Updated daily

Colorado soil temperature

Estimated 2–4 inch soil temperature, statewide average . Based on NOAA weather stations near representative Colorado locations.

What this soil temperature means for your Colorado lawn

The current Colorado reading loads from today's R2 snapshot. Use the live value above or enter your ZIP code for a location-specific recommendation.

Estimated soil temperature at Colorado locations

ZIP code Est. soil temp Data through
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Values load from each ZIP's nearest NOAA station in the current R2 snapshot. Enter your own ZIP above for a reading closer to home.

How Colorado compares to the rest of the country

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Estimated 2–4 inch soil temperature by state . Tap a state for its detailed page.

About Colorado lawns

Colorado is in USDA Hardiness Zones 3b-7a, with a dry western-season lawn climate. Common grass types include Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, Buffalo Grass, Blue Grama Grass.

These estimates are modeled from air temperature (about ±5°F at 2–4 inch depth — methodology). For local agronomic guidance, see the Colorado State University Extension.

Common Colorado soil temperature questions

What is the current soil temperature in Colorado?

This page shows a statewide estimated 2–4 inch soil temperature for Colorado, recomputed daily from NOAA weather station records, plus per-ZIP estimates for representative Colorado locations. Enter your ZIP code for the reading nearest you.

At what soil temperature should I apply pre-emergent in Colorado?

Apply pre-emergent when Colorado soil temperatures approach 55°F at a 2–4 inch depth in spring — crabgrass germinates as soil holds 55°F and above. In Colorado that typically happens mid-april to early may.

What soil temperature does grass seed need in Colorado?

Cool-season grasses germinate best in 50–65°F soil, while warm-season grasses want 65–80°F. Common Colorado lawns (Kentucky Bluegrass, Tall Fescue, Buffalo Grass, Blue Grama Grass) should be seeded when soil enters the right range for their type — check the current estimate above.

How accurate is this Colorado soil temperature estimate?

It is modeled from air temperatures with a published lag model, not measured by in-ground sensors, and is typically within about ±5°F at 2–4 inch depth. Shade, moisture, and snow cover shift real readings; for precise numbers use a soil thermometer or Colorado State University Extension resources.

Soil temperature in nearby states