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Liquid Aeration

Liquid aeration is a lawn treatment designed to improve the health of your soil so your grass can grow better. Instead of pulling plugs out of the ground like traditional core aeration, this treatment uses specialized liquid products to help the soil work more efficiently over time.

What it does for your lawn When your soil is healthier, your grass has a better environment to grow in. Liquid aeration helps by:
  • Improving how water soaks into the soil
  • Helping oxygen move into the root zone
  • Supporting deeper, stronger roots
  • Making nutrients more available to the lawn
  • Encouraging beneficial microbial activity in the soil
  • Helping manage the effects of mild to moderate soil compaction
How it’s different from core aeration A lot of clients ask this.
  • Core aeration physically removes plugs of soil to relieve compaction
  • Liquid aeration does not remove soil plugs
Instead, liquid aeration works gradually by improving soil structure and biological activity. It’s a great option for improving overall soil performance, but if the ground is heavily compacted, core aeration may still be needed.
 
What results you can expect This is not an instant cosmetic treatment — it works over time as the soil improves.

 

In the first few weeks, you may notice:

  • Better water absorption
  • Less standing water after rain or irrigation
  • Better response to fertilizer
  • Improved turf vigor

Over the following weeks and months, you may notice:

  • Better color
  • Stronger root development
  • Thicker turf
  • Improved heat and drought tolerance

Over time with repeated treatments:

  • Healthier soil
  • More consistent lawn quality
  • Better stress recovery
  • Improved overall lawn performance

 

What it won’t do

It’s important to set the right expectation:
Liquid aeration is not a grass-growing product.
It will not directly fill in bare spots or create grass where no living turf exists.
What it can do is improve the soil conditions so existing grass can spread and perform better.
If an area is completely bare, it may still need:
  • Seeding
  • Sodding
  • Plugging
How often it’s recommended
- two applications per year for best results.