Identify the weed in your lawn by answering a few questions about leaf shape, growth habit, and season. Matches your weed to the correct species and treatment.
How to Identify Any Lawn Weed
Every lawn weed falls into one of three categories: broadleaf weeds with wide flat leaves, grassy weeds with narrow blades that blend with turf, or sedges with triangular stems. Knowing the category tells you which herbicide class to use. The interactive tool above walks you through the identification process step by step.
If you prefer to identify manually, start with the three-question test below, then match your answers to the causes listed on this page.
All Common Causes
Browse all causes below. Each includes symptoms, a photo placeholder, confirmation test, and treatment links.
Broadleaf Weed (Wide Flat Leaves)
Pattern: Wide leaves with visible veins branching from a central midrib. Leaves look nothing like grass. May have visible flowers.
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Broadleaf weeds include dandelion, clover, creeping charlie, plantain, henbit, chickweed, spurge, and wild violet. They are the easiest category to treat because selective broadleaf herbicides (2,4-D, dicamba, triclopyr) kill them without harming most lawn grasses. Identify the specific species by leaf shape, flower color, and growth habit.
How To Confirm
Break a leaf: milky sap means spurge. Crush a leaf: minty smell means creeping charlie. Three round leaflets means clover. Jagged rosette with yellow flower means dandelion.
Grassy Weed (Narrow Blades Like Turf)
Pattern: Narrow, grass-like blades with parallel veins. Blends in with lawn but different shade of green, blade width, or growth pattern.
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Grassy weeds include crabgrass, goosegrass, foxtail, dallisgrass, quackgrass, annual bluegrass, and nimblewill. They are harder to identify because they look similar to turf. Pre-emergent herbicide is the primary control for annual grassy weeds. Perennial grassy weeds require spot treatment or removal.
How To Confirm
Star-shaped spreading mat (lighter green) means crabgrass. Flat rosette with white center means goosegrass. Fuzzy cylindrical seed heads mean foxtail. Coarse clump returning same spot each year means dallisgrass.
Sedge (Triangular Stem)
Pattern: Grass-like appearance but grows faster than surrounding lawn. Lighter yellow-green color. Often in wet or low areas.
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Sedges include yellow nutsedge, purple nutsedge, and green kyllinga. They require sedge-specific herbicides (halosulfuron or sulfentrazone) because standard broadleaf and grassy weed products have no effect. Sedges almost always indicate a drainage problem.
How To Confirm
Roll the stem between your fingers. Three distinct flat edges (triangular cross-section) confirms a sedge. The saying is 'sedges have edges.' Grass stems are round or flat.
Low Mat-Forming Growth (Flat Against Ground)
Pattern: Plant grows flat against the soil, spreading outward in a circular mat. Low to the ground, rarely more than 2 inches tall.
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Mat-forming weeds include spurge, creeping charlie, knotweed, and some crabgrass varieties. Check the leaf shape to narrow it down: wide scalloped leaves mean creeping charlie, tiny oval leaves with milky sap mean spurge, small blue-green leaves at wiry joints mean knotweed.
How To Confirm
Break a stem to check for milky sap (spurge). Crush a leaf to check for minty smell (creeping charlie). Check stem shape: square stems confirm creeping charlie (mint family).
Upright Clump Growth
Pattern: Weed grows upright in distinct clumps, often taller or a different texture than surrounding lawn.
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Clump-forming weeds include dallisgrass, tall fescue (when unwanted), quackgrass, and foxtail. Check whether the clump returns in the same spot each year (perennial) or appears in new locations (annual). Perennial clumps are harder to control because they establish deep root systems.
How To Confirm
Same spot each year with coarse blades means dallisgrass or quackgrass. New location each year with fuzzy seed heads means foxtail. Wider blades with finger-like projections at the base (auricles) mean quackgrass.
Rosette Growth (Flat Circle of Leaves)
Pattern: Leaves radiate outward from a central point at ground level, forming a flat circle. No upright stem until flowering.
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Rosette-forming weeds include dandelion, plantain, and thistle. Dandelion has jagged-edged leaves and a deep taproot. Plantain has broad oval leaves with parallel ribs. Thistle has spiny leaves. All three are broadleaf perennials treatable with selective herbicide.
How To Confirm
Jagged sawtooth leaves with yellow flower means dandelion. Broad oval leaves with parallel veins and a central seed stalk means plantain. Spiny leaves mean thistle.