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Fort Worth, Texas Lawn Care Guide

Local advice tuned to USDA Zone 8a, your frost dates, and Fort Worth-specific climate.

Fort Worth Quick Facts

USDA Zone: 8a
Annual Rainfall: 36"
First Frost (avg): Nov 22
Last Frost (avg): Mar 14
Top Grasses: Bermudagrass, St. Augustinegrass, Zoysiagrass
Neighborhoods Covered: TCU/West 7th, Arlington, Keller, Southlake, Mansfield

Quick Answer

Lawn care in Fort Worth, Texas centers on matching turf practices to lawn care in Fort Worth's warm-season grass climate and USDA zone 8a[1]. First-fall frost averages Nov 22 and last-spring frost averages Mar 14[2], which sets the working growing-season length for any lawn here. The realistic grass list — Bermudagrass, St. Augustinegrass, and Zoysiagrass[3] — and the recurring pest pressure from white grubs and chinch bugs[4] are what shape the local calendar.

Key Takeaways

  • USDA zone 8a places Fort Worth in warm-season grass territory[1].
  • The default grass for most Fort Worth lawns is Bermudagrass; secondary pick: St. Augustinegrass[3].
  • Frost window: first-fall Nov 22; last-spring Mar 14[2].
  • Recurring local pressure: white grubs and chinch bugs[4].

Climate Snapshot

Fort Worth sits in USDA zone 8a[1], with a warm-zone grass profile. The combination of Nov 22 first-fall frost and Mar 14 last-spring frost[2] sets the working growing-season length, and 36" of annual rainfall determines how much supplemental irrigation a lawn here needs[6].

  • USDA zone: 8a
  • First fall frost (avg): Nov 22
  • Last spring frost (avg): Mar 14
  • Annual rainfall: 36"
  • Grass zone: warm-season

Best Grass Types for Fort Worth

Most established Fort Worth lawns are some variety of Bermudagrass, St. Augustinegrass, and Zoysiagrass[3].

For most Fort Worth homeowners the default choice is the first species listed — it matches the local climate and is what nurseries and sod farms in the area carry. St. Augustinegrass is a reasonable second pick for shaded yards or higher-traffic lawns[4].

Local Seasonal Calendar

Timing matters more than effort in Fort Worth. The annual calendar:

  • Pre-emergent — Late February - Early March; aligned to Fort Worth's last-frost window (Mar 14)
  • Active fertilization — April through September
  • Aeration / overseeding — May-June
  • Dormancy — December-February (warm-season grasses)

These windows shift slightly with elevation and microclimate[2]; the state-level guide for Texas covers the broader pattern.

Watering and Irrigation

Fort Worth gets roughly 36" of rainfall a year, enough to carry a lawn through most months without irrigation. Plan to supplement during the hottest 6–8 weeks of summer with 0.75"–1" per week once established. Track the local forecast — if a week brings 1" or more, skip the sprinklers.[6]

Mowing in Fort Worth

For most Fort Worth lawns, mowing height tracks the dominant warm-season grass. Bermudagrass typically wants a cutting height of 1.5"–2.5" — taller in heat, shorter when overseeding. Mow weekly during peak growth and never remove more than one-third of the blade in a single pass. Sharp mower blades matter more in hot, humid air, where ragged cuts open the door to fungal disease.[4]

Common Local Challenges

Worth knowing before you plant or treat in Fort Worth:

  • Seasonal water variability — 36" of annual rainfall in Fort Worth clusters into specific months, so irrigation timing matters more than total volume
  • Bermudagrass as the realistic default — USDA zone 8a in Fort Worth narrows the sensible grass list down to a few warm-season species adapted to local heat
  • white grubs — the most-reported turf pest in Fort Worth per the local extension service

Fort Worth homeowners watch for white grubs and chinch bugs more than other pests[4]. For the most current IPM and turf bulletins, see Texas A&M AgriLife — Tarrant County[3].

Parent Guide

Zoom out to Lawn Care in Texas for the state-level rhythm.

Sources

  1. USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map — Hardiness zones that determine which grasses overwinter locally.

2. NOAA Climate Normals 1991–2020 — 30-year frost-date and rainfall baselines for the metro.

3. Texas A&M AgriLife — Tarrant County — Local turf and pest guidance for Fort Worth.

4. Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Turf Program — State-level turfgrass program and seasonal timing bulletins.

5. Texas A&M AgriLife Extension — State cooperative extension lawn-care publications.

6. Scotts Lawn Care — Consumer turf-care product research.