Clover in Your Lawn: Kill It, Keep It, or Leave It? The Honest Answer for Central Ohio
- Timothy Jacobs
- 29 minutes ago
- 3 min read
Clover is the most honestly debated plant in Central Ohio lawns. Half the homeowners between Circleville and Chillicothe call it a weed and want it dead. The other half learned it is a nitrogen-fixer and deliberately seed it in. Both sides have a point — and the honest answer depends on three things about your specific lawn.
Here is the actual decision tree we use when clients ask.
What clover is doing to your lawn right now
White clover is a low-growing broadleaf that spreads by both seed and surface runners. In Central Ohio soils it starts breaking dormancy in mid-April and is at peak visibility right now — white blooms on short stems, 2-inch round leaves, mat-forming coverage in thin areas.
Two things clover does well: it pulls atmospheric nitrogen into the soil (free fertilizer), and it stays green in July drought when your cool-season grass goes dormant. Two things it does badly: the blooms attract bees right where kids and dogs walk, and it does not recover well from weekly mowing at residential heights.
Kill it — when clover is the wrong answer
Keep reading only if your lawn is mostly clover, not mostly grass. Broadleaf herbicide that targets clover specifically (triclopyr, or 3-way mixes with MCPP and dicamba) will knock it out in 7 to 10 days. Spray on a non-windy morning when temperature is above 60 degrees and no rain is forecast for 24 hours.
Kill-it is the right call when more than 30 percent of your lawn footprint is clover, when you have a pet allergy or a pool with barefoot traffic, or when you want crisp stripe mowing patterns for appearances.
Do not kill clover if you are planning to overseed this fall — herbicide residue blocks germination for 4 to 8 weeks.
Keep it — when clover is the right answer
Clover as a deliberate 5 to 15 percent component of a fescue or bluegrass lawn is a genuine upgrade. It feeds the surrounding grass, handles drought, and crowds out dandelion and plantain. Dutch white clover and micro clover are the two cultivars that actually work in Central Ohio — common pasture clover gets too tall.
Leave-it is the right call when your lawn already stays green through August without heavy watering, when you want to reduce synthetic fertilizer applications, or when your property is rural or low-traffic.
Leave it alone — when it does not matter
Honest answer: for maybe half the lawns we work on in Circleville, Columbus, Lancaster, and Chillicothe, the right move on clover is nothing. It is not hurting the lawn, not spreading aggressively, and removing it costs more than tolerating it. Homeowners who are going to overseed anyway in September will crowd clover out naturally as the grass density improves.
How to tell which camp your lawn is in
Walk a 10-foot radius from anywhere in your yard and count. Under 10 clover plants per 10 feet means ignore. 10 to 30 means let it stay, or spot-spray the biggest patches. Over 30 means decide whether you are in keep-it or kill-it camp based on the questions above.
Why fall overseeding solves this better than herbicide
The long-term move on a weedy Central Ohio lawn — clover or otherwise — is always the same: thicken the turf. Thick turf crowds weeds out without chemicals. Our fall aeration and overseeding service in late September hits this goal directly. Clients who do one fall aeration plus overseed see weed cover drop 40 to 60 percent the following spring with no herbicide in the mix.
This week — three other moves while you are out on the lawn
The same homeowners asking us about clover are usually looking at three other April-specific lawn moves at the same time. Dandelion control: if clover is visible, dandelions definitely are. Spot-spray broadleaf herbicide hits both on the same pass. Fresh mulch install: the 4-week window is closing. Getting edge work and mulch done now plus any needed weed control is the efficient one-visit package. First fertilizer application: now through early May is the window for balanced fertilizer on cool-season Central Ohio lawns. If clover is your free nitrogen, you can skip the nitrogen-heavy blend and save money on product.
The takeaway
Count your clover. Under 10 per 10 feet, ignore. 10-30, leave it or spot-spray if it bothers you. Over 30, pick a camp — kill it with targeted broadleaf herbicide, or accept it and skip synthetic nitrogen. The long-term fix is thick turf from fall overseeding, not spring chemicals.
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Serving Circleville · Columbus · Lancaster · Chillicothe · Central Ohio




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