Brown Patches in Your Lawn? Here’s Exactly Why (And How to Fix It)
Lawn Care Guide

Brown Patches in Your Lawn?
Here’s Exactly Why
— And How to Fix Each One

Most homeowners treat the wrong problem and make it worse. Here are the 5 real causes and the exact fix for each one.

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The Mistake Most Homeowners Make

When you see brown patches, the instinct is to water more. But here’s the problem — overwatering is actually the cause of two of the five issues on this list. Treating the wrong cause doesn’t just fail to work, it actively makes the problem spread.

Before you spend money on products at the hardware store, you need to know which of these five things you’re actually dealing with. Each one has a different look, a different cause, and a completely different fix.

🔍 What You’ll Learn

How to identify each cause by its specific visual symptoms — so you know exactly what you’re dealing with before you do anything.

🛠 What You’ll Get

The exact fix for each cause, plus an honest assessment of which ones you can DIY and which ones need a professional to stop the spread.

Brown Patches: What’s Actually Causing Yours

1

Fungal Disease

⚠️ Spreads fast — act quickly

Fungal brown patches are the most commonly misdiagnosed lawn problem. They appear as circular patches with a distinctive darker ring around the outside edge. Up close, the grass blades will look water-soaked, slimy, or matted at the base.

This gets significantly worse in hot, humid weather — especially if you’re watering in the evenings. The moisture sitting overnight creates the perfect environment for the fungus to spread.

The Fix

A fungicide application + switching to early-morning watering only so the lawn dries during the day. Fungal disease spreads fast — if you’re seeing multiple circles forming, this is one where early professional treatment saves your lawn.

⚠️ If you see more than 2–3 circles forming, call a professional before the next rain — fungal disease can spread across an entire lawn in days.
2

Grub Damage

🔍 Easy to diagnose with one test

Grubs eat the root system of your grass from underground. The lawn looks dead because it essentially is — there are no roots holding it down. Here’s the test: go to a brown patch and try to peel the grass back like a piece of carpet. If it lifts away from the soil with almost no resistance, you have grubs.

You’ll often notice other signs too — birds, skunks, or raccoons digging at your lawn. They can smell the grubs underneath and are hunting them.

The Fix

Grub control treatment applied late spring to early summer is most effective. If you’re already seeing damage, a curative treatment can stop the spread but the dead areas will need to be reseeded afterward.

3

Drought Stress

💧 Often caused by incorrect watering

Drought stress looks different from the other causes — the browning is more widespread and uniform rather than in distinct circles or patches. The grass blades fold in on themselves lengthwise, which is the plant’s natural response to conserve moisture. A telltale sign: your footprints stay visible in the lawn longer than usual.

The Fix

Deep, infrequent watering — 2 to 3 times per week, reaching 6 inches deep. Early morning only. Important: if your lawn has been brown for more than 3–4 weeks it may have gone dormant, and overwatering a dormant lawn invites disease. Not sure if it’s dormant or dead? A quick call to a lawn professional can save you from a costly mistake.

4

Pet Urine

🐕 Easy to identify by the ring pattern

Pet urine patches are easy to identify: small, irregular spots with a darker green ring around the outside. That ring is actually caused by nitrogen in the urine acting like a diluted fertilizer at the edges, while the concentrated center burns the grass.

The Fix

Flush affected areas heavily with water as soon as possible after your dog goes — dilution is the key. For larger dead areas, the grass usually needs to be removed and reseeded. If this is a recurring issue, a lawn care professional can set up a treatment rotation that keeps things looking good despite it.

5

Compacted Soil & Thatch Buildup

📉 The slow killer most homeowners miss

Thatch is the layer of dead grass and organic matter that builds up between the soil and the living grass blades. When it exceeds half an inch, it acts like a mat — blocking water, air, and nutrients from reaching the roots. Compacted soil does the same thing at the root level.

This shows up as a slow, uniform decline across the whole lawn rather than distinct patches. The grass just looks tired, thin, and dull over time.

The Fix

Core aeration — a machine pulls small plugs of soil out of the ground, opening channels for water and air to penetrate. Combined with dethatching for thatch buildup. Typically done in fall, but possible in spring depending on your grass type. This is the most high-impact lawn health service most homeowners put off until it’s a problem.

Identify Your Problem in 30 Seconds

Use this table to match what you’re seeing to the cause:

What You See Most Likely Cause Urgency
Circular patches with dark outer ring Fungal disease 🔴 Act within days
Grass peels back like carpet Grub damage 🔴 Treat this week
Widespread brown, folded blades, footprints visible Drought stress 🟡 Adjust watering now
Small irregular spots with green ring Pet urine 🟡 Flush & reseed
Whole lawn looks thin, tired, dull Compaction / thatch 🟢 Schedule aeration

Not Sure Which One You Have?
Get a Free Assessment.

A professional can identify the cause in a few minutes over the phone and get you on the right treatment plan before it spreads further.

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⏳ Spring treatment window is limited — the sooner you call, the better your results this season

Real Results from Real Lawns

★★★★★

“I had been watering more for weeks thinking that was the problem. One call and they identified it as fungal disease immediately. Two weeks later my lawn looks completely different.”

Mark T.
Homeowner
★★★★★

“The grub test they described — peeling back the grass — that was the moment I knew exactly what I was dealing with. Called right away and they had a treatment plan same week.”

Sandra L.
Homeowner
★★★★★

“After two years of a sad-looking lawn I finally got it aerated and dethatched. Should have done it years ago. Night and day difference before the summer even started.”

David R.
Homeowner

Questions Homeowners Ask Us

How quickly do brown patches spread?+
Fungal disease can spread to cover an entire lawn within a week in warm, humid conditions. Grub damage spreads more slowly but accelerates in summer. The sooner you identify and treat the correct cause, the better your outcome.
Can I fix this myself or do I need a professional?+
Drought stress and pet urine patches can often be managed at home. Fungal disease, grub infestations, and compaction typically benefit from professional treatment — the wrong product or timing can waste money and cause more damage.
What does a free lawn assessment involve?+
A quick phone conversation where we ask a few questions about what you’re seeing. Based on your description, we can usually identify the likely cause and recommend the right treatment approach. No obligation, no upselling — just a clear answer.
When is the best time to treat brown patches?+
As soon as you notice them, ideally. Most lawn problems are significantly easier and cheaper to treat early. Spring is a critical treatment window — problems ignored now typically worsen through summer and require more aggressive treatment in fall.
Do you treat all grass types?+
Yes. Treatment protocols vary by grass type — Bermuda, Zoysia, Fescue, St. Augustine, Kentucky Bluegrass, and others all have slightly different needs. That’s one reason a professional assessment is valuable — the right treatment depends on what type of grass you have.

Don’t Let It Spread Another Week

Most of these problems double in size if left untreated. A free 5-minute call could save your entire lawn this season.

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Results may vary. Individual lawn conditions differ.