Illustration of a person using an electric trimmer and a robotic lawn mower on a green lawn, alongside the text “Silence of the Lawns” discussing changes in yard care due to noise ordinances, gas equipment bans, and automation.

Weekend mornings are a lot quieter this fall as more municipalities restrict or ban loud gas-powered lawn mowers and leaf blowers. And for a truly purring mower, robot mowers can cut grass while you sleep.

 

Welcome to the “Silence of the Lawns.” 

 

“We went electric last year with the mower, edger, and blower. Soooo much better,” says Carl Swirsding, of Los Altos, California. “Easier to use, no hassle with gas or starting the damn motor. No oil changes, no air filters or spark plugs. No noise and stinky exhaust in your face.” 

 

In this article, we’ll break down the trends, stats, maps, and figures of how electric lawn equipment is transforming U.S. neighborhoods. 

⚖️The Noise and Pollution Crackdown

Noise Bans 

 

Today, more than 200 of the 500 largest U.S. metro areas have a noise ban or ordinance that limits hours when loud equipment like leaf blowers and mowers can be operated. Some cities are going so far as to arm police with noise monitors to keep the decibels in check.

 

The 1972 Noise Control Act established a precedent for policies limiting harmful levels of noise. Advocacy groups like Quiet Communities continue to increase awareness of noise pollution and promote noise-restricting policies.

 

📢Fun Fact: The first recorded noise ordinance was written by Julius Caesar in 44 BCE. 

 

Grab your earplugs: According to the American Public Health Association, noise pollution is a public health hazard. Sounds above 70 decibels (dBs) can be irritating, and prolonged exposure to roars, rings, and pings of 80 dBs and louder can lead to hearing loss.

Equipment Type

Average Decibels

Gas-Powered Lawn Mowers

90dB

Electric Lawn Mowers

85dB or less

Robot Mowers

55 to 60dB

Gas-powered leaf blowers

80 to 90dB

Can still be up to 75dB when listening through the walls of a house.

Electric leaf blowers

60 to 80dB 

Gas-Powered Equipment Bans

 

California is ahead of the curve when it comes to implementing green lawn care policies, including its statewide ban on sales of new gas-powered lawn equipment.

 

Outside of the Golden State, 33 of the 500 largest U.S. cities have either banned or restricted gas-powered equipment

 

What’s driving the push from gas-powered mowers and other lawn care equipment? Air pollution.

 

⛽ Nationally, lawn upkeep – mowers, string trimmers, and leaf blowers – consumes an estimated 800 million gallons of gas per year.

 Carmel, California, became the first U.S. city to ban leaf blowers in 1975. 

 

In 2024, California banned the sale of all gas-powered lawn care equipment. The use of all gas-powered lawn equipment is fully banned in 4 California cities, Menlo Park, Sausalito, San Anselmo, and Fairfax.

 

● 71 cities — 65% of which are located in California — have banned the use of gas-powered leaf blowers, and 6 Golden State cities have policies banning all leaf blowers, according to PIRG. 

 

Some cities, including Baltimore, Portland, Oregon, and Cambridge, Massachusetts, are currently phasing out the use of gas-powered equipment, with policies in place to implement bans in future years. 

 

Leaf blower restrictions vary widely:

 Some leaf blower restrictions are noise-based, such as in Newton, Massachusetts, which allows only leaf blowers under 65 decibels. 

 

○ Other leaf blowing restrictions are tied to air quality, such as in Sacramento, California, where it is prohibited to use either gas or electric leaf blowers when the Air Quality Index is at or above 101. 

 

○ In places like Burlington, Vermont, leaf blowers are not allowed during the summer months from Memorial Day to Labor Day. 

There is some pushback to green lawn care laws and regulations. 5 states — Georgia, Texas, Louisiana, North Carolina, and Montana — have prohibited municipal bans on gas-powered equipment. Some eco-minded cities in these states are still helping push the electric lawn care movement by offering rebates and incentives.

 

 

⚡️A Transforming Lawn Care Market

Photo Credit: MIKI Yoshihito / Flickr / CC BY 2.0

There are numerous players competing in the electric equipment market, from U.S. agriculture icon John Deere to robot mower pioneer Husqvarna. Even Segway and Honda are making moves on the electric scene.

 

● The global market for electric lawn mowers is anticipated to reach 28.1 billion by 2033.

● Globally, the market for robot mowers is on track to reach $4 billion by 2030.

 

Big-box retailers selling lawn care equipment support the shift. Home Depot has set a goal for battery-powered outdoor equipment to make up over 85% of outdoor power equipment sales by 2028. 

 

At the time of writing, the American Green Zone Alliance has tested and vetted 10 brands for high-quality performance, including Husqvarna, STIHL, and Mean Green Mowers.

🔋Advancements in Battery-Powered Equipment

As interest in electric and automated lawn care grows, the makers of mowers, string trimmers, and leaf blowers are improving the performance of battery-powered equipment. And, as with anything new, the price will come down as acceptance grows.

 

“The electric equipment works just as well — they are quiet and turn on/off instantly,” Swirsding says. “We have 2,000 square feet of lawn and can mow the lawn twice before recharging.” 

💰Cost Breakdown: Gas vs. Electric Equipment

Gas and electric lawn care equipment each have their own unique advantages.

 

Is using electric equipment cheaper? “Interesting question. Without doing any math, I would say yes. Can’t say how much,” Swirsding says. “But the cost isn’t the reason to switch. The environment wasn’t the reason either. It was the ease of use.” 

