I've been maintaining my lawn in the Reading area for over a decade now, and if there's one thing I've learned, it's that most mowing advice online is written for American climates. Our UK growing season is completely different — milder winters, wetter springs, and those July dry spells that catch everyone off guard. The schedule I follow has been refined through years of trial, error, and the occasional scalped patch I'd rather not talk about.
This guide is the month-by-month calendar I actually use. Whether you're a first-time homeowner staring at an overgrown patch or you've been mowing for years but want to get more out of your lawn, this should help.
| Month | Mow? | Frequency | Height | Key Tasks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | No | — | — | Service mower, check drainage |
| February | No | — | — | Plan repairs, order seed and feed |
| March | Yes (late) | Once | 50–60mm | First light cut, highest setting |
| April | Yes | Weekly | 40–50mm | Apply spring feed, start edging |
| May | Yes | Twice weekly | 30–40mm | Weed control, stripe creation |
| June | Yes | Weekly | 25–35mm | Raise height if dry, evening mowing |
| July | Yes | Weekly (or less) | 40mm+ | Mulch clippings, reduce in drought |
| August | Yes | Weekly (or less) | 40mm+ | Water early morning, brown grass isn't dead |
| September | Yes | Weekly | 35–45mm | Scarify, aerate, overseed |
| October | Yes (early) | Fortnightly | 50mm | Final cut mid-late month, clear leaves |
| November | No | — | — | Clean and store mower |
| December | No | — | — | Stay off frozen or waterlogged grass |
A quick note: these timings are based on the south of England. If you're in Scotland, the north of England, or at altitude, shift everything forward by two to three weeks in spring and back by the same in autumn.
I know it's tempting. You look out the window on one of those oddly mild February afternoons and think the grass could do with a tidy-up. Resist the urge. The ground is almost certainly too soft, and you'll do more damage with compaction than you'll gain from a trim.
Wait until soil temperature reaches around 6°C consistently. For most of southern England, that's the second or third week of March. Further north, late March or early April.
If you've got a cordless mower, fully charge the battery a day or two before. Cold-stored lithium batteries don't deliver full power immediately.
April is when your lawn suddenly remembers it's alive. Growth accelerates rapidly with rising temperatures, longer days, and April showers.
This is when battery life really matters for cordless owners. Thicker, wetter grass makes the motor work harder.
May is when your lawn looks its absolute best — if you've been keeping on top of things.
Every summer there's a stretch where lawns turn brown and people panic on gardening forums. Here's what actually matters:
Arguably the most important month for lawn care. The heat stress is over, rain returns, and the grass kicks into a second growth flush.
Petrol mowers: Run tank dry or add stabiliser. Change oil while warm. Clean deck. Sharpen/replace blade. Replace air filter and spark plug.
Cordless mowers: Clean deck and blade. Charge battery to 40-50%. Store battery indoors — cold permanently degrades lithium-ion cells. The mower body is fine outside.
The lawn: Keep clearing leaves. Stay off frozen/waterlogged grass. Note any fungal patches for spring treatment.
| Grass Type | Ideal Height | UK Context |
|---|---|---|
| Perennial Ryegrass | 25–40mm | Most common UK lawn grass. Hard-wearing, quick to establish. |
| Fine Fescue | 15–25mm | Shade-tolerant, formal lawns. Doesn't handle heavy traffic. |
| Bent Grass | 10–20mm | Bowling greens, putting greens. Requires cylinder mowing. |
| Meadow Grass | 30–50mm | Spreads via rhizomes, fills gaps naturally. Good for family gardens. |
Mid-to-late March for most of England and Wales. Late March to early April in Scotland and northern England. The key indicator is consistent soil temperature above 6°C.
25–40mm during peak season (May–June), 40–50mm at the start and end. Never cut more than a third of the blade length in one mow.
Not ideal, but sometimes unavoidable — this is the UK. Raise the height, go slowly, clean the deck immediately. Don't mow waterlogged ground.
During drought (July-August), yes — they act as mulch. The rest of the year, collect and compost. If your mower has a mulching function, use it in dry conditions.
Early evening. Dew has dried, heat is fading, grass has overnight to recover. Avoid morning dew and midday heat. Also means fewer noise complaints.