Free lawn tool

Lawn Fertilization Calculator

Estimate exactly how many pounds of fertilizer product and how many bags you need for a Missouri cool-season lawn. Enter your lawn size, target nitrogen rate, bag N-P-K analysis, and preferred application schedule.

  • Built for tall fescue and other cool-season lawns
  • Shows both total product needed and per-application breakdown
  • Includes fall-heavy timing guidance for St. Charles County and Missouri lawns
Inputs

Enter your lawn details

Measure only the turf you plan to fertilize.

Most Missouri cool-season lawns land around 2.5 to 4.0 lb N per 1,000 sq ft annually.

Examples: 24-0-10, 28-0-3, 18-24-12. The calculator uses the first number as nitrogen percentage.

Use the bag weight printed on the package.

Missouri cool-season lawns usually respond best to lighter spring feeding and heavier fall applications.

Outputs

Your fertilizer plan

Total nitrogen needed 15.0 lb N
Total product needed 62.5 lb
Exact bags needed 1.56 bags
Bags to buy 2 bags
Recommended timing: light spring feeding, then heavier September and late-October applications for cool-season lawns.
Timing % of annual N Product needed N delivered

How the math works

If your bag is 24-0-10, it is 24% nitrogen. To deliver 1 pound of nitrogen, you need about 4.17 pounds of product. The calculator multiplies your annual nitrogen goal by lawn size, then converts that into product weight and bag count.

Missouri timing guidance

For St. Charles County cool-season lawns, most nitrogen should go down in early fall and late fall. Spring applications should stay modest so you do not push soft top growth right before summer stress.

When to call a pro

If your lawn also needs weed control, aeration, overseeding, or help reading a soil test, it is often worth bundling the work into a recurring lawn care program instead of guessing on timing.

FAQ

Lawn fertilization calculator questions

What nitrogen rate should I use for a Missouri cool-season lawn?

Most tall fescue lawns in Missouri fall in the 2.5 to 4.0 pounds of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet per year range, but the right number depends on soil test results, irrigation, mowing quality, and how much growth you want to manage.

Why does the calculator care about the first number in N-P-K?

The first number is nitrogen percentage. A 24-0-10 bag is 24% nitrogen, so a 40-pound bag contains 9.6 pounds of actual nitrogen.

When should I fertilize a cool-season lawn in Missouri?

The heaviest feeding window is usually September through late October. Spring applications should generally be lighter than fall applications, especially for tall fescue lawns heading into hot Missouri summers.