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When to Plant Grass Seed in Albuquerque, NM

Germination timing based on current soil temperature readings from your nearest monitoring station.

Current Soil Temperature

The 2-inch soil temperature near Albuquerque, NM is currently 83.5°F (82°F at 4 inches), measured at the Los Lunas PMC monitoring station (30.3 mi away). That is about 3°F warmer than typical for this date.

Soil is warm enough for warm-season grasses. Bermuda and zoysia can be seeded or sodded now; St. Augustine establishes from sod or plugs. For cool-season grasses, wait for the fall window, which opens once soil falls back through 70°F, typically around September 28.

Typical Seeding Calendar for Albuquerque

Based on long-term station averages, the 2-inch soil near Albuquerque typically crosses the cool-season seeding threshold (50°F) around March 4 and reaches the warm-season threshold (65°F) around April 11. After the summer peak, soil falls back through 70°F around September 28 and below 65°F around October 10, the heart of the fall seeding window. Use these dates as a starting guide, but always confirm with a current soil thermometer reading.

  • Days in the 5065°F cool-season band: 74 per year, split between the spring and fall shoulders
  • Days at or above 75°F (peak summer soil, too hot to seed): 114 per year
  • Days below 40°F (winter dormancy): 47 per year

Albuquerque's Predicted Planting Windows

These windows are computed from Albuquerque's multi-year soil-temperature climatology and NOAA frost normals, so they reflect this location rather than a regional average. Treat them as a starting plan and confirm with current readings.

  • Spring cool-season window: March 8 through May 5 (medium-confidence estimate; the station has limited history). Seed early in this window so roots establish before summer heat.

Albuquerque sits in the transition zone: both cool-season and warm-season grasses grow here, and peak summer soil averages around 87°F. Tall fescue is the usual cool-season pick for its heat tolerance; Bermuda and zoysia are the warm-season options. The calendar below shows both windows.

Last Safe Seeding Date Before Frost in Albuquerque

The average first frost near Albuquerque is October 22, from NOAA frost normals measured 618 miles away. Cool-season seedlings need about 42 days of root growth before a hard freeze, so counting back from the frost date puts the last safe seeding day around September 10. Seed later than that and roots will not establish before dormancy; the seed usually survives winter, but germination and coverage suffer.

Best Time to Plant Grass Seed in Albuquerque: Month by Month

Typical 2-inch soil temperature by month near Albuquerque, from multi-year station averages, with the seeding verdict for each grass family. Confirm against the current reading above before you put seed down.

MonthTypical 2" soil tempCool-season seedingWarm-season seeding
January37°FDormantToo cold
February43°FToo coldToo cold
March53°FGood; fall is betterToo cold
April64°FGood; fall is betterApproaching
May73°FRisky; heat aheadPrime window
June79°FToo hotPrime window
July83°FToo hotPrime window
August83°FToo hotToo late this year
September75°FToo hotToo late this year
October60°FPrime windowToo cold
November48°FToo coldToo cold
December40°FToo coldToo cold

Grass Species Readiness in Albuquerque

Each species has its own germination optimum. The bands and day counts below come from university extension data; the dates come from Albuquerque's own station climatology.

SpeciesOptimum soil tempDays to germinateSoil typically readyRight now
Kentucky bluegrass5986°F14-30April 2Germinates, but warm for establishment
Tall fescue6886°F7-12April 26Germinates, but warm for establishment
Perennial ryegrass6886°F5-10April 26Germinates, but warm for establishment
Fine fescue5977°F7-14April 2Too warm to establish
Bermudagrass7585°F10-30May 20Germinates well
Zoysia7585°FvariesMay 20Germinates well
Buffalograss7585°F14-30May 20Germinates well
Centipede7585°FvariesMay 20Germinates well

“Right now” compares each species’ band to the current 2-inch reading of 83.5°F. “Soil typically ready” is the first calendar day the long-term station average reaches that species’ optimum band.

Cool-Season Grass Planting Windows

Cool-season grasses (tall fescue, Kentucky bluegrass, perennial ryegrass) germinate best when the 2-inch soil temperature stays between 50°F and 65°F. The ideal window is early to mid-spring, or early fall when soil cools back into this range. Fall seeding has less weed competition and more consistent moisture.

  • Spring: Seed when soil sustains 50°F+ for 3–5 consecutive days, early enough that roots establish before summer heat.
  • Fall (best window): Seed 6–8 weeks before the first hard freeze so roots establish.
  • Avoid: Mid-summer seeding when soil exceeds 75°F. Germination drops and weed pressure peaks.

Warm-Season Grass Planting Windows

Warm-season grasses (Bermuda, zoysia, St. Augustine, centipede) need soil temperatures of65°F or higher for germination. These grasses are best seeded in late spring through early summer when soil has fully warmed.

  • Late spring: Seed once soil sustains 65°F+ for 5–7 days.
  • Sod: Can be laid slightly earlier since it is already established, but root growth still needs 60°F+ soil.
  • Avoid: Fall seeding. Warm-season seeds will not germinate before winter dormancy.

How to Check Before You Seed

Use a soil thermometer at 2 inches depth, measured mid-morning after the sun has warmed the surface. Take readings in several spots and average them. One warm day does not mean soil is ready; look for a sustained trend across 3–5 days.

How to read a soil thermometer →

Related Resources

Full lawn care schedule for Albuquerque

Monthly soil temperature history for Albuquerque

Check soil temperature before seeding in Albuquerque

Enter your ZIP code for real-time 2-inch soil temperatures from the nearest USDA monitoring station.