
Down from 18.6% · new tippers tip conservatively

How Every State Moved: Tipping Trends 2024 → 2025

Three things can change in tipping: how often customers tip (the tip rate — share of jobs that got a tip), how much they tip (the dollar amount), and what share of the total bill they tip. Map labels show relative change in tip rate. Color reflects how tip rate and tip dollar shifted together from 2024 to 2025. Hover any state to see all three metrics.

More tipping & bigger tip amounts (both jumped strongly) More tipping & bigger tip amounts More tipping, tip amounts about the same More tipping, but tip amounts fell Tipping rate fell vs. 2024

Not One Major Market Missed the Wave

Among the 20 largest markets, every single city saw its tip rate rise. Nashville and St. Louis both gained more than 10 percentage points. Even Detroit, the most reluctant market, climbed nearly 5 points.

Where Did Tipping Grow the Most in 2025?

How much more often did customers tip in 2025 vs. 2024? Each bar shows the gain in tip rate from biggest to smallest. National average: +7.6 percentage points. Darker green = bigger gain.

Did the Tip Amount Go Up or Down? Average Tip in Dollars, 2024 vs. 2025

Change in average tip dollar amount per tipped job. Mixed results — Chicago saw +$0.47 more per tip; Detroit dropped −$0.54. National average change: +$0.14.

Tips as a Share of the Bill — Did They Go Up or Down?

Of the total job price, what percentage do customers tip? Yellow = 2024, green = 2025. Every city slipped slightly — because new tippers tend to start with smaller tips relative to the bill. Nationally, the share fell from 18.6% to 17.9% of the total job price.

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What sparked the jump?

As tipping for outdoor services becomes culturally normalized — mirroring the path restaurants took decades ago — frequency rises first. Dollar amounts typically follow in subsequent years once the behavior is fully established.

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What it meant for a Nashville pro’s paycheck

Nashville’s tip rate jumped from 19.5% to 30.3%, lifting the effective tip per mow from $1.95 to $3.05. At 6 mows/day over a 35-week season, that’s over $1,150 more in take-home tip earnings in 2025 than in 2024 — from rate improvement alone, without any single customer tipping a dollar more.

Looking Ahead: 2026 Mowing Season

All systems are green (or greening up) across the U.S. Lawn care pros have been mowing yards in Texas for weeks, Florida is starting slowly because of the ongoing drought, and lawn care pros are struggling with gas prices, which fuel their trucks and power much of their lawn care equipment. We're tracking mows, frequencies, prices, and tips for a similar by-the-numbers LawnStarter industry report next year. Will July 3 be the peak mowing day for 2026? Stay tuned.

How We Compiled This Report

Data covers lawn mowing service transactions completed through LawnStarter across 2K+ U.S. cities in 2025. The full dataset includes 2M+ mowing jobs. Metrics include price per 1,000 sq ft, tip amount and frequency, weather disruption rate, and mows per property per year. All weighted averages are calculated by mow volume. State-level figures are computed from cities in the LawnStarter dataset, weighted by mow volume, and are representative of LawnStarter service areas. Annual cost estimates multiply average price by average mows per property for cities where both metrics are available. Weather disruption is defined as mowing jobs rescheduled or cancelled due to weather. Tip data reflects voluntary gratuities at time of payment.

Based on data from markets where LawnStarter operates.