In all honesty, if you are asking yourself this question in mid-June, you’ve probably already missed the window. Crabgrass germination doesn’t wait around, and once local soil temperatures cross a certain threshold, no pre-emergent product in the world is going to stop what’s already in motion.
But that doesn’t mean all is lost, and it doesn’t mean you should give up on your lawn. Quite the contrary. What it means is that right now is the perfect time to get ahead of next year. This blog will explain what we mean fully … so stay to the end.
First, let’s talk about what’s really going on with crabgrass in your lawn, and why so many lawn care companies — including some of the big national ones that show up when you Google ‘lawn care near me’ consistently get it wrong.
The Crabgrass Clock In SE Massachusetts Is Different Than You Think
Most generic lawn care advice is written for a broad, national audience. It talks about soil temperature hitting 55°F as the triggers for crabgrass germination. This is accurate in principle, but the problem is that advice is almost never calibrated for where you live.
Southeastern Massachusetts covers towns from Hingham and Scituate down through Plymouth and New Bedford, and inland through Attleboro, and Middleborough which all sit in a coastal New England climate zone that doesn’t behave the way generic schedules assume. This makes a few things in our region tricky:
Our proximity to the ocean moderates temperatures. Coastal towns like Marshfield, and Cohasset tend to warm up more slowly in spring than inland areas. Meanwhile, places like Taunton, and Norton can see soil temps spike quickly once April arrives.
Spring here can be unpredictable. One warm week in March can be followed by two cold weeks in April. Soil temperature at the 2-to-4-inch level — where crabgrass seeds sit — fluctuates more than surface air temps suggest.
Our sandy and loamy soils warm up fast. Much of our area has light, well-draining soil. That’s great for some things, but it also means the ground heats up quicker than the clay-heavy soils you’d find further north or west. Pre-emergent needs to be down before that happens.
What all this adds up to is a narrower application window than many homeowners and even some lawn care companies realize. In our area, the target window for pre-emergent crabgrass control typically runs from mid-March through late April, depending on the year. Some years it’s tighter than that. It is all about timing, timing, timing.
So, What Does ‘Too Late’ Actually Look Like?
Pre-emergent herbicides work by creating a chemical barrier in the soil that prevents crabgrass seeds from completing germination. Once those seeds have already germinated, and once that barrier has been broken, pre-emergent becomes essentially useless for the current season.
The cutoff isn’t tied to a date on the calendar. It’s tied to what’s happening in your soil. When ground temperatures at the 2-inch level have been consistently at or above 55°F for several days in a row, crabgrass germination has already begun. At that point, you’ve crossed the line.
In practical terms for Southeastern Massachusetts, if you’re reading this in mid-June or later and pre-emergent hasn’t been applied yet, you’ve likely missed it. The window varies by a few weeks depending on the year, but it doesn’t stretch into summer.
What can you do right now? A few things:
Post-emergent spot treatment. If crabgrass is just starting to appear, certain post-emergent products can knock back young plants. This is a targeted approach, not a lawn-wide solution, but it can help with localized outbreaks.
Keep mowing high. Crabgrass is an opportunist nuisance grass. It moves into thin, stressed, closely mowed turf. Keeping your grass at 3 to 3.5 inches through the summer creates natural competition that slows crabgrass spread and helps existing grass fill in bare spots.
Start planning for fall and next spring now. This is honestly the most important thing you can do. The customers who have the cleanest, crabgrass-free lawns in May are the ones who got on our program the previous fall, or at minimum signed up in early in the year for spring service.
Why Other Lawn Care Companies Often Get the Timing Wrong
This is a frustrating reality that we hear about from customers all the time.
There are two main ways timing goes wrong with less attentive lawn care providers.
1. They Simply Apply Too Late
Some companies — especially high-volume national brands operating on rigid schedules — simply have more lawns to cover than their crews can realistically handle. When a warm early spring compresses the pre-emergent window and your property is toward the end of the route list, you might get your application in April when it should have been applied in March.
2. They Apply by the Calendar Instead of Conditions
Other companies may play it a little safer by going earlier — but without checking soil conditions. They pick a calendar date, say April 1st, and apply across the board regardless of whether temperatures are where they need to be.
This sounds fine at first, but pre-emergent has a residual window. It doesn’t last forever. If it goes down too early and the product breaks down before crabgrass germinates, you’re back to square one.
Good pre-emergent timing means watching actual soil temperatures, adjusting based on the current year’s spring weather pattern, and understanding the microclimates within the service area. A lawn in Scituate near the water may need a different application date than a lawn in Attleboro, even in the same spring season.
Start Now — We’ll Make Sure You’re Covered Next Year
If you’re sitting here in the thick of summer watching crabgrass creep into your lawn, we want you to know something: this is fixable, and you’re not too late to do something about it.
You’re just too late for this year’s pre-emergent. That ship has sailed. But what you do right now — the decisions you make in June thru September determine exactly how different next spring looks.
Here’s what we recommend:
Get on our program now. Our VitaminLawn program includes pre-emergent crabgrass control as part of the annual plan. When you sign up now, we get you into our schedule for this fall, set you up for early spring service next year, and make sure you’re never scrambling in March again.
Fall aeration and overseeding helps too. One of the best long-term defenses against crabgrass is a thick, dense stand of desirable grass. Crabgrass struggles to take hold when the turf is competitive. Core aeration and overseeding helps build that density going into next season.
We’ll track the timing for you. This is the part that trips most homeowners up — knowing exactly when conditions are right. That’s our job. When you’re a Lawn Squad customer, you don’t have to watch weather apps or look up soil temperature maps. We’re already doing that.
Lawn Squad of Southeastern Massachusetts is locally owned and operated and we have spent years building our reputation in this community. We understand the nuances of Southeastern Massachusetts soil, the way spring unfolds differently from town to town, and what it takes to get a pre-emergent application down at the right time — not just the right time on a corporate schedule, but the right time for your specific lawn.
The Bottom Line
Pre-emergent crabgrass control here has a narrow window. Once that window closes, it’s closed for the season. If you’ve already lost it this year, don’t spend money on products that won’t work — and don’t let another spring sneak up on you the same way.
The smartest move you can make right now is to get ahead of it. Call us, get a free quote, and let us build a program that has your lawn protected before the first crabgrass seed even thinks about germinating next spring.
Because the homeowners who win the crabgrass battle aren’t the ones reacting in June. They’re the ones who made a phone call the summer before.
Ready To Get Ahead Of Crabgrass Next Season?
Call Lawn Squad of Southeastern Massachusetts at 774-295-1455 or request a free quote online using our easy contact form. We would love the opportunity to serve you, and your lawn will thank you!