Armyworms are among the most aggressive lawn pests homeowners face — capable of destroying large areas of grass in just a few days. These caterpillar-like insects feed in large groups, moving across lawns and leaving behind brown, stripped turf that can appear almost overnight.
Because armyworms move fast and feed heavily at night, many homeowners don’t realize there’s an infestation until significant damage has already occurred. The key to minimizing losses is early detection and immediate treatment before the feeding front expands.
Armyworms are the larval stage of certain moth species. They earn their name because they move across lawns in large numbers, feeding as they go — much like an advancing army sweeping through a field.
Armyworm larvae characteristics:
- Green, brown, or striped body — roughly 1–2 inches long when mature
- Often have distinctive stripes running along the sides and back
- Most active during late summer and early fall (August through October)
- Fast-moving feeders that chew grass blades down to the crown
- Feed most heavily at night and during overcast or cooler days
Armyworms attack bermuda grass, fescue, ryegrass, bluegrass, and St. Augustine grass. Newly seeded and drought-stressed lawns are especially vulnerable to rapid destruction.
Armyworm damage often appears suddenly and spreads at a visible rate. What looks like minor patchy areas in the morning can become large dead zones by the following day during an active infestation.
Common symptoms to watch for:
- Brown or scorched-looking grass that appears almost overnight
- Grass blades chewed down close to the soil — leaving bare or stemmy areas
- Rapidly expanding patches of dead turf moving in one direction across the lawn
- Heavy bird activity — flocks of birds actively feeding on the lawn is a strong warning sign
- Visible caterpillars crawling through turf in the early morning or evening
- Large sections of lawn turning brown that did not exist the day before
Armyworm damage can be mistaken for drought stress initially, but the rapid spread and presence of birds feeding are key indicators that larvae are actively consuming the turf.
Before treating, confirm armyworms are the cause. Inspect damaged turf closely during early morning or evening hours when larvae are most active and visible.
How to check for armyworms:
- Walk the lawn at dusk and look for caterpillars crawling through the grass
- Part the grass blades at the edge of a damaged patch — larvae often rest in the thatch layer during the day
- Look for chewed, ragged grass blades and clean-cut stems at the soil level
- Perform a soap flush: mix 1–2 tablespoons of dish soap in one gallon of water, pour over a damaged area, and wait 5–10 minutes — larvae will surface
Finding multiple larvae per square foot of turf confirms an active, damaging infestation. Act immediately — armyworm populations can double quickly and feeding damage accelerates as larvae grow larger.
Step 1
Act Immediately
Speed matters with armyworms. Do not wait to see if damage stops on its own. Apply treatment the same day larvae are confirmed to prevent rapid spread.
Step 2
Apply Insecticide
Use bifenthrin, permethrin, carbaryl, or spinosad. Apply in the late afternoon or evening when armyworms are actively feeding close to the turf surface.
Step 3
Recover & Monitor
Water deeply to help turf recover. Re-inspect the lawn every few days after treatment — armyworm eggs can hatch in waves through late summer and fall.
For organic treatment, Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) and spinosad are both effective against young armyworm larvae and safer for beneficial insects. Treat at first sign of damage for best results with these options, as they work most effectively on smaller, younger larvae.
Recommended products for armyworm control:
Healthy, well-maintained lawns are far more resistant to armyworm damage and recover more quickly when infestations do occur. Prevention focuses on turf health and early detection during peak season.
Key prevention practices:
- Maintain proper mowing height — never remove more than one-third of the blade at once
- Fertilize on schedule to keep turf dense and vigorous throughout the growing season
- Water deeply during dry periods to reduce drought stress that makes lawns vulnerable
- Reduce excess thatch to limit larval shelter and improve treatment effectiveness
- Monitor lawns weekly from August through October — prime armyworm season
- Inspect early morning or evening when larvae are visible near the surface
- Encourage birds by avoiding unnecessary broad-spectrum pesticide use — birds are natural predators
Final Thoughts
Armyworms are one of the fastest-moving lawn pests homeowners will encounter. Left untreated even briefly, they can destroy healthy grass in just a matter of days, especially during the late summer heat when conditions favor rapid feeding and reproduction.
The good news is that armyworms are very treatable when caught early. Quick identification, immediate insecticide application, and proper follow-up monitoring can stop an infestation in its tracks and allow damaged turf to fully recover. Stay alert from late summer through fall, and your lawn stands a strong chance of coming through the season looking its best.