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Bare and patchy spots are almost inevitable in a Bermuda grass lawn — high-traffic paths, pet damage, dead roots from grub attacks, dog urine, or even sun-scorched stretches all leave their mark. The good news: Bermuda grass is one of the easiest turfgrasses to repair thanks to its aggressive lateral growth. This guide walks through exactly how to fix bare or patchy spots in a Bermuda lawn, including when to patch, when to reseed, and when to call in professional resodding.
Fixing the symptom without fixing the cause guarantees the spot will come back. Common causes of bare spots:
Rake out dead grass, loose thatch, and debris until you’re down to soil.
Use a hand cultivator or garden fork to loosen the top 2–3 inches of soil. Heavy clay benefits from a small amount of topsoil or compost mixed in.
If the spot has sunk or eroded, add topsoil to match the surrounding grade. A low spot collects water and stays bare; a high spot scalps during mowing.
Cut small squares or round plugs from a Bermuda sod piece and set them into the prepared bare area. Press firmly for good soil contact. This is the fastest way to fill spots up to a few square feet.
Bermuda sprigs — small runners with nodes — can be pressed into prepared soil at 2–4 inch spacing. Keep consistently moist for 2–3 weeks. Sprigs are more economical than sod for mid-sized repairs.
Hybrid Bermuda varieties (TifTuf, Celebration, Tifway 419) are sterile and don’t produce viable seed. Only common Bermuda can be started from seed. If your lawn is a hybrid variety, seeding will create a visible texture mismatch.
For spots larger than about 20 square feet, or when patchiness covers more than 20% of the lawn, full resodding usually produces the best-looking and longest-lasting result.
| Days | Watering |
|---|---|
| 1–7 | Water 1–2 times per day to keep soil moist |
| 8–14 | Water once per day |
| 15–21 | Water every other day |
| 22+ | Return to standard schedule |
In Louisiana, repair Bermuda bare spots between April and early August. Warm soil temperatures and active growth give the fastest fill-in and strongest rooting. Repairs done in fall or winter will typically not establish until the following spring.
With active growing conditions (April–August), Bermuda typically fills small bare spots in 3–6 weeks. Larger spots or sprig repairs take 6–10 weeks.
Yes — Bermuda is one of the most aggressive self-repairing grasses. Small bare spots (under 6 inches across) often fill in without intervention during peak summer growth.
Only if your lawn is common Bermuda. Hybrid Bermudas are sterile and must be repaired with plugs, sprigs, or sod to match.
For spots larger than about 3 square feet, light tilling of the top 2–3 inches is helpful. For smaller spots, a garden fork is sufficient.
The underlying cause hasn’t been fixed. Most persistent bare spots trace back to compaction, shade, ongoing pet damage, or drainage issues.
If more than 20% of the lawn is bare, thin, or patchy, full resodding is usually more cost-effective and produces a more uniform result than extensive patching.
TurnKey Grass restores Bermuda lawns across St. Rose, River Ridge, La Place, and throughout southeastern Louisiana. From spot repairs to full resodding, our team delivers clean, uniform results that blend seamlessly with existing turf.