Lawn care companies are notorious for billing disputes — unauthorized services, seasonal auto-renewals you never agreed to, price increases without notice, and charges for work that wasn't actually performed. With the average household spending $1,200-$3,600 annually on lawn care, even small overcharges add up quickly.
Here's how to fight back against unfair lawn care billing and protect yourself going forward.
Common Lawn Care Billing Problems
The Most Frequent Disputes
- Unauthorized services: Company performs (and charges for) work you didn't request
- No-show billing: Charged for visits that didn't happen
- Scope creep: Initial services gradually expand without approval
- Annual auto-renewal: Contract renews without notice, locks you in another year
- Price increases: Rates jump mid-season without proper notification
- Damage charges: Company damages property, then charges you for "repair"
- Cancellation fees: Attempting to charge fees for canceling service
How to Dispute Specific Issues
Unauthorized Services
When you receive a bill for work you didn't approve:
- Document immediately: Photo the lawn/property showing current state
- Review your contract: Check what services were actually agreed upon
- Send written dispute: Email or certified letter stating:
- "I did not authorize [specific service] performed on [date]"
- "My contract covers only [listed services]"
- "Please remove the charge of $[amount] from my account"
- "Any additional services require my written pre-approval going forward"
- Set a response deadline: 14 business days to resolve
Services Not Performed (No-Show Billing)
Proving a negative is harder, but:
- Check timestamps: Some companies use GPS tracking — request service logs
- Security cameras: Review footage for the billed date/time
- Lawn condition: Photo the lawn before and after the alleged service date
- Neighbor witnesses: Ask if they noticed the crew
Unjustified Price Increases
Most contracts require 30-day written notice before price changes:
- Review your contract for the price increase clause
- If no notice was given, you can refuse the increase
- Say: "I was not given the required [30-day] notice per our agreement. I'll continue at the contracted rate of $[amount]."
- If they insist, cancel with required notice and switch providers
Cancellation Disputes
For month-to-month service:
- Provide 30-day written notice (email with read receipt or certified mail)
- You are NOT obligated to complete a season
- There is no legitimate early termination fee for month-to-month service
For annual contracts:
- Review the cancellation clause carefully
- Most residential contracts have a 30-day written notice provision
- If they claim you owe the remainder of the season, check state law — many states cap cancellation fees
Step-by-Step Dispute Resolution
Level 1: Contact the Company Directly
- Call the office (not your technician) and explain the issue
- Follow up in writing (email creates a paper trail)
- Be specific: dates, amounts, what was wrong
- Request resolution within 14 days
Level 2: Formal Written Dispute
If phone call doesn't resolve it, send formal notice:
- Certified mail or email with read receipt
- Reference your contract terms
- State the specific amount in dispute
- Outline what resolution you expect
- Set a deadline (14-21 days)
Level 3: Credit Card Dispute
If you paid by credit card and the company won't resolve:
- File a dispute within 60 days of the charge
- Reason: "Services not rendered" or "Unauthorized charge"
- Provide: your contract, dispute correspondence, photos/evidence
Level 4: Regulatory Complaints
- Better Business Bureau: File complaint (public pressure)
- State Attorney General: Consumer protection division
- Local licensing board: Many states license lawn care applicators (pesticides/fertilizers)
- Small claims court: For amounts worth pursuing legally
Protecting Yourself in Future Contracts
Before Signing
- [ ] Get everything in writing (no verbal agreements)
- [ ] List EVERY service included with specific pricing
- [ ] Specify that additional services require written pre-approval
- [ ] Include a clear cancellation clause (30-day written notice, no fee)
- [ ] Avoid annual prepayment — pay monthly or per visit
- [ ] Set auto-renewal to require your written confirmation
- [ ] Include a satisfaction guarantee or remedy clause
What a Good Contract Should Include
- Specific services listed with individual pricing
- Service frequency and schedule
- Total monthly/seasonal cost
- Cancellation terms (30-day notice, no penalty)
- How price increases are communicated (30+ days written notice)
- Liability for property damage
- Payment terms and methods
- What happens in bad weather (skip or reschedule?)
Red Flags in Contracts
- Long-term commitments (2+ years)
- Large upfront payments or full-season prepayment
- Vague service descriptions ("as needed" without definition)
- Automatic renewal without notice provisions
- No written cancellation process
- "Reasonable" fees without defined amounts
- Waiver of your right to dispute charges
Fair Market Rates (Know What You Should Pay)
| Service | Average Cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Basic mowing (1/4 acre) | $30-$60 | Weekly |
| Basic mowing (1/2 acre) | $50-$80 | Weekly |
| Fertilization (per application) | $50-$100 | 4-6x/year |
| Weed control | $50-$75 | Per application |
| Aeration | $75-$200 | 1-2x/year |
| Overseeding | $100-$300 | 1x/year |
| Full-service lawn care | $150-$300 | Monthly |
| Landscaping/bed maintenance | $100-$250 | Monthly |
If your costs significantly exceed these ranges without clear justification (large property, difficult terrain), get competing quotes.
Bottom Line
Lawn care contract disputes are common because the industry relies heavily on recurring billing, seasonal commitments, and scope creep. Protect yourself by insisting on detailed written agreements, never authorizing verbal add-ons, and disputing unauthorized charges immediately in writing. Most disputes resolve in your favor when you document clearly and escalate methodically — companies would rather refund questionable charges than lose a customer or face regulatory complaints.
Sources
- National Association of Landscape Professionals pricing data
- State consumer protection office complaint databases
- FTC guidelines on service contract disputes
- HomeAdvisor lawn care cost benchmarks







