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Lawn Care Tips to Get Your Yard Ready for Spring and Summer

The grass is always greener when you get an early jump on lawn care for the season

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A top down view of a green lawn bordered by a curved garden edge, Echo SRM-2620 string trimmer, and the Ego ZT4205S riding mower.
The right tools help you get a lush, manicured lawn with an even cut and clean edges. Shown: Echo SRM-2620 string trimmer (top) and Ego ZT4205S riding mower (bottom).
Photos: Getty Images, Manufacturers

No matter what the recent weather has been in your area, now’s the time to start thinking about your yard so that it looks its best this spring and summer.

Start off by assessing your lawn equipment (like your lawn mowerstring trimmerleaf blower, and other gear).

“Retailers discount old outdoor power equipment inventory to make way for new models,” says Courtney Pennicooke, a CR market analyst who oversees these product categories.

And even if you can’t snag a deal, shopping now ensures that you’ll get the broadest selection of this year’s stock.

Below, we have tips for getting your property ready for greener days, as well as ratings and reviews for top-performing lawn mowers and string trimmers in case you’re in the market for a new machine.

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1. Check Your Lawn Mower and String Trimmer

Start your gas lawn mower and string trimmer to make sure they’re running well. If you properly winterized the equipment, the machines should be ready to get to work.

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If you didn’t winterize the gear, don’t start the mower or trimmer—circulating stale fuel could create problems, and then you’d have to drain the lines. Instead, remove the gasoline from each tank using a dedicated turkey baster. Then fill tanks with fresh fuel and stabilizer. Now you can test your tools.

If any problems occur, take the equipment to the service center now; you’ll get your gear back sooner and before you really need to use it.

2. Test Your Soil

More than 100 land-grant schools in the U.S. have an extension service that will perform soil testing for a small fee. You can find the closest office to your home through the Extension Foundation, a membership-based nonprofit designed to support, modernize, and fuel the U.S. Cooperative Extension’s advancement.

The results you receive will tell you about the nutrients in your soil and the soil’s pH balance. Handling it this early will help you make informed decisions about fertilizing and treating pH.

If your soil has a low pH, meaning it’s acidic, you can spread lime now. If you have high alkaline soil, add elemental sulfur. Either way, you’ll benefit from spring rains, which will help the soil absorb what you’ve laid down. But you’ll want to tackle the testing now—sending in samples and waiting for results can take several weeks.

3. Clear Leaves and Debris

While it’s generally fine to leave the leaves where they are in the fall, large dense swaths of yard debris can block the sun from reaching your lawn, making it difficult for grass to sprout at all. If you didn’t use a leaf blower last fall, do some cleanup now.

Use the collected leaves for compost. Better still, mulch the fallen leaves with the mulching kit or attachment for your lawn mower or tractor. The churned-up clippings will feed your lawn and reduce the amount of fertilizing.

4. Apply Fertilizer

Bags of fertilizer display three numbers separated by hyphens. The numbers refer to the ratio among nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K), in that order. Again, your soil test will tell you which nutrients your soil is lacking.

For grasses planted and intended for cooler northern climates, apply at least one fertilizer application in spring (if needed). Bagged fertilizer is best distributed with a spreader, either a push model or a snap-on version that attaches to your riding mower.

5. Repair Walkways and Edging

Winter can be brutal on pavers, walkways, and driveways. Aside from damage done by your snow blower or a plow, frost heave—the natural freeze-and-thaw cycle—can split concrete and knock stones out of whack. To keep water out and help prevent a problem from worsening, seal any new gaps in concrete with concrete crack filler.

Secure loose pavers or patio stones temporarily. If the damage is extensive, consider having a landscape contractor dig up and reset the stones, making sure to start 6 inches below the soil line to minimize shifts from future frost heave. Tackling this project now, while pros are less busy, may cost a bit less than booking a repair at the height of the season.

Great Lawn Mowers

Looking for a new lawn mower? Here are great battery, gas, and riding lawn mowers that cut like champs.

Stellar String Trimmers

Looking for a new string trimmer? Here are great battery, gas, and corded string trimmers that trim grass like pros.


Paul Hope

Paul Hope is a Home & DIY Editor at Consumer Reports and a trained chef. He covers ranges, cooktops, and wall ovens, as well as grills, drills, outdoor power tools, decking, and wood stains. Before joining CR in 2016, he tested kitchen products at Good Housekeeping and covered tools and remodeling for This Old House magazine. You’ll typically find him in his old fixer-upper, engrossed in a DIY project or trying out a new recipe.