Is a Lawn Care Business Profitable? Free Calculator
Lawn care looks like an easy side hustle — low barrier to entry, cash in hand, no boss. But between equipment costs, fuel, seasonal gaps, and the wear and tear on your body, many lawn care operators earn less than minimum wage. This calculator shows your real hourly wage and tells you what's holding you back.
Your Numbers
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❌ Don't do this yet. At these numbers, this business would earn you just $56.6k/year — that's $27/hour for your time. There are fundamental problems that need fixing first.
Stuck on cash: You'll hit $-3,144 — a negative cash balance — before you break even. You need at least $4.1k more in startup capital to survive the ramp.
Key Numbers
What If...
Move the sliders to see how changes affect your earnings.
Cash Over 24 Months
Frequently asked questions
How much does a lawn care business owner make?+
A lawn care business owner typically nets between $28,000-$55,000 per year after expenses. Income depends heavily on price per yard ($40-$80 typical), number of yards per week, seasonal consistency, and equipment costs. Many owners find they earn below minimum wage once equipment maintenance and unpaid travel time are factored in.
How much does it cost to start a lawn care business?+
Basic startup costs range from $3,000-$8,000. Essential equipment: lawn mower ($500-$3,000), string trimmer ($150-$400), blower ($200-$500), trailer ($1,000-$3,000), and basic hand tools ($100-$300). Many owners underestimate ongoing costs: fuel, blades, oil changes, and repairs add 10-20% to annual expenses.
What is a good profit margin for a lawn care business?+
Lawn care businesses typically have 60-80% gross margins after direct costs (fuel, equipment maintenance). Net margins fall to 15-30% after fixed costs like insurance, vehicle payments, and marketing. The seasonal nature means summer profits must cover winter months — making cash flow management critical.
This is an estimate based on the numbers you entered, not investment or tax advice. Consult a CPA or financial advisor for your specific situation.
Lawn Care Business Profitability — Industry Overview
The lawn care industry generates over $105 billion annually (IBISWorld OD5613, 2026). Over 600,000 businesses, most solo operators. Seasonal cash flow is the #1 challenge.
Lawn care businesses operate on 60-80% gross margins. Equipment is the biggest risk — a $3,000 mower lasts 3-5 years. Many operators don't factor replacement into pricing.
70-80% of income comes between April and October. The cash flow gap is the top reason lawn care businesses fail in their first two years.
Typical Cost Structure
| Cost | Monthly | % Rev |
|---|---|---|
| Fuel & maintenance | $200-$500 | 8-15% |
| Equipment depreciation | $100-$300 | 5-8% |
| Transportation | $200-$600 | 8-12% |
| Insurance | $30-$80 | 2-5% |
| Marketing | $50-$300 | 3-8% |
| Off-season savings | $500-$2,000 | 15-25% |
Why Lawn Care Businesses Fail
Seasonal cash flow trap
Earn $4,000/mo in summer but $1,500 in winter. Must save $2,500/mo during peak. The cash curve in the calculator above shows your 24-month balance.
Not charging for equipment wear
$60 lawn cut minus gas ($9), depreciation ($6), truck ($5), insurance ($3) = $37. At 45 min/yard, that's less than a regular job.
Physical limits
5-6 yards/day max in summer heat. Rain days lose 10-15% of working days. Be realistic with jobs per week input in the calculator.
Related Tools & Guides
Industry data: IBISWorld OD5613 (2026), SBA Office of Advocacy.