Crabgrass doesn’t wait for summer.
By the time you notice it, it’s already too late.
That patchy, aggressive grass that seems to take over overnight? It actually started planning its comeback months ago—long before most homeowners are even thinking about lawn care.
If you’ve battled crabgrass before, you already know how frustrating it can be. Let’s break down why it keeps coming back—and what actually stops it.
Crabgrass is an annual weed, which means it dies off every fall.
Sounds like good news, right?
Not exactly.
Before it dies, a single crabgrass plant can drop thousands of seeds into your lawn. Those seeds sit quietly in your soil all winter, waiting for the right conditions to come back strong in the spring.
Once soil temperatures consistently hit around 55°F, those seeds start to germinate.
And here’s the key:
You won’t see it happening.
By the time crabgrass becomes visible, it’s already established—and much harder to control.
A lot of homeowners take a reactive approach:
“I’ll deal with it if I see it.”
That’s exactly what crabgrass is counting on.
Post-emergent treatments (what you apply after it’s visible) can help, but they’re not nearly as effective as stopping it before it starts. Once crabgrass matures, it spreads quickly and competes aggressively with your lawn for:
At that point, control becomes more about damage limitation than prevention.
Crabgrass prevention is all about timing.
The most effective approach is applying a pre-emergent treatment before seeds germinate. That creates a barrier in the soil that stops crabgrass from ever breaking through the surface.
In New England, that window typically falls in:
Miss that window, and you’re playing catch-up the rest of the season.
Not all crabgrass prevention is equal.
For it to work consistently, a few things need to line up:
Too early, and it breaks down before seeds germinate.
Too late, and crabgrass has already started growing.
Missed spots = crabgrass breakthroughs.
It doesn’t take much.
Thin lawns give crabgrass room to grow.
Thick, healthy turf is one of the best natural defenses.
Skipping a season resets the problem.
Those seeds don’t go away on their own.
If crabgrass seems worse in your yard than your neighbor’s, there’s usually a reason.
Common factors include:
Crabgrass is opportunistic. It looks for openings—and it finds them.
Stopping crabgrass isn’t about a single application.
It’s about setting your lawn up to outcompete it.
That includes:
When your lawn is strong, crabgrass has nowhere to go.
Crabgrass isn’t random.
It’s predictable—and preventable.
But only if you get ahead of it.
If you wait until you see it, you’re already behind. The key is stopping it before it ever has a chance to show up.
At Mainely Grass, we focus on timing, consistency, and building lawns that naturally resist weeds like crabgrass.
If you want a lawn that fills in instead of getting taken over, we can help you get there.