A lawn seed calculator tells you exactly how many pounds of grass seed you need based on your lawn area, grass type, and whether you are starting a new lawn, overseeding, or repairing bare spots. Enter your dimensions below to get instant seed amounts, bag counts, estimated cost, and planting tips — no guesswork required.
Grass Seed Estimator
Seed Calculation Breakdown
Planting Guide
Keep the seeded area consistently moist for the first 2-3 weeks. Water lightly 2-3 times per day until seedlings are established.
Seeding Rate Reference
| Grass Type | New Lawn lbs/1,000 sq ft |
Overseed lbs/1,000 sq ft |
Season | Germination |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kentucky Bluegrass | 2-3 | 1-1.5 | Cool | 14-30 days |
| Perennial Ryegrass | 8-10 | 4-5 | Cool | 5-10 days |
| Tall Fescue | 8-10 | 4-5 | Cool | 7-12 days |
| Bermuda Grass | 1-2 | 0.5-1 | Warm | 7-14 days |
| Zoysia Grass | 1-2 | 0.5-1 | Warm | 14-21 days |
| Fine Fescue | 4-5 | 2-2.5 | Cool | 7-14 days |
| Centipede Grass | 0.25-0.5 | 0.13-0.25 | Warm | 14-28 days |
How to Use the Lawn Seed Calculator
Buying the right amount of grass seed saves money and produces better results. Too little seed leaves thin, patchy coverage that invites weeds. Too much seed creates overcrowded seedlings that compete for water and nutrients, leading to a weaker lawn. This lawn seed calculator uses published seeding rates for seven popular grass types to give you precise pound amounts, bag counts, and cost estimates in seconds.
Step 1: Enter Your Lawn Area
Type your lawn area in square feet directly, or use the length-times-width helper to calculate it from two measurements. For irregular-shaped lawns, break the area into rectangles, calculate each one, and add them together. If your lawn is roughly 50 feet wide and 100 feet long, your total area is 5,000 square feet. The calculator accepts any positive number.
Step 2: Select Your Grass Type
Choose the grass species you plan to plant from the dropdown. Each type has a different seeding rate based on seed size — small-seeded grasses like Bermuda and Centipede need far less weight per square foot than large-seeded grasses like Tall Fescue and Perennial Ryegrass. If you are unsure which grass to choose, consider your climate: cool-season grasses (Kentucky Bluegrass, Fescue, Ryegrass) thrive in northern regions, while warm-season grasses (Bermuda, Zoysia, Centipede) are best for southern climates.
Step 3: Choose Your Application Type
Select one of three application types. New Lawn uses the full seeding rate for establishing grass on bare soil. Overseeding uses 50% of the new lawn rate, ideal for thickening an existing lawn. Bare Spot Repair uses 150% of the rate to ensure dense coverage on exposed patches where seeds face tougher growing conditions.
Step 4: Review Your Results
The calculator shows your total seed needed in pounds (with 10% overage included), the number of bags in four common sizes (3 lb, 7 lb, 25 lb, 50 lb), and estimated cost based on your price per pound. The planting guide section shows germination time, best planting season, and mowing height for your selected grass seed type. Use the reference table below the calculator to compare rates across all grass types at a glance.
Tips for Successful Seeding
Prepare the soil before seeding by removing debris and loosening the top inch with a rake. Spread seed evenly using a broadcast spreader for large areas or by hand for small patches. Cover seed lightly with a thin layer of straw mulch or peat moss to retain moisture and protect from birds. Water lightly two to three times per day until seedlings are established, typically two to three weeks. Avoid mowing until the grass reaches at least three inches tall.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this lawn seed calculator free to use?
Yes, the lawn seed calculator is completely free with no signup, no ads gating results, and no limits on calculations. All math runs in your browser so your lawn details stay private on your device.
Is my data private when I use this tool?
Absolutely. Every calculation runs locally in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No lawn dimensions, grass type selections, or personal data are ever sent to a server. Your information stays completely private.
How much grass seed do I need per 1,000 square feet?
It depends on the grass type. Kentucky Bluegrass needs 2-3 lbs per 1,000 sq ft for a new lawn, while Tall Fescue and Perennial Ryegrass need 8-10 lbs. Bermuda and Zoysia only need 1-2 lbs, and Centipede grass needs just 0.25-0.5 lbs. Overseeding uses half these rates.
What is the difference between overseeding and new lawn seeding rates?
Overseeding is spreading seed over an existing lawn to fill in thin spots, using about 50% of the new lawn rate since you already have established grass. New lawn seeding starts from scratch on bare soil and requires the full seeding rate for complete coverage.
When is the best time to plant grass seed?
Cool-season grasses like Kentucky Bluegrass, Fescue, and Ryegrass are best planted in early fall (September-October) or early spring. Warm-season grasses like Bermuda, Zoysia, and Centipede should be planted in late spring to early summer when soil temperatures are consistently above 65 degrees.
How long does grass seed take to germinate?
Germination time varies by grass type. Perennial Ryegrass is the fastest at 5-10 days. Bermuda takes 7-14 days, Tall Fescue 7-12 days, Kentucky Bluegrass 14-30 days, and Zoysia is the slowest at 14-21 days. Keep the seed consistently moist during this period.
Why does the calculator add 10% extra seed?
The 10% overage accounts for seed lost to wind, uneven spreading, birds eating seed, poor germination rates, and areas that may need reseeding. This buffer ensures you have enough to achieve full, even coverage without a second trip to the store.
Should I use more seed for bare spot repair?
Yes, bare spot repair uses about 150% of the normal new lawn seeding rate. The extra seed compensates for the exposed soil conditions where seeds face more challenges from wind, rain washout, and lack of existing root structure to hold moisture.