Lawn care pricing guide · 2026

How should you price lawn care?

Most companies price per cut by lot size — a typical residential mow runs $40–$80 as of 2026, with large or rural properties priced per acre ($45–$90/acre). A practical rule many operators use is roughly $1 per minute of total job time against a firm minimum. Region, terrain, obstacles, and route density move it.

Ranges reflect typical U.S. residential pricing as of 2026 · Varies by region, terrain, and access

Lawn care pricing by lot size and service

Typical per-visit ranges for a complete mow (mow, trim, edge, blow) as of 2026. Terrain, obstacles, growth, and route density move every line. Acreage rates drop as the property grows.

Lot / serviceTypical rangeNotes
Small lot (under ~5,000 sq ft)$35–$50At or near your minimum charge
Average residential (¼ acre area)$45–$70The bread-and-butter cut
Large residential (¼–½ acre+)$60–$100+More mowing and trimming time
Per acre (large/rural)$45–$90/acreRate drops as acreage rises
Minimum charge$35–$45Covers the drive on any stop
Add-ons (aeration, fert, cleanup)Priced separatelyNot part of the per-cut price

National ballparks for residential mowing; metro and HOA work runs higher. Always price from your real machine cost, labor, and time on site.

Lawn care lives and dies on time and drive distance, not lawn beauty. A $50 cut next door to your last stop beats a $75 cut twenty minutes away. The operators who win this trade price each lawn from its real time on site, hold a firm minimum, and build routes that keep the truck moving.

Pricing per cut by lot size

The standard residential model is a flat price per cut, set by lot size and growth. As of 2026, a small lot sits near your minimum ($35–$45), an average quarter-acre yard runs $45–$70, and larger lots push $60–$100+. Underneath the lot-size shorthand, what you're really pricing is time: mowing minutes plus trimming, edging, and blowing.

A reliable gut-check that experienced operators lean on is roughly $1 per minute of total job time — a 50-minute complete service points to about $50. Use lot size to quote fast, then sanity-check against the clock. And never quote below your minimum charge: a tiny lawn still costs you a drive, a setup, and a teardown.

Pricing per acre for large and rural properties

Once a property is too big for residential lot pricing, switch to per acre. A common 2026 range with commercial equipment is $45–$90 per acre, and the rate falls as acreage rises because your fixed costs — mobilization, drive time, unloading — spread across more ground. The first acre often carries a higher effective rate to cover showing up.

Open, flat, obstacle-free fields mow fast and price at the low end. Slopes, wet ground, fence lines, trees, and heavy trimming all add time and push the rate up. As always, confirm the number against your real machine-and-labor cost per hour — acreage that looks easy from the road can hide a lot of string-trimming.

What's included vs what's an add-on

For most residential mowing, bundle the complete service into one price: mow, string-trim, edge, and blow off the hard surfaces. Customers expect a finished look, and quoting each step separately reads as nickel-and-diming. What you do price separately are the genuine extras:

  • Bagging and hauling clippings (vs mulching in place)
  • Fertilization and weed control (a separate program with its own visits)
  • Aeration and overseeding (seasonal, equipment-heavy)
  • Leaf cleanup (fall, priced by volume or time)
  • Bed maintenance, mulch, and shrub trimming

Spell out exactly what the cut includes on the quote. A clear scope prevents the "I thought you did the beds too" conversation that quietly erodes your margin.

Per-cut vs seasonal contract pricing

Per-cut is simple and flexible, but your income rides the weather — a slow August or an early frost hits the bank account directly. Seasonal or annual contracts fix that: total the year's expected visits, then bill in equal monthly installments. You get smooth cash flow, the customer gets a predictable bill, and you're paid through the slow months when the grass barely grows.

Many established operators move recurring clients onto flat monthly contracts and reserve per-cut pricing for one-time and as-needed work. The key is to build the contract from your expected visit count — count the cuts realistically, because a long, wet growing season shouldn't be the month you lose money on the deal.

Route density: the real profit lever

Here's what the per-cut price alone hides: drive time is unpaid time. The closer your stops, the more lawns you finish in a day, and the more each cut actually earns. A tightly clustered route can make a $45 lawn more profitable than a $70 lawn across town.

So build density deliberately: set service days by neighborhood, offer a small incentive when a customer's neighbor signs on, and price isolated or far-out properties higher to pay for the drive. The most profitable lawn companies aren't always the ones charging the most per cut — they're the ones whose trucks barely stop moving.

Quote it, route it, get paid for it

The money in lawn care is in volume and rhythm — the right stops in the right order, recurring billing that runs itself. Claver for lawn care lets you save per-lot and per-acre pricing, quote on the spot, set recurring visits or seasonal contracts with monthly billing, and collect by card or auto-pay so you're mowing instead of chasing checks. See it on the lawn care page or the feature tour.

Lawn care pricing — FAQ

How should you price lawn care?
Most lawn care companies price per cut by lot size, with a typical residential mow running $40 to $80 as of 2026 — small lots near $35 to $45, and large or quarter-acre-plus yards $60 to $100-plus. Large and rural properties are priced per acre, often $45 to $90 per acre after the first. A practical rule many operators use is roughly $1 per minute of total job time, set against a firm minimum charge. Region, terrain, obstacles, and route density move the number.
How much should I charge per acre to mow?
For larger properties mowed with commercial equipment, a common 2026 range is $45 to $90 per acre, with the rate dropping as acreage rises because setup and drive time get spread over more ground. The first acre often carries a higher effective rate to cover mobilization. Open, flat, obstacle-free fields price at the low end; sloped, wet, or trimmed-heavy acreage prices higher. Always confirm against your real machine and labor cost per hour.
Is edging, trimming, and blowing included in the price?
For most residential mowing, a complete service — mow, string-trim, edge, and blow off hard surfaces — is bundled into one per-cut price, because customers expect a finished look and quoting each piece separately feels nickel-and-dime. What is usually charged separately are true add-ons: bagging and hauling clippings, fertilization and weed control, aeration, leaf cleanup, bed maintenance, and shrub trimming. Spell out what the cut includes so there is no dispute.
Should I use per-cut or seasonal contract pricing?
Per-cut billing is simplest and flexible, but income swings with the weather and the season. Seasonal or annual contracts — where you total the year's expected visits and bill in equal monthly installments — smooth your cash flow, lock in the customer, and pay you in slow months. Many established operators move recurring clients onto flat monthly contracts and reserve per-cut pricing for one-time or as-needed work. Build the contract from your expected visit count so a long growing season does not cost you.
Why does route density matter for lawn pricing?
Drive time between jobs is unpaid time, so the closer your stops are, the more lawns you finish per day and the more each cut earns you. A tightly clustered route can make a $45 lawn more profitable than a $70 lawn 25 minutes away. Many operators offer a small incentive to add a neighbor, set service days by neighborhood, and price isolated or far-out properties higher to cover the drive. Density, not just the per-cut price, is what drives daily profit.

Price the cut. Keep the truck moving.

Save per-lot and per-acre rates, quote on the spot, run recurring or seasonal billing, and get paid automatically. Claver Pro is free forever — start in minutes, no card required.

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