How to Identify Clover
White clover (Trifolium repens) grows low to the ground with three round leaflets per stem, often with a lighter V-shaped band on each leaf. It produces white to pinkish ball-shaped flowers from late spring through fall. The stems creep along the ground (stolons), rooting at nodes to form dense mats.
Clover stands out in a lawn because its leaves are distinctly different from grass blades. It stays green during drought when surrounding grass goes dormant, which often makes it more visible in summer.
Weed or Feature?
Clover is increasingly planted intentionally. It fixes nitrogen from the air into the soil (reducing fertilizer needs), stays green without irrigation, tolerates foot traffic, and supports pollinators. Some homeowners seed clover-grass mixes deliberately. Whether you treat it as a weed depends entirely on your lawn goals.
If you want a uniform grass lawn, clover is a weed that competes with turf. If you’re open to a mixed lawn or want to reduce fertilizer inputs, clover is a beneficial ground cover.

