Mowing Seven Oaks | lawns

Serving Seven Oaks, Meadow Pointe, Estancia, Watergrass, Epperson, Wiregrass Ranch, Union Park, New Tampa, Land O Lakes, and nearby areas.

Rated 4.9 stars by 100+ Wesley Chapel homeowners

100+ Reviews

Licensed & Certified

Last updated April 2026

HOA Ready

Sharp Edging

Healthy Turf

On-Time Service

Most lawn crews serving Seven Oaks mow and leave. No turf check. No edge inspection. Same cut height in July as January. That’s why lawns that looked healthy in May are showing brown patches by August and HOA letters by October.

We’ve been running mowing Seven Oaks routes through Bellafield, Maple Glen, Grassglen, Spring Hollow, and Lakeside every week since 2019. We know where problems show up first and why. Most of the lawns we restore in Seven Oaks didn’t fail overnight. The mowing mistake usually happened weeks before the homeowner noticed the damage.

What’s Actually Killing Seven Oaks Lawns

St. Augustine is the dominant grass type throughout Seven Oaks

  • It needs to be cut at 3.5 to 4 inches during Florida’s summer months — University of Florida IFAS Extension documents this clearly.
  • Most crews cut at 2.5 to 3 inches because it looks cleaner and they move faster.
  • Six weeks of that in June and July and your root system can’t recover before fall.

As listed on Royalty Lawn & Landscaping’s pricing page at the time of writing:

  • They charge an additional $10 for corner lots and fenced yards.
  • They operate on a rolling schedule with no guaranteed visit day.
  • They exclude items requiring a ladder

Pristine Lawn Care’s entire Seven Oaks page is 87 words

  • No mowing height information.
  • No Seven Oaks neighborhoods named.
  • No seasonal turf guidance for Pasco County conditions.

Different Parts of Seven Oaks, Different Lawn Problems

Bellafield

Pool decks and pavers radiate heat into surrounding turf. St. Augustine along hardscape edges shows stress before anywhere else on the property. We adjust cut height on deck-adjacent turf and flag early thinning before it spreads.

Maple Glen

More tree canopy than most Seven Oaks sections. Shade-grown St. Augustine thins faster when cut too short and holds moisture longer after afternoon thunderstorms — creating fungal pressure that looks like drought stress if you don’t know what you’re looking at.

Grassglen

Larger lots with mixed sun exposure. Front gets full sun, back is partially shaded, growth rates differ across the same property. One pass at one height doesn’t work here. We’ve mowed enough Grassglen lots since 2019 to know where uneven patterns show up on individual properties.

Spring Hollow

Backs up to preservation buffer areas. Dollar weed and torpedo grass push in from the natural edge first, along the rear property line. We check the back edge every visit. Catching it at the perimeter during a mowing visit costs nothing. Catching it after it’s spread through the rear lawn costs real money.

Lakeside

Higher soil moisture near retention areas means grass grows noticeably faster during rainy season. One missed mowing cycle on a Lakeside lot in July takes three to four proper cuts to correct. We don’t skip cycles on these properties.

What We Do Every Visit

Set mowing height by season. Edge every visit — not alternating weeks. Walk the property before leaving. Check for chinch bug activity that homeowners often mistake for drought stress. Many respond by increasing irrigation, which allows the damage to spread further before the real problem is identified. Blow every clipping off every hard surface.

Corner lots, fenced yards, retention pond lots — no extra charge.

30-Day Guarantee. Not satisfied with any visit in the first 30 days — we come back at no charge. No argument. No service fee.