Underpricing is one of the most common mistakes in the lawn care industry. Many providers set prices based on competitors or instinct rather than true costs, which erodes profitability and long-term sustainability (Entrepreneur, 2022).
In the world of home service economics, pricing is one of the most critical decisions a provider makes. For lawn care operators, landscapers, and other local service providers, the temptation to set prices based on what competitors charge—or worse, on gut instinct—is strong. Yet this approach often leads to underpricing, a trap that undermines lawn care business profitability and long-term sustainability (Entrepreneur, 2022).
At Local Lawn Service (LLS), we’ve seen how underpricing can cripple even the most skilled providers. This blog explores why underpricing happens, the risks it creates, and how providers can adopt a service pricing strategy that ensures healthy small business margins.
Many providers look at what others are charging and simply match or undercut those rates. While this may win short-term business, it ignores the provider’s unique cost structure. For example, Trutco Lawn Care in Jacksonville positions itself as a premium provider, offering monthly fertilizer, insect, and weed treatments tailored to each lawn. Their pricing reflects higher input costs and expertise, which means competing solely on price would undervalue their offering (Trutco, 2025).
New providers often believe that lower prices will attract more customers. While this may be true initially, it creates a “race to the bottom” where providers work harder for less money. As Florida Turf Pros explains in their training content, many lawn care operators fall into this trap, only to realize later that their margins are unsustainable (Florida Turf Pros, 2025).
Without tracking true costs—fuel, labor, insurance, equipment maintenance—providers risk charging less than it costs to deliver the service. For example, GreenPal’s Jacksonville listings show lawn mowing as low as $23 per cut (GreenPal, 2025). While attractive to homeowners, such pricing may leave little room for profit once expenses are factored in.
Profit margin is the lifeblood of any service business. A healthy net margin of 15–30% allows reinvestment in equipment, marketing, and staff (Small Business Administration [SBA], 2023). Underpricing often drives margins below 10%, leaving providers vulnerable to seasonal fluctuations and unexpected costs.
Working long hours for minimal profit leads to burnout. Providers who underprice often find themselves trapped in a cycle of overwork, unable to scale or hire help. This not only impacts the provider’s well-being but also service quality.
When providers consistently underprice, they inadvertently train customers to expect “cheap” service. This devalues the entire market and makes it harder for professional providers to charge fair rates. Companies like Trutco combat this by emphasizing results-driven service and transparent pricing, which builds trust and positions them as premium providers (Trutco, 2025).
Jacksonville, Florida, offers a clear example of how pricing strategies shape profitability.
This contrast illustrates that while low-cost providers may win short-term clients, premium providers build sustainable businesses by aligning pricing with value.
Start by listing all direct and indirect costs:
Only after calculating these should you set a price that ensures a profit margin for service providers of at least 15–30%.
Instead of competing solely on price, emphasize the value you deliver. For example, Trutco highlights personalized treatments and responsive service, justifying higher rates (Trutco, 2025).
Transparency builds trust. Explain to clients why your pricing reflects not just mowing, but reliability, expertise, and long-term lawn health. Florida Turf Pros stresses that educating clients reduces pushback and builds loyalty (Florida Turf Pros, 2025).
Create service tiers—basic, premium, deluxe—so clients can self-select based on budget. This strategy increases upsell opportunities and smooths cash flow.
According to IBISWorld (2024), lawn care businesses average 20–25% net margins when routes are optimized and equipment is well-maintained. Use this as a benchmark to evaluate your own pricing.
At Local Lawn Service, we recommend:
Underpricing may seem like a shortcut to winning clients, but it’s a long-term liability. Providers who fail to calculate true costs risk eroding margins, burning out, and devaluing their services. By adopting a service pricing strategy rooted in cost awareness, value communication, and margin protection, providers can achieve sustainable lawn care business profitability.
At Local Lawn Service, we believe profit is not greed—it’s sustainability. By pricing with confidence, providers can reinvest in their businesses, serve clients with excellence, and build lasting careers in the home service sector.