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Lawn Care & Mowing in Tucson

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Typical price: $35–$900

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Lawn Care & Mowing prices in Tucson

Researched estimates for Tucson (USD), adjusted for city size from national ranges. Updated 2026.
Job size Low Typical High
Small lawn mow (under 1/8 acre) Mow, trim, edge, and blow for a small city or townhouse lot on a recurring schedule $35 $55 $90
Standard suburban lawn mow (1/8-1/4 acre) Full mow-trim-edge-blow visit for a typical suburban lot $50 $75 $130
Large lot mow (1/2 acre+) Larger properties needing ride-on equipment and longer visits $100 $160 $300
First cut / overgrown lawn recovery Double-cutting, bagging, and hauling clippings on a neglected lawn $80 $150 $350
Annual treatment program (6-8 applications) Fertilization plus pre/post-emergent weed control for an average lawn, per year $300 $500 $900

How to hire a lawn care & mowing pro in United States

  1. Get 2-3 per-visit quotes based on your lot size — most providers quote from aerial imagery without visiting
  2. Verify general liability insurance (at least $1M is the industry norm); ask for a certificate of insurance, not just a verbal yes
  3. If you want fertilization or weed control, confirm the applicator holds your state's pesticide applicator license (required in all 50 states for commercial application)
  4. Check whether your state requires a contractor or business license for landscape maintenance — some states and many cities require a local business license
  5. Confirm what's included: mowing, string trimming, edging, and blowing is the standard bundle; bagging clippings is usually extra
  6. Agree the rain policy and off-season schedule in writing before setting up auto-pay
  7. For HOA neighborhoods, check the HOA's noise-hour and equipment rules before scheduling

Routine mowing generally requires only a local business license, but commercial application of fertilizers and pesticides requires a state pesticide applicator license in every state, issued by the state department of agriculture. Some states (e.g., California via the C-27 landscape contractor license) require contractor licensing once work goes beyond maintenance.

Budgeting first?

See the full breakdown of what drives lawn care & mowing prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.

Lawn Care & Mowing cost guide for United States

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to be home for a lawn mowing visit?

No, and most recurring customers aren't. The provider needs unlocked gate access, pets kept inside, and toys or hoses cleared from the lawn. Agree a notification system (message on arrival/completion, photo of the finished lawn) so you can verify visits you don't witness — this matters if you're paying per visit automatically.

Do lawn services work in winter or the off-season?

In cool climates most mowing providers switch to leaf clearing, gutter and tidy-up work, or pause service entirely from late autumn. In warm climates mowing continues year-round at reduced frequency. Check whether your contract auto-pauses in the off-season or keeps billing — that clause is the most common source of disputes.

How much does lawn mowing cost per visit?

A standard residential mow — cut, edge trim, and blow-off — is priced per visit, and the price depends mainly on lawn size, slope, and how overgrown the grass is. Expect the low end for a small flat lawn on a recurring schedule, and 2-3x that for a large or neglected lawn. One-off cuts always cost more per visit than a fortnightly or weekly contract because the provider can't amortise travel time.

How do I get an accurate lawn mowing quote?

Give the provider your approximate lawn area (front and back separately), whether there are slopes, obstacles like trampolines or beds, gate width (ride-on mowers need wide access), and when it was last cut. Photos or a pin on a map are usually enough — most providers in Tucson will quote from aerial imagery without a site visit.

How often should a lawn be mowed?

In peak growing season, every 1-2 weeks; in shoulder seasons, every 2-4 weeks; in winter or dry-season dormancy, often not at all. A good provider adjusts frequency rather than cutting dormant grass. Never let more than a third of the blade height be removed in one cut — that's the practical test for whether you've waited too long.

Do lawn care companies in the US need a license?

For basic mowing, usually just a local business license. But anyone applying pesticides or herbicides commercially — including standard weed-and-feed programs — must hold a state pesticide applicator license. Ask for the license number before signing up for a treatment program; you can verify it with your state's department of agriculture.

How do US lawn treatment programs like the big national brands price out?

National treatment programs typically sell 6-8 applications per year, priced by lawn square footage, commonly $50-$100 per application for an average suburban lawn. Local independents often match the program for 10-20% less. Either way the mowing itself is a separate service — treatment programs don't include cutting.

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