Mowing Calculator — How Long Will It Take to Mow My Lawn? | ZonedGarden
FREE · INSTANT RESULT · Time, Frequency & Cost

Mowing Calculator — How Long Will It Take?

Find out exactly how long it takes to mow your lawn, how often you should mow by season, and how much fuel or battery life you need. Enter your lawn size and mower type — instant result, no maths required.

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Seasons Covered
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Mowing Calculator — Time & Frequency
Enter your lawn area and select your mower type. The calculator estimates mowing time, how often to mow, and fuel or battery usage for a single session.
Lawn area (m²)
Mower type
Season / Grass growth rate
Lawn complexity
Estimated mowing time
Recommended frequency
Times per year
Fuel / battery per session
5 Mower Types — push, petrol, ride-on, robot, cylinder Seasonal Frequency — spring through winter Fuel & Battery — usage per session estimated Free, No Account — instant result
HOW IT WORKS

How to Use the Mowing Calculator — 3 Steps

Get your mowing time estimate in under a minute. Works for any lawn size or mower type.

Enter Your Lawn Area

Type in your lawn area in square metres. If you do not know the exact figure, use the ZonedGarden Lawn Area Calculator to measure it first — it takes two minutes and gives you the number you need. For a quick estimate, pace out the length and width of your lawn and multiply the two numbers together. A 10m × 6m lawn is 60 m².

Takes 30 seconds

Select Your Mower and Season

Choose the mower type that matches your equipment — push, rotary petrol, ride-on, robot, or cylinder. Then select the current season. Spring means fast growth and more frequent mowing; winter means very slow growth and infrequent cuts. The season setting adjusts the recommended mowing frequency and annual cut count. Select the complexity of your lawn to account for obstacles, borders, and narrow sections that slow mowing time.

Takes 20 seconds

Get Your Mowing Estimate

Your estimated mowing time appears immediately, along with how often you should mow for the current season, the total number of mows per year, and the approximate fuel or battery usage per session. Use the time estimate to plan your day, and the frequency to set a recurring reminder. The annual mow count is useful for budgeting fuel costs over the year or comparing the running cost of different mower types.

Takes 5 seconds
SEASONAL MOWING GUIDE

When to Mow Your Lawn — Full Year Schedule

Grass growth varies significantly by season. Mowing at the right frequency keeps your lawn healthy and prevents scalping or letting it grow too long before cutting.

🌱 Spring (March–May)
Spring is peak mowing season. Grass grows rapidly as temperatures rise and rainfall increases. Begin mowing as soon as growth starts — typically when grass reaches 5–6 cm. Set the mower on a high cut for the first two mows of the year (30–40 mm) to avoid scalping winter-weakened turf. From mid-April, mow every 5–7 days. Never remove more than one-third of the grass height in a single cut — this stresses the lawn and encourages weeds to establish in weakened areas.
Every 5–7 days
☀️ Summer (June–August)
Growth slows slightly during dry summer periods. In a typical UK summer, mow every 7–10 days. During drought or extended dry spells, raise the cutting height to 40–50 mm and reduce mowing frequency — closely mown grass under heat stress browns faster and takes longer to recover. Avoid mowing in the hottest part of the day. If summer rainfall is high, revert to a 5–7 day cycle. Leave grass clippings on the lawn during dry spells to return moisture and nutrients to the soil.
Every 7–10 days
🍂 Autumn (September–November)
Growth continues through September and October, slowing as temperatures drop below 10°C in November. Mow every 10–14 days from September. Gradually raise the cutting height as autumn progresses — ending the season at 40–50 mm protects grass crowns from winter frost. The last cut of the year typically falls in late October or early November depending on your region. In mild southern areas, you may get another cut in December. Collect clippings in autumn rather than leaving them — wet cuttings mat down and encourage disease.
Every 10–14 days
❄️ Winter (December–February)
Grass grows very slowly or stops entirely when soil temperatures fall below 5°C. Avoid mowing on frosty mornings — walking on frozen turf or cutting frost-covered grass causes cell damage that shows as brown patches for weeks. If there is an unusually mild spell and grass reaches 6–7 cm, a single high cut (40–50 mm) is acceptable. Most lawns need zero to one mow between December and February. Use winter to service your mower: sharpen blades, change oil, and check the air filter so it is ready for the spring rush.
0–1 times (only if needed)
MOWER TYPES COMPARED

Which Mower Is Fastest for Your Lawn Size?

