When to overseed your lawn
in Louisiana
Enter your Louisiana ZIP code. We'll tell you the best time to overseed your lawn based on real weather station data and estimated soil temperature.
Data details
What to buy for this result
Some links are sponsored. We may earn a commission, but your ZIP result determines which product type we show.
Tall Fescue Seed + Starter Food
Tall Fescue Seed + Starter Food
Scotts Turf Builder Rapid Grass
Best fit: Transition-zone and southern cool-season lawns; heat and drought tolerance
Check the label, coverage area, and current price before you buy.
Coarser blade than bluegrass; will not spread to fill bare spots on its own
Sun & Shade Seed Mix
Sun & Shade Seed Mix
Jonathan Green Black Beauty / Scotts Landscaper’s Mix
Best fit: Northern lawns with mixed sun and shade; general-purpose overseeding
Check the label, coverage area, and current price before you buy.
Mixed-species blends establish unevenly if the seedbed is not kept moist
Starter Fertilizer (24-25-4)
Starter Fertilizer (24-25-4)
Scotts Turf Builder Starter Food
Best fit: Phosphorus boost for root development in newly seeded areas
Check the label, coverage area, and current price before you buy.
Check local rules — some states restrict phosphorus except on new seedings
How Soil Temperature Predicts Overseeding Success
Grass seed germination is driven by soil temperature, not air temperature or the calendar. Cool-season grasses like tall fescue, perennial ryegrass, and Kentucky bluegrass germinate best when soil in the seed zone holds 50–65°F. This tracker estimates 2–4 inch soil temperature for your ZIP code from daily NOAA air-temperature records using a published lag model, then tells you where you stand relative to that germination window. In most of the country the window opens in late summer as soils cool back through 65°F — warm enough for fast germination, cool enough that seedlings aren’t cooked by summer heat.
Overseeding Soil Temperature Thresholds
Why Overseeding Timing Matters
Seed too early and summer heat, disease, and crabgrass competition kill young seedlings. Seed too late and grass germinates slowly — or not at all — and winter arrives before roots establish. Fall-seeded lawns get warm soil for fast germination plus cool air and fewer weeds for establishment, then a second spring growth window before their first summer. Timing also interacts with herbicides: most pre-emergents block grass seed just like weed seeds, so an overseeding plan changes what you can spray and when.
About Louisiana Lawns
Louisiana is in USDA Hardiness Zones 8a-9b. Common grass types include St. Augustine Grass, Bermuda Grass, Centipede Grass, Zoysia Grass.
For more lawn care information specific to Louisiana, visit the LSU AgCenter.
Common Louisiana overseeding questions
When should I overseed your lawn in Louisiana?
Use estimated soil temperature tracking for precise overseeding timing in Louisiana. Enter your ZIP code for a location-specific recommendation based on real weather data.