Boston · MA Licensed · Fall & Spring 2026

Let your lawn
breathe again. Aeration quoted by the square foot.

Compacted soil suffocates your lawn. Draw your lawn area on the map — we calculate plugging density and labor instantly. No site visit.

Licensed MA · Core + spike options · 10 towns
Licensed MA
Core & spike aeration
Overseed add-on
Fall & spring service
How it works

Three steps from map to mowed.

No site visit, no sales call. Quote in 90 seconds, schedule before you close the tab. We arrive with the right machine and the right plug pattern for your soil density.

Draw your lawn area on the map.

Pin your address. Trace the lawn polygon — front, side, back. Subtract beds, driveway, paths.

Pick aeration type & overseed.

Core hollow-tine (deepest, removes plugs) or solid spike (gentler, no cleanup). Add overseed for thickness.

Instant price & schedule.

Square footage × density × labor. Lock in your fall slot or spring window without a phone call.

Aeration types

Two methods. One bundle that wins fall.

Pricing scales linearly with square footage. Below are typical small-to-medium Boston lots — the calculator will refine to your exact area, slope, and access.

Gentler · No cleanup

Spike aeration

Solid tine. Punches holes without removing soil. Faster, no plugs on the lawn afterwards.

From $129·
  • Up to 3,000 sq ft included at base price
  • No plugs to clean up — same-day curb appeal
  • Best for sandy soil, light compaction, sloped lots
  • Recommended interval: 2× per year
Best value

Aerate + overseed bundle

Core aeration plus same-day overseed with a Boston cool-season blend. The thick-lawn move.

From $299·
  • Core aeration + overseed in one visit
  • Northeast tall fescue + Kentucky bluegrass blend
  • Seed falls into fresh aeration holes — 3× germination
  • Best timed Sept–Oct for Boston
Why aerate

The thick-lawn fix is under the surface.

Boston soils sit on glacial till and decades of construction backfill. Without aeration, water runs off, roots stay shallow, and crabgrass wins.

Soil compaction

Foot traffic, mowers, and clay tighten the top 4 inches. Aeration breaks the seal so roots can push down.

Air, water, nutrients

Open channels let oxygen in and let fertilizer and rainfall reach the root zone instead of running into the street.

Stronger root system

Roots that reach 6+ inches survive August droughts without irrigation rescue. Deep roots = drought tolerance.

Thatch reduction

Aeration cores expose thatch to microbes that break it down naturally — no power-rake scarification needed.

Best timing

Two windows. Pick one — don't skip both.

Boston's cool-season grasses (fescue, bluegrass, rye) recover fastest when soil temperatures are 55–65°F. That's a narrow window in the Northeast.

Best · Fall window

September – October.
Best for Boston cool-season lawns.

Soil is still warm, air is cool, weeds are dying back. Aeration + overseed in fall produces the thickest spring green-up of any combination — by a wide margin.

JFMAMJ JASOND
Alternative · Spring window

April – early May.
Second-best for established lawns.

Use spring aeration if you missed fall, or for warm-season patches. Skip overseed in spring — pre-emergent crabgrass control conflicts with germination.

JFMAMJ JASOND
Service area

Ten Boston towns. No travel surcharge inside the line.

  • Brookline
  • Newton
  • Cambridge
  • Somerville
  • Arlington
  • Belmont
  • Watertown
  • Lexington
  • Medford
  • Winchester
Coverage
10 Towns
Typical lot quoted
5,200 sq ft median
Booking lead time
7 Days · in season
FAQ

Questions every first-time customer asks.

If you don't see your question, the chat in the corner of the quote page is staffed by the crew lead, not a chatbot. Real answers in business hours.

How often should I aerate my lawn?
For Boston-area cool-season lawns: once a year is the standard, every fall. If you have heavy clay, high foot traffic, or a sloped lot, twice a year (fall + light spring spike) is worth it. Sandy or freshly-installed lawns can stretch to every other year.
Core vs. spike — which one for me?
Core if you have clay, compaction, or thatch > ½ inch — it physically removes soil to break the seal. Spike if you have sandy soil, a steep slope where cores would roll off, or you simply can't have plugs on the lawn for a week. Most Boston lots want core; the calculator recommends one based on your address.
Can you overseed the same day?
Yes — and you should. Seed dropped onto a freshly aerated lawn falls into the holes, where it gets soil contact, moisture, and protection from birds. Germination rates run roughly 3× higher than broadcast seeding alone. The bundle is priced for exactly this.
When can kids and pets back on the lawn?
Aeration alone: immediately. The cores are mineral soil, not chemical. If we overseed, we'd ask you to keep heavy traffic off the lawn for 2–3 weeks while seedlings establish. Light foot traffic (mailman, kid retrieving a soccer ball) is fine.
Are the soil plugs supposed to stay on the lawn?
Yes. Hollow-tine plugs break down on their own in 1–2 weeks under normal Boston rainfall and the next mow knocks them flat. Removing them removes the topsoil microbes that decompose thatch — defeats half the point. They're a feature, not litter.
Best grass types for the Boston area?
The Northeast cool-season trio: tall fescue (drought-tolerant, our highest blend percentage), Kentucky bluegrass (the deep green you remember from childhood), and perennial ryegrass (germinates fast, stitches in bare patches). Our overseed mix is tuned to roughly 60 / 25 / 15 by weight.
One quote away

The secret to a thick lawn is underground.

Draw your lawn on the map. We'll quote in 90 seconds and book your fall slot before October fills up.