Different mowers cover ground at very different speeds. Use this table to compare mowing times for your lawn size.

Mower typeCutting widthSpeed (m²/min)Best for lawn sizeFuel / power cost (per mow)
Manual push (hand reel)30–35 cm3–5 m²/minUp to 30 m²£0 (no fuel)
Electric rotary (corded)32–38 cm6–9 m²/min20–60 m²£0.05–0.10 (electricity)
Cordless battery rotary38–46 cm7–10 m²/min30–80 m²£0.05–0.15 (charging)
Petrol rotary (push)41–51 cm8–12 m²/min50–150 m²£0.30–0.60 (petrol)
Self-propelled petrol46–53 cm12–18 m²/min80–300 m²£0.40–0.80 (petrol)
Cylinder mower (electric)30–40 cm5–8 m²/min20–80 m² (fine lawns)£0.05–0.10
Ride-on / tractor mower76–122 cm40–80 m²/min300 m²+£1.00–2.50 (petrol)
Robot mower (autonomous)18–28 cmContinuous overnightUp to 800 m²£0.02–0.05/day (electricity)
Speed tip
These figures are for cutting time only. Add 20–30% for turning, emptying the grass box, and navigating around obstacles. A 60 m² lawn takes a petrol rotary 5–8 minutes of cutting but 10–15 minutes total including setup and finishing.
KEY FACTORS

What Affects How Long It Takes to Mow a Lawn?

Mowing time is not just about lawn size. These factors can double or halve the time it takes.

Cutting Width of Your Mower

The single biggest factor after lawn size is the mower's cutting width. A mower with a 46 cm deck covers 53% more area per pass than a 30 cm machine. If you regularly mow a lawn over 80 m² and still use a narrow push mower, upgrading to a wider deck is the fastest way to cut mowing time in half. Every extra 10 cm of cutting width reduces mowing passes by approximately 20% on a rectangular lawn.

Obstacles and Lawn Shape

Every tree, flower bed, garden ornament, or irregular edge adds turning time and requires careful mowing around it. A simple open rectangle with no obstacles can be mowed in a consistent parallel pattern with minimal turns. A lawn broken up by eight flower beds, a pond, and a garden path may take twice as long per m² as an open equivalent. When planning a new garden layout, grouping beds together rather than scattering them reduces mowing time significantly.

Grass Length at Time of Mowing

Letting grass get too long before mowing forces the mower to work harder, slows cutting speed, and may require a second pass at a higher height first. Grass over 10 cm tall should be reduced in two stages — take off roughly half the height, then return two days later to cut to the final height. Sticking to the recommended mowing frequency for your season prevents the grass from getting to a length that causes slow, laboured cutting.

Slope and Terrain

Sloped lawns take noticeably longer than flat ones. On a gentle slope, add 10–15% to the estimated flat-lawn mowing time. On a steep slope — over 15 degrees — a walk-behind rotary becomes slow and physically demanding. Lawns with significant slopes over 20 degrees should use a hover mower, which floats on an air cushion and handles slopes much better than wheeled machines. Ride-on mowers should not be used on slopes over 10–12 degrees due to tip-over risk.

Grass Box vs Mulching

Stopping to empty the grass collection box adds time to every mowing session. A 60 m² lawn typically fills a standard 40-litre grass box once or twice per mow in active growing season. Switching to a mulching mower — which chops clippings finely and returns them to the lawn — eliminates collection entirely and saves 10–20% of total mowing time. Mulching also returns nutrients to the soil, reducing the amount of fertiliser needed over the season.

