Minneapolis is in USDA Zone 4b. Kentucky Bluegrass lawns here grow best when fertilized september–october. Here's your complete schedule.
Kentucky Bluegrass
Best Grass
Zone 4b
Hardiness Zone
September–October
Fertilize
7,200 sq ft
Avg. Lot Size
A year-round fertilization plan for Kentucky Bluegrass lawns in Zone 4b. Adjust based on your lawn's condition and soil test results.
Early Fall (September)
This is the most important feeding for Kentucky Bluegrass in Minneapolis. Cool nights + warm soil = peak growth.
Late Fall (November)
Apply before the first hard freeze in Minneapolis. Builds root reserves for spring green-up.
Early Spring (April)
Don't go heavy — you want root growth, not top growth. Half the fall rate is plenty.
Late Spring (May)
Last feeding before summer heat. Kentucky Bluegrass slows down in Minneapolis's warm months.
The most common mistake Minneapolis homeowners make is fertilizing at the wrong time. Kentucky Bluegrass grows most aggressively in fall, so that's when it can absorb the most nutrients. Spring fertilizing is secondary.
Before you buy fertilizer, know your lawn size. The average Minneapolis lot is 7,200 square feet, but that includes your house, driveway, and patio. Use LotSite to measure just the grass area — then plug that number into our fertilizer calculator to get the exact bags you need.
For a 7,200-square-foot lot in Minneapolis, you'll typically need 2–4 bags of fertilizer per application depending on the product. Over-fertilizing wastes money and can burn your lawn — measuring accurately saves both.
Enter your address to measure your exact lawn area — then get the right amount of fertilizer.