Detail of soil rolls on the lawn after aeration
Lawn Aeration Services

Professional Lawn Aeration

Revitalize your lawn with professional aeration services. We help air, water, and nutrients reach the roots for a healthier, thicker lawn.

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What Is Aeration?

Understanding Lawn Aeration

Lawn aeration is the process of creating small holes in the soil to allow air, water, and nutrients to penetrate the grassroots. This simple but effective treatment can transform a struggling lawn into a lush, healthy one.

Pulls Soil Plugs

Aeration removes small cores of soil from your lawn

Reduces Compaction

Loosens tightly packed soil that blocks root growth

Reaches Roots

Air, water, and nutrients can reach deep into the roots

Benefits

Why Aerate Your Lawn?

Healthier, Thicker Grass

Aeration promotes denser grass growth for a more lush appearance.

Better Fertilizer Absorption

Nutrients penetrate deeper into the soil where roots can use them.

Improved Root Growth

Roots grow deeper and stronger in loosened, oxygen-rich soil.

Less Water Runoff

Water absorbs more efficiently instead of running off the surface.

Repairs Thin Lawns

Helps restore damaged or thinning lawns to full health.

Reduces Thatch

Breaks down thatch buildup naturally over time.

Timing

When to Aerate Your Lawn

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Early Spring

Aerate in early spring when grass begins actively growing. This helps your lawn recover quickly and absorb nutrients for the growing season ahead.

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Fall (Best Time)

Fall is ideal for cool-season grasses. Aerate in early to mid-fall, then overseed for best results. Your lawn has time to recover before winter.

Does Your Lawn Need It?

Signs Your Lawn Needs Aeration

Hard or Compact Soil

If soil feels firm underfoot, it's compacted and needs aeration.

Water Pooling

Water that sits on the surface instead of soaking in indicates compaction.

Thinning Grass

Grass that's thinning or turning yellow may not be getting enough nutrients.

Heavy Foot Traffic

Lawns with lots of kids, pets, or parties get compacted quickly.

Thatch Buildup

A thick layer of dead grass (>1/2 inch) blocks water and air.

New Home Lawns

Newly built homes often have heavily compacted soil from construction.

Frequency

How Often Should You Aerate?

Most Lawns

Once a year is sufficient for most residential lawns to maintain healthy soil.

1x Per Year

High-Traffic Lawns

Lawns with heavy use from pets, kids, or frequent gatherings may need extra care.

1-2x Per Year
After Aeration

What to Do After Aeration

Overseeding

Fill in bare spots and thicken your lawn by spreading grass seed after aeration. The holes provide perfect seed-to-soil contact.

Fertilizing

Apply fertilizer right after aeration so nutrients can reach the roots directly. This maximizes the benefit for your lawn.

Watering

Keep your lawn consistently moist after aeration. Water daily for the first week to help grass recover and seeds germinate.

Why Us?

Why Hire a Professional?

Deeper Plug Removal

Professional aerators pull deeper soil cores (3-4 inches) compared to rental machines, providing better results.

Even Coverage

We ensure consistent coverage across your entire lawn, avoiding missed spots or overlap that can damage grass.

Saves Time & Effort

Aeration is hard work! Let us handle it while you relax. We'll do the job right in a fraction of the time.

Ready to Transform Your Lawn?

Contact us today to schedule your lawn aeration and help your grass grow thicker and healthier.