Mowing Pattern

The most efficient pattern for a rectangular lawn is parallel strips with the fewest turns possible. Start along the longest edge and mow straight runs the full length of the lawn, overlapping each pass by 5–10 cm. For square lawns, the direction matters less. Diagonal or curved patterns look attractive but add distance and time. Alternating the mowing direction each session (north–south one week, east–west the next) also improves turf quality by preventing grass from lying over in one direction.

COMMON QUESTIONS

Mowing Calculator — Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most common questions about mowing time, frequency, and technique.

With a standard petrol rotary mower (46 cm deck), a simple 100 m² lawn takes 10–15 minutes of active mowing. Including setup, emptying the grass box, and edging, allow 20–25 minutes total. A ride-on mower covers 100 m² in 3–5 minutes of cutting. A robot mower handles it overnight autonomously. The calculator gives an estimate based on your specific mower type and lawn complexity — use it for planning before a particularly busy week.
The rule is: mow when the grass reaches approximately 50% above your target height, and never remove more than one-third of the grass blade in a single cut. In spring (March–May), this means mowing every 5–7 days for most UK lawns. In summer, every 7–10 days. In autumn, every 10–14 days. In winter, only mow if growth is visible and the ground is not frozen — most lawns need zero to one winter mow. The calculator outputs the recommended frequency for the season you select.
For a typical UK lawn, cut to 25–40 mm from spring through summer. Ornamental or fine lawns can be cut to 15–25 mm. Utility and family lawns do better at 35–45 mm — slightly longer grass is more resilient, stays greener in dry spells, and outcompetes weeds. In autumn and winter, raise the height to 40–50 mm. Never scalp a lawn — cutting too low weakens the turf, exposes bare soil, and gives weeds an opportunity to establish. If you want a striped finish, use a mower with a rear roller.
A typical petrol walk-behind rotary mower uses 0.25–0.5 litres per hour. For a 60 m² lawn mowed in 20–25 minutes, that is approximately 0.1–0.2 litres of petrol per session — roughly £0.15–0.30 at current UK petrol prices. Self-propelled models use slightly more. A ride-on mower uses 1.5–3 litres per hour. Over a full UK mowing season (roughly 25–30 mows per year for a spring and summer lawn), a walk-behind petrol mower costs approximately £5–10 per year in fuel for a 60 m² lawn.
It is best to avoid mowing wet grass if possible. Wet clippings clump and clog the grass box and underside of the mower deck, leaving messy patches on the lawn rather than a clean cut. Wet grass also tears rather than cuts cleanly, stressing the turf. If you must mow in damp conditions, raise the cutting height, slow your walking pace, and empty the box more frequently. Allow the lawn to dry for at least two hours after rain before mowing. Never mow on frosty ground — the frozen grass cells burst under the mower rollers, leaving brown stripes that take weeks to recover.
Robot mowers are most cost-effective for lawns of 200 m² and above where manual mowing takes 30+ minutes weekly. For smaller lawns under 60 m², a robot mower is hard to justify on time savings alone — an electric rotary can handle the job in under 15 minutes. Robot mowers work by mowing a little every day rather than a full cut weekly — this keeps the lawn consistently tidy and removes very small clippings that fall between grass blades as natural mulch. Entry-level models start around £300–400; capable models for 300–500 m² lawns cost £700–1,500.
WHO THIS IS FOR

Who Uses the Mowing Calculator?

Anyone who wants to plan their mowing time, track costs, or decide which mower to buy.

Homeowners Planning Their Week

Use the mowing time estimate to block out the right amount of time before a garden party, a house viewing, or a busy weekend. Knowing the job takes 25 minutes — not an hour — makes it easier to fit into a schedule.

People Choosing a New Mower

Compare the estimated mowing time for a push mower versus a self-propelled petrol model on your exact lawn size. The time difference often justifies the cost of an upgrade, particularly for lawns over 80 m².

Lawn Care Professionals

Estimate job time for client quotes. Enter the lawn area and mower type to get an accurate time baseline for pricing. The fuel cost estimate helps ensure quotes cover running costs at current petrol prices.

Landlords and Property Managers

Calculate the annual mowing time for rental properties to assess whether a gardening service is cost-effective versus DIY. The annual mow count gives a clear picture of the time commitment across a full year.