Equipment

Average Cost Gas-Powered

Average Cost Electric-Powered

Ride-on mower

$2,960

$3,879

Push mower

$286

$322

Self-propelled mower

$604

$786

Robot mower

N/A

$1,499

Leaf blower

$180 (handheld)

$420 (backpack)

$275 (battery)

$90 (corded)

Annual Costs

Gas-powered mowers

To fuel a gas-powered mower on a 1-acre property can take an average of 15 gallons of gas per year. Nationally, that’s around $47 per year. For Californians, that’s about $70.

Gas-powered leaf blowers

Gas-powered leaf blowers burn through an average of 0.43 gallons of gas per hour. Running the leaf blower for an hour once a week between April and November can cost around $43 to fuel annually, per the national average gas prices.

Battery-powered mowers

CNET estimates a mower with a 56-volt battery costs around $0.58 per hour to charge, meaning it costs less than $10 per year to charge an electric mower for a typical homeowner.

Battery replacement

Battery-powered equipment may need batteries replaced every 3–5 years. Check the manufacturer’s replacement battery prices while shopping for electric equipment. Replacement battery prices can range from $40 to over $240 , depending on the brand and model.

Carbon Costs

Reports claim that commercial gas-powered leaf blowers can produce pollution equivalent to driving a car 1,100 miles. This carbon footprint is on par with a road trip from New York City to Orlando or from Los Angeles to Denver.

🤖The Robots are Coming…

Lawn robot news dominated this year’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. These Roombas for the lawn are smarter — they don’t bounce off walls but rather mow in straight lines like a real lawn mower. 

Most robot lawn mowers cost between $700 and $2,650. The best ones cost north of $1,000

A survey found:

● 49.84% of respondents without a robot mower say they are too expensive. 

● 41.23% say they don’t want to own a robot lawn mower, and 27.44% are unsure about purchasing robot lawn mowers.

● 87% of the respondents with robot lawn mowers are satisfied with their quiet grass-cutting machines.

🤔Lawn Care Pro Perceptions

Unfortunately, navigating these restrictions can be a financial obstacle for lawn care professionals. 

 

Noise restrictions limit how much yard work can be done in the morning, which is often the best time to handle lawn chores. 

 

For LawnStarter pro CC Boone, who provides lawn care services around Washington, D.C., noise restrictions are “very irritating and hold up the day, having to wait for noise restrictions in the morning to end because that’s the best time to get out and cut — not the middle of the day.”

 

Meanwhile, electric mandates are challenging for some, like LawnStarter pro Jonathan Villatoro in Damascus, Maryland, who shares that equipment restrictions have made the job “really hard as equipment is more expensive.”

💲Leading With Incentives

Some governments are incentivizing the switch to electric equipment to encourage residents and lawn care professionals to make the switch. 

 

State Incentives

 

● Colorado: A 30% discount is available for electric mowers, leaf blowers, trimmers, and snow blowers at participating retailers until the end of 2026. The Centennial State also offers funding up to $6,000 for businesses upgrading to electric equipment. 

● Massachusetts: Mass Save offers discounts from $30 to $3,500 for Massachusetts lawn care professionals making electric upgrades. 

● California: In less than a year, California spent the $27 million allocated by Senate Bill 170 on vouchers dedicated to lawn care businesses switching to electric-powered equipment. 

● New York: A bill is on its way to establish incentives for electric-powered landscaping.

 

City Incentives

 

According to data from PIRG, residents living in nearly half — 237 to be specific — of the 500 biggest U.S. cities have access to incentives and rebates for purchasing electric lawn care equipment. 

 

Local policies implementing regulations and/or incentives on lawn care equipment are found in hundreds of cities across 26 different states

 

Other incentives and rebates may be available from local utility companies. 

🌱No Lawn Mowers Needed

Some homeowners no longer need a robot or any kind of mower. They’re abandoning lawn care altogether. 

 

“I haven’t switched to electric,says Jim Walsh, of Aptos, California. “Myself, along with most of my neighbors, have removed lawns and gone with more native planting for water conservation.” 

 

Green lawn care trends like rewilding, freedom lawns, and meadowscaping can make a landscape pop with minimal maintenance required. Many homeowners are integrating native plants and xeriscaping to design less thirsty lawns.

 

Another less common alternative for quiet and organic lawn care? Animal lawn mowing with goats and sheep.

 

No matter where you look or listen, lawn care is getting quieter. Maybe not a total Silence of the Lawns — but some neighborhoods are getting there.

 

California-based LawnStarter freelance writer John Hickey contributed to this report.

Sources

Notes

 

● The national average for gas prices at the time of writing was $3.16.

● Data for long grass fees encompasses cities with 20 or more completed jobs.

 

AAA Fuel Prices, LawnStarter, Lowe’s, Luke Metzger, Noise Pollution Clearinghouse, PowerOutage.us, and SaveOnEnergy.

Main Illustration Credit: Aris Berroya / LawnStarter

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

headshot image of Sav Maive

Sav Maive is a writer based in San Antonio, with roots in the Adirondacks and Blue Ridge Mountains. She has also lived in San Diego and Washington, D.C., and has been writing lawn care stories for LawnStarter since 2021.

ABOUT THE PROJECT EDITOR

Jeff Herman

LawnStarter editor-in-chief Jeff Herman has been mowing lawns for years in St. Louis and then in Gainesville, Florida. While a robot mower right out of “The Jetsons” may one day take grass cutting off my to-do list, I’ll still handle the weeding and trimming. It’s cheap therapy for me.