Reliable Lawn Mowing for Frisco Homeowners
If you've lived in Frisco for more than one summer, you already know: North Texas grass doesn't slow down. Bermuda explodes in May. St. Augustine creeps over every edge by July. And HOAs across Frisco — from Stonebriar to Phillips Creek Ranch to Newman Village — are quick to send a letter if the yard gets ahead of you.
Our Frisco lawn mowing service is built for that reality. We mow on a fixed schedule, at the correct height for your grass type, with sharp blades and a finishing pass on every edge. The yard looks done — not just cut — when we leave.
- Mowing at the correct height for Bermuda, St. Augustine, or Zoysia
- Edging along walks, driveways, and curbs for crisp definition
- Line-trimming around beds, fences, trees, and obstacles
- Full blow-off of driveways, sidewalks, and patios
- Bag or mulch — your call, or our recommendation based on conditions
Weekly vs. Biweekly: What's Right for Your Frisco Lawn?
The short answer: weekly from April through October, biweekly in March and November. Here's why.
Why weekly works best in peak season
Frisco summers run hot and wet enough that warm-season grasses (Bermuda, Zoysia) put on serious growth between Tuesday and Friday. Skipping a week means scalping — cutting more than one-third of the blade — which stresses the turf, turns it brown, and invites weeds. Weekly mowing keeps the cut shallow, the color even, and the lawn dense enough to crowd out crabgrass and dallisgrass before they take hold.
When biweekly is fine
In early spring and late fall, growth slows enough that every other week is plenty. We'll move you to a biweekly schedule automatically when the season calls for it — and back to weekly when it ramps up — so you're never paying for a mow you don't need.
HOA-heavy neighborhoods
If you live in an HOA-managed community (Phillips Creek Ranch, Newman Village, Stonebriar, Starwood, The Trails of West Frisco), weekly is almost always required to stay under the "neat and trimmed" standard. We know the rules and mow accordingly.
What Lawn Mowing Costs in Frisco, TX
Most Frisco homeowners pay between $40 and $80 per visit for weekly or biweekly mowing. Pricing depends on:
- Lot size — sub-6,000 sq ft front-and-back is on the low end; quarter-acre and up runs higher
- Slope and obstacles — pools, play sets, and steep berms add labor
- Grass type — St. Augustine and Zoysia need more careful handling than Bermuda
- Frequency — recurring weekly customers get the best rate; one-time visits run higher
We give a free, no-pressure quote after a quick site walk — and we lock the price in writing, so there are no "fuel surcharge" or "this week was extra long" surprises on your invoice.
Why Frisco Homeowners Pick Us
We Show Up
You're on the schedule. Same day of the week, every week. If weather pushes a route, you get a text — not a no-show.
Sharp Blades, Clean Cuts
Dull blades shred grass and brown the tips. Ours are sharpened on rotation so every cut is clean — and your lawn stays green.
HOA-Ready Finish
Edged walks, trimmed beds, blown driveways. The yard looks done from the curb — not just mowed.
Lawn Mowing FAQ
How much does lawn mowing cost in Frisco?
Most Frisco yards fall in the $40–$80 per visit range for weekly or biweekly mowing, depending on lot size, slope, and grass type. Larger lots in Prosper or Celina, or yards with heavy obstacles, can run higher. Quotes are always free and locked in writing.
How often should I mow my Frisco lawn?
Weekly from April through October, biweekly in March and November. Most HOA-managed neighborhoods in Frisco require weekly during peak season to stay compliant.
Do you bag or mulch?
Both, depending on conditions and your preference. We mulch when the lawn is dry and growth is moderate — it returns nitrogen to the turf. We bag after rain, leaf-fall, or if a yard is overgrown.
What if it rains on my mowing day?
We push to the next dry day on the route and text you the new ETA. We don't mow soaked St. Augustine — it tears the crown and leaves wheel ruts.
Do you offer one-time mows?
Yes. One-time visits are great for vacation prep, pre-listing refreshes, or HOA-violation deadlines. Recurring customers get a better rate.
Can you handle an overgrown yard?
Yes — overgrown clean-ups are one of our most common one-time jobs. We may need to make two passes at different heights to avoid stressing the turf.