How to Edge a Lawn: Complete Guide to Sharp Lawn Borders

Edging transforms your lawn. Learn why it matters, tools for every budget, technique, and timing. Sharp borders = curb appeal.

(7 min read)
How to Edge a Lawn: Complete Guide to Sharp Lawn Borders

How to Edge a Lawn: Complete Guide to Sharp Lawn Borders

A well-mowed lawn means nothing without sharp edges.

Grass creeping into flower beds. Lawn extending onto sidewalks. Blurry borders. This kills curb appeal instantly.

Edging is the finishing touch that separates amateur lawns from professional ones. A sharp edge changes everything.

This guide shows you exactly how to edge a lawn like a pro.


Why Edging Matters

1. Curb Appeal (The Obvious Reason)

Sharp edge = instantly professional appearance

Comparison:

  • No edging: Grass/bed boundary blurry; looks neglected
  • Edged: Clear line; looks well-maintained and intentional

Impact: Professional edging increases curb appeal 30–50%


2. Prevents Grass Spreading Into Beds

Without edging: Grass roots spread into flower beds

  • Chokes out plants
  • Requires hand-pulling from beds every week
  • Creates maintenance nightmare

With edging: Physical barrier prevents root spread

  • Beds stay clean of grass
  • Less maintenance
  • Plants grow uncontested

3. Prevents Lawn Spreading Onto Hardscape

Without edging: Grass creeps onto sidewalks, driveways

  • Becomes a tripping hazard
  • Looks unprofessional
  • Safety issue

With edging: Clear boundary maintained

  • Safe walkways
  • Professional appearance
  • Easier to sweep/maintain hardscape

4. Makes Mowing Cleaner

Without edging: Mower hits flowers/plants while cutting edges

  • Damages plants
  • Uneven mowing
  • Messy appearance

With edging: Physical edge protects plants

  • Clean, even mowing
  • No plant damage
  • Professional appearance

Tool Options: Which One for You?

Option 1: Manual Spade (Cheapest)

Cost: $0 (if you have one) to $30

What it is: Flat-bottomed shovel or specialized edging spade

How it works: Push straight down along edge; flip backward to cut root zone

Pros:

  • Ultra cheap
  • No equipment to maintain
  • Good control
  • Quiet (good for early morning)

Cons:

  • Labor-intensive (tiring for large properties)
  • Slow (takes 30–60 minutes for average lawn)
  • Uneven results possible
  • Hard on back/knees

Best for:

  • Small lawns (under 3,000 sq ft)
  • Budget-conscious
  • Don't mind physical work
  • Occasional edging only

Technique:

  1. Stand on edge
  2. Push spade down straight (6–8 inches deep)
  3. Tilt handle backward to cut roots
  4. Move along line; repeat
  5. Remove severed sod

Option 2: Power Edger (Professional Quality)

Cost: $150–400 (purchase) or $30–50 (rental per day)

What it is: Gasoline or electric handheld wheel with spinning blade

How it works: Spinning vertical blade cuts edge precisely as you walk

Pros:

  • Fast (15–20 minutes for average lawn)
  • Professional, sharp edge
  • Minimal physical effort
  • Great for larger properties
  • Consistent results

Cons:

  • Expensive to purchase
  • Maintenance (gas models)
  • Noise
  • Learning curve
  • Overkill for tiny lawns

Best for:

  • Medium to large lawns (5,000+ sq ft)
  • Want professional results
  • Don't want to do physical work
  • Frequent edging

Rental option:

  • Rent daily ($30–50) for occasional use
  • Test before buying

Technique:

  1. Start at one end of lawn edge
  2. Walk slowly along edge line
  3. Keep wheel against boundary
  4. Blade cuts vertically
  5. Move continuously for clean edge

Option 3: String Trimmer (Convenient)

Cost: $80–200 (electric) to $150–300 (gas)

What it is: Handheld tool with spinning nylon string

How it works: Spinning string cuts grass at the edge; not ideal for true edging

Pros:

  • Quick cleanup of stray grass
  • Most people already own one
  • Works on any surface (grass, stone, concrete)
  • Versatile (use for other trimming too)

Cons:

  • Doesn't create a clean physical edge
  • Just trims existing edge, doesn't define it
  • Nylon string less precise than blade
  • Temporary (grass grows back quickly)

Best for:

  • Maintenance trimming between edgings
  • Not creating the initial edge
  • Cleanup only

Note: String trimmer maintains an edge; power edger creates one. Use both for best results.


Option 4: Rotary Edger (Professional Equipment)

Cost: $3,000–8,000 (too expensive to own unless professional)

What it is: Large walk-behind machine with horizontal spinning blade

How it works: Blade cuts horizontally; creates perfect straight edge

Pros:

  • Fastest (5–10 minutes for large lawn)
  • Most professional results
  • Minimal effort
  • Ideal for large properties

Cons:

  • Extremely expensive
  • Only worth renting for very large properties
  • Overkill for residential
  • Rental expensive ($100–150/day)

Best for:

  • Very large properties (10,000+ sq ft)
  • Commercial properties
  • Rental is more cost-effective than hiring

Edging Technique by Location

Along Flower Beds

Goal: Create sharp line; prevent grass from spreading into bed

Technique:

  1. Position power edger or spade at grass/bed boundary
  2. Cut straight down 6–8 inches
  3. Remove severed sod
  4. Result: clean line; grass can't spread laterally

Frequency: 1–2x per year (spring and/or fall)

Best time: Early spring (before growth) or fall


Along Sidewalks

Goal: Prevent grass from creeping onto concrete

Technique:

  1. Position edger along grass/sidewalk line
  2. Cut down 4–6 inches (shallower than beds)
  3. Remove severed sod
  4. Result: clean line; grass can't spread forward

Frequency: 1–2x per year

Maintenance: Use string trimmer monthly to clean up stray growth


Along Curbs/Driveways

Goal: Prevent grass from creeping onto hard surface

Technique:

  1. Position edger along grass/curb line
  2. Cut down 4–6 inches
  3. Remove severed sod
  4. Result: clean line

Frequency: 1–2x per year

Maintenance: Weekly string trimmer touch-ups

Safety note: Clean edges prevent tripping hazards


Creating a New Edge Where There Isn't One

Scenario: You have a bed or walkway but no defined edge; grass grows into it

Solution: Create the Edge

Step 1: Define the Line

  • Walk the bed/sidewalk
  • Identify where the edge SHOULD be
  • Spray paint a line (biodegradable paint)
  • Make it straight (use string as guide)

Step 2: Cut the Edge

  • Use power edger along the painted line
  • Or manually spade along the line
  • Cut 6–8 inches deep
  • Remove severed sod/roots

Step 3: Remove Sod

  • Manually pull up cut turf
  • Expose bare ground/mulch beneath
  • Clean up debris

Step 4: Verify the Line

  • Check that the edge is straight
  • Adjust if needed
  • Optional: backfill with mulch or sod edge barrier

Time: 1–2 hours for average property

Result: Professional defined edge


Edging Frequency: How Often?

High-Maintenance Approach (Best Results)

Schedule:

  • Monthly (growing season): String trimmer touch-up (removes stray growth)
  • Spring: Power edge (creates sharp line)
  • Fall: Power edge (redefine edge after summer growth)

Time commitment: 30–60 minutes total per month (growing season)

Results: Perfect edge all season; professional appearance

Best for: Want lawn to look great year-round


Standard Approach (Balanced)

Schedule:

  • 2–3x per year: Power edge (spring, midsummer optional, fall)
  • As-needed: String trimmer (when grass creeps over)

Time commitment: 3–4 times yearly, 1–2 hours each

Results: Good edge most of the time; acceptable appearance

Best for: Most homeowners; good balance of effort/appearance


Minimal Approach (Budget)

Schedule:

  • 1–2x per year: Power edge (spring and/or fall)
  • Never: String trimmer (let it grow)

Time commitment: 2 times yearly, 30–60 minutes each

Results: Edge lasts 2–3 months; then blurs

Best for: Budget-conscious; don't mind less-than-perfect appearance


Best Time to Edge

Spring (March–May)

Why: Winter/spring growth pushes grass boundaries

  • Grass has spread
  • New growth starting
  • Good time to redefine edge

Best month: April (spring growth active)


Fall (August–October)

Why: Heavy fall overseeding spreads grass

  • Overseed has grown
  • Need to define edge before winter
  • Second best time

Best month: September (after overseeding established)


Summer (June–August)

Why: Optional

  • Good for high-traffic areas (grass spreads fast)
  • Not critical

Best month: July (midseason refresh)


Maintenance Between Major Edgings

Monthly String Trimmer Touch-Up

What: Use string trimmer to clean up grass creeping over edge

When: Once per month during growing season (April–October)

How:

  1. Walk along edge with string trimmer
  2. Trim stray grass
  3. Keep line clean
  4. Takes 15–30 minutes

Why: Keeps edge looking fresh between power edgings


After Heavy Rain

Issue: Heavy rain can cause turf to shift slightly

Fix: Check edges after downpours; trim as needed


After Overseeding

Issue: New seed spreads beyond original edge

Fix: Trim or edge after overseeding established (week 4–6)


Equipment Maintenance

Manual Spade

Maintenance:

  • Keep sharp (sharpen yearly)
  • Wipe clean after use
  • Store dry

Cost: Minimal


Power Edger (Gas)

Maintenance:

  • Change oil (check manual)
  • Clean air filter (yearly)
  • Drain fuel in off-season
  • Replace blade when dull ($20–50)

Cost: $50–100/year

Storage: Cool, dry place; covered


Power Edger (Electric)

Maintenance:

  • Charge battery properly
  • Clean deck
  • Check blade condition
  • Store indoors

Cost: Minimal ($20 for replacement blade)


String Trimmer

Maintenance:

  • Replace line when worn (cost: $2–5 per replacement)
  • Clean air filter
  • Store fuel separately or use fuel stabilizer
  • Replace spark plug yearly (gas model)

Cost: $20–30/year


DIY vs Professional Edging

DIY Option

Cost: $30–200 (equipment one-time) + time

Tools:

  • Manual spade: $30
  • Electric power edger rental: $30–50 per day
  • String trimmer (you probably own): $0

Time: 1–2 hours per edging session

Frequency: 2–3 times yearly

Annual cost: $100–200 + labor

Results: Good to excellent (depends on skill)


Professional Edging Service

Cost: $75–150 per edging (typical lawn)

Frequency: 2–3 times yearly

Annual cost: $200–450

Time: Your time is free

Results: Professional (consistent, sharp)


The Comparison

DIY is cheaper if:

  • You already own equipment
  • You don't mind physical work
  • You have time

Professional is worth it if:

  • Your time = $30+/hour
  • You want perfect results
  • You don't want to maintain equipment

Hybrid approach:

  • Professional edging (1–2x yearly): $150–300/year
  • String trimmer maintenance yourself: monthly
  • Total: professional results at reasonable cost

Common Edging Mistakes

Mistake 1: Cutting Too Shallow

Problem: Edge isn't deep enough to stop root spread

Fix: Cut 6–8 inches deep; not just surface trim


Mistake 2: Uneven Edge

Problem: Edge wanders; doesn't look professional

Fix: Use string as guide; walk slowly; focus on straight line


Mistake 3: Not Removing Severed Sod

Problem: Dead sod sits on top of bed; looks messy

Fix: Remove all cut turf; clean up


Mistake 4: Edging When Soil is Wet

Problem: Wet soil clumps; edge looks ragged; tool gets muddy

Fix: Edge when soil is moist but not wet (day after rain, not during)


Mistake 5: Edging Too Frequently

Problem: Over-edging degrades the line; wastes effort

Fix: 2–3 times yearly is enough; maintenance trim as needed between


FAQ: Lawn Edging

Q: Does edging kill the grass or harm the lawn? A: No. Cutting the edge redirects growth and prevents spreading. Healthy response.

Q: Can I use a weed trimmer instead of a power edger? A: Yes, for maintenance. But weed trimmer doesn't cut deep enough to create a true edge. Use edger for initial edge; trimmer for maintenance.

Q: How long does an edge last? A: 2–3 months before grass starts creeping back. Monthly trimming maintains it.

Q: Best time to edge: before or after mowing? A: Either is fine, but many prefer edging first, then mowing (mower cleans up debris).

Q: Can I edge when the lawn is wet? A: Avoid it. Wet soil clumps; wet grass is harder to cut cleanly. Wait until soil drains (usually 1 day after rain).


Conclusion

Edging is the finishing touch that separates amateur lawns from professional ones.

The impact: Sharp edges = 30–50% boost to curb appeal

The effort: 2–3 times yearly, 1–2 hours each = 6 hours/year for perfect lawn

The equipment:

  • Cheap: Manual spade ($30)
  • Fast: Power edger rental ($40/day)
  • Best value: Own electric power edger ($150–200)

The frequency:

  • Power edge: Spring and fall (critical)
  • String trim: Monthly (maintenance)
  • Result: Professional appearance year-round

Bottom line: Invest 1–2 hours per season in edging, and your lawn will look 10x better. It's that transformative.

Ready to get sharp edges? Contact Simply Lawn for professional edging or let us show you the right tools and technique.