← Back to Blog

Speedwell (Veronica): The Creeping Weed That Takes Over Thin Missouri Lawns

Speedwell — also called veronica or bird’s-eye — is the tiny blue-flowered weed that sneaks into thin spots in your lawn and spreads into a dense mat before you even notice it. If you’ve ever wondered how a weed can turn a small bare patch into a carpet of green with delicate blue flowers in just a few weeks, you’ve met speedwell.

I first noticed speedwell in my own yard in Wentzville a few years ago. It showed up in a spot where the grass had thinned out from shade. By the time I realized what it was, it had spread across a 4-foot patch. It’s one of those weeds that doesn’t look threatening — those tiny blue flowers are almost charming — but it will absolutely take over thin turf in a single growing season.

In St. Charles County, speedwell is most active in spring and fall when temperatures are cool and moisture is consistent. It’s especially aggressive in lawns with thin grass, shady areas, or compacted soil.

What Is Speedwell?

Speedwell refers to several species in the Veronica genus. The most common types found in Missouri lawns are:

  • Creeping speedwell (Veronica filiformis) — Thin, thread-like stems that root at nodes; tiny round leaves; pale blue flowers with dark stripes
  • Corn speedwell (Veronica arvensis) — Upