Pest Control

How to Get Rid of Grubs in Your Lawn

7 min read
Identify & Treat
Lawn Recovery Included

Brown patches that feel spongy underfoot. Grass that peels up like a loose carpet. Birds drilling holes in your lawn. These are all signs that grubs — the larval stage of common beetles — are feeding on the roots of your grass from below. By the time the damage shows on the surface, grubs have often been at work for weeks.

The good news is that grub damage is very treatable, and with the right product applied at the right time, you can stop an infestation in its tracks. This guide walks you through how to identify grubs, when to treat, which products to use, and how to bring your lawn back after damage occurs.

1

What Are Grubs and Why They Damage Lawns

Grubs are the white, C-shaped larvae of several beetle species — most commonly Japanese beetles, June bugs (June beetles), and chafer beetles. Adult beetles lay their eggs in lawn soil during late June and July. The eggs hatch into small grubs that spend late summer and early fall feeding aggressively on grass roots just below the soil surface before burrowing deeper for winter.

The damage happens because grubs sever the root system entirely. Grass with no roots can't uptake water or nutrients, and it dies quickly in the heat of late summer. The sod literally comes loose from the ground — which is why heavily infested areas pull up in sheets, often revealing hundreds of grubs writhing in the exposed soil.

Beetle species that cause grub problems:

  • Japanese Beetles — the most widespread grub pest across the eastern U.S.; adults are distinctive with copper and green coloring
  • June Bugs (May beetles) — large brown beetles common in warm climates; larvae are thick and especially damaging
  • European Chafer — particularly damaging in northern states; adult emergence in June is the window for egg-laying prevention
  • Masked Chafer — common in the Midwest; similar life cycle to Japanese beetles
  • Oriental Beetle — expanding range across the mid-Atlantic; less visible adults but destructive larvae

Knowing which beetle is responsible in your area helps with timing, since the egg-laying and larval feeding windows vary slightly by species. Japanese beetles in most regions lay eggs in July, with grubs peaking in August and September. Your local cooperative extension office can confirm what's prevalent in your zone.


2

How to Tell If You Have Grubs

The challenge with grubs is that damage often isn't visible until midsummer, when populations have grown large enough to cause widespread root destruction. Catching them early — or preventing them before they hatch — is far more effective than reacting to visible damage. Here's what to watch for at each stage.

Early warning signs (July–August):

  • Irregular patches of lawn that look drought-stressed even with adequate water
  • Increased bird activity — starlings, robins, and crows pecking the lawn are hunting grubs
  • Skunks and raccoons digging up sections of turf overnight to feed on grubs
  • Spongy, soft feeling underfoot in isolated areas

Confirmed damage signs (August–October):

  • Brown dead patches that don't respond to watering — roots have been severed
  • Turf that rolls back easily like a carpet with no resistance
  • Visible white C-shaped larvae 1/2 to 1 inch long in the top 2–3 inches of soil
  • More than 5–10 grubs per square foot indicates a damaging level infestation

To confirm grubs, cut and peel back a 1-square-foot section of turf in a suspect area and examine the soil. Count the grubs. A threshold of 5 or more per square foot in cool-season grasses (or 8–10 per square foot in warm-season grasses) is generally considered worth treating. Fewer than that and your lawn may tolerate the population without significant damage.


3

Apply Grub Control — Timing Is Everything

Grub control products fall into two categories: preventive and curative. The right choice depends on where you are in the season. Preventive products are applied before eggs hatch and work best on young larvae. Curative products are applied to existing grub populations later in the summer and fall. Using the wrong type at the wrong time significantly reduces effectiveness.

Spring to Early Summer
Preventive Application

Apply preventive granules (imidacloprid or chlorantraniliprole) in May–June before beetles lay eggs. These products move into the soil and kill newly hatched grubs.

Mid-Late Summer
Curative Application

If you have active grubs in August–September, use a fast-acting curative insecticide that works faster on larger larvae. Water in immediately and thoroughly.

Early Fall
Lawn Repair

After treating, overseed damaged areas in September. Fall is ideal for grass germination — mild temperatures, less weed competition, and soil moisture support rapid establishment.

Water is critical with any grub control product. Most granular treatments need to be watered in immediately after application — at least 1/2 inch of irrigation. This moves the active ingredient into the root zone where grubs feed. Without adequate watering, the product sits on the surface where it's far less effective.

Recommended Products via DoMyOwn

Season-Long Grub Killer
via DoMyOwn

Chlorantraniliprole-based preventive granule — apply in spring for season-long protection. Kills grubs before they hatch and become damaging.

Shop DoMyOwn
Fast-Acting Curative Grub Killer
via DoMyOwn

Fast-acting curative granule for existing grub infestations — trichlorfon-based formula kills grubs within 1–3 days. Water in immediately after application.

Shop DoMyOwn
Preventive Grub Control Granules
via DoMyOwn

Imidacloprid-based preventive — professional-grade grub control applied in May or June for maximum effectiveness against newly hatched larvae.

Shop DoMyOwn
Milky Spore Powder (Organic Option)
via DoMyOwn

Natural bacterial control specifically for Japanese beetle grubs — builds up in soil over time and provides multi-year control without chemicals.

Shop DoMyOwn

4

Repair the Lawn Damage They Leave Behind

Once you've treated the grub population, the dead patches in your lawn need to be reseeded. Grub damage creates bare spots that weeds will quickly colonize if left untreated. Early fall (September into early October) is the best window for repair — temperatures are cooler, soil retains moisture better, and grass seed germinates quickly with less competition from summer weeds.

Lawn repair steps after grub treatment:

  • Rake out dead grass and debris to expose bare soil — don't skip this step
  • Loosen the top inch of soil with a hand rake or dethatching rake to improve seed-to-soil contact
  • Amend with a thin layer of compost or lawn soil to improve the growing medium
  • Spread grass seed appropriate for your lawn type — match the existing grass variety if possible
  • Lightly rake seed in and tamp down gently with the back of a rake
  • Apply a starter fertilizer to support root development on new seedlings
  • Keep the seeded area consistently moist until germination (7–21 days depending on variety)
  • Reduce watering frequency but increase depth once seedlings are 1–2 inches tall

One common mistake is rushing to apply a weed killer over reseeded areas. Most herbicides — including pre-emergent crabgrass preventers — will kill or inhibit grass seedlings. Wait until new grass has been mowed at least 2–3 times before applying any weed control product to those areas.

Pro Tips for Grub Control

  • The best prevention is a thick, healthy lawn — dense grass is harder for beetles to penetrate when laying eggs
  • Avoid overwatering in July and August — moist soil is more attractive for beetle egg-laying
  • Apply preventive grub control after Memorial Day and before July 4th for the best window
  • If using curative products in late summer, water in at least 1/2 inch immediately — don't skip this step
  • Beneficial nematodes are an organic option but require moist soil and specific application timing to be effective
  • If skunks are digging your lawn nightly, you almost certainly have a grub problem — treat before damage worsens

The Bottom Line on Grub Control

Grubs are a manageable problem when you catch them at the right time. If you've never had grub damage but live in an area where Japanese beetles or chafer beetles are common, a preventive application in spring is excellent insurance — it's far easier than repairing a lawn that's been stripped of its root system. If you're already seeing damage, a curative product applied promptly followed by overseeding in fall will get your lawn back on track.

Don't assume every brown patch is grubs — drought stress, fungal disease, and dog urine look similar. Confirm by peeling back the turf and doing the grub count. If the count is low, save the treatment cost and focus on other possible causes instead.

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