Free calculator
Grass Seed Calculator
Use this grass seed calculator to estimate seed pounds and bag count from lawn area, grass type, project type, bag weight, waste, and optional bag cost. It keeps seed-rate assumptions visible so you can compare the result with the label before buying.
EstimateEstimate only; use the seed label and local lawn conditions for final purchase planning.
Project inputs
Estimate
21 lb of tall fescue seed
Tall fescue at 8 lb per 1,000 sq ft needs about 21 lb for 2500 sq ft, or 3 bags at 10 lb each.
Printable material list
Estimate- Tall fescue21 lbnew lawn rate plus 5% extra
- Seed bags3 10-lb bagsround up and keep the label for final rate
- Seed cost placeholder$126.00$42/bag assumption
- Starter fertilizer or soil preplabel basednot included in the seed pounds
Estimate only. Always compare this result with the seed label, local extension guidance, and actual lawn conditions.
Visible defaults
Assumptions
- Rates are planning values in pounds per 1,000 square feet.
- New lawn and overseeding use different default rates.
- Bag count is rounded up to whole bags.
- The seed label is the final source for product-specific application rates.
Math
Calculation details
- Seed pounds = area / 1,000 x selected seed rate.
- Waste is added after the base seed amount.
- Bag count = pounds needed / bag weight, rounded up.
What this grass seed calculator estimates
Grass seed is usually labeled by pounds per 1,000 square feet, but homeowners often start with a lawn shape, a bag size, and a project type. This calculator bridges that gap. Enter the seedable area, choose new lawn or overseeding, pick a grass type, and it estimates pounds, bags, and optional cost.
The tool is useful for repairing bare areas, planning overseeding, or sizing a new lawn seed purchase. It is not a lawn diagnosis. Germination depends on seed quality, soil temperature, water, seed-to-soil contact, shade, traffic, and timing. The calculator gives a planning quantity; the product label and local conditions still matter.
New lawn versus overseeding
A new lawn usually needs more seed because the goal is to establish coverage on mostly bare soil. Overseeding uses less seed because existing grass already occupies part of the area. If your lawn is mostly bare, use the new lawn setting. If it has established turf with thin spots, overseeding is usually the closer planning category.
Do not raise the rate indefinitely to compensate for poor preparation. Too much seed can create crowded seedlings that struggle for light and water. Better results usually come from soil preparation, correct timing, watering, and using the label rate rather than simply dumping more seed on the lawn.
Formula used
The calculator divides lawn area by 1,000 and multiplies by the selected seed rate. It then adds the extra seed percentage and divides by bag weight to get whole bags. For example, 2,500 sq ft of tall fescue at 8 lb per 1,000 sq ft needs 20 lb before extra seed. With 5 percent extra, the estimate becomes 21 lb.
Seed rates in the selector are common planning values, not universal rules. Blends vary. Coated seed may have a different effective coverage than uncoated seed. Warm-season and cool-season grasses differ. If the product label gives a rate for your use case, enter a scenario that matches the label or use the calculator result only as a cross-check.
Measuring lawn area
For a rectangular lawn, multiply length by width. For irregular areas, divide the lawn into rectangles, triangles, or circles and add them. Exclude driveways, patios, planting beds, tree rings, and areas you will not seed. If a section is heavily shaded or irrigated differently, consider estimating it separately because the grass type or rate may change.
Online maps can help with a rough area, but a tape measure or wheel is better for small yards. The difference between 2,000 and 2,500 sq ft can be several pounds of seed, which can change the number of bags and the spreader setup.
Planning the material list
The printable list includes seed pounds, whole bags, seed rate, and optional cost. It does not include starter fertilizer, straw, compost, top soil, lime, irrigation supplies, or rental equipment. Those items depend on soil test results, the season, and how much preparation the lawn needs.
Before buying, compare the calculator output with the bag label. Labels often include separate rates for new lawns, overseeding, repair, and specific spreader settings. Keep the label after purchase so you can set the spreader and document what was applied.
Common mistakes
The biggest mistake is estimating the entire lot instead of the seedable lawn. Another is using a new lawn rate for light overseeding, which can waste seed and crowd seedlings. A third is ignoring germination conditions. Seed quantity alone does not fix compacted soil, poor watering, or planting outside the recommended season.
This calculator intentionally avoids yield promises. It helps you buy a reasonable amount of seed, but the lawn result depends on preparation and care. For persistent bare spots, drainage problems, steep slopes, or disease concerns, get local guidance before reseeding the same way again.
Quick reference
Seed rate by grass type (lb per 1,000 sq ft)
| Grass type | New lawn | Overseeding |
|---|---|---|
| Tall fescue | 8 lb | 4 lb |
| Kentucky bluegrass | 3 lb | 1.5 lb |
| Bermuda grass | 2 lb | 1 lb |
| Perennial ryegrass | 7 lb | 4 lb |
| Sun & shade mix | 6 lb | 3 lb |
Planning rates only. Always use the rate printed on the label for the seed product you buy.
FAQ
Grass Seed Calculator FAQ
How do I calculate grass seed needed?
Divide lawn area by 1,000, multiply by the seed rate for the grass type and project type, then add a small extra allowance. Divide by bag weight and round up for bag count.
How much grass seed for 1,000 square feet?
It depends on grass type and whether you are seeding a new lawn or overseeding. Tall fescue might use about 8 lb per 1,000 sq ft for a new lawn and 4 lb for overseeding.
Can I use the same rate for overseeding and a new lawn?
Usually no. Overseeding rates are lower because existing turf is still present. New lawns usually need more seed to establish coverage on bare soil.
Should I buy extra grass seed?
A small extra allowance can cover spreader overlap and missed areas. The calculator defaults to 5 percent. Avoid using a very high extra amount unless the label or local guidance supports it.
Does coated seed change the calculation?
It can. Coated seed products may have different coverage and label rates than uncoated seed. Use the bag label as the final guide for that product.
Does this include fertilizer or straw?
No. The calculator estimates seed only. Starter fertilizer, straw, compost, top soil, lime, and watering supplies should be planned separately.
Methodology
Who built and reviewed this estimate
Keep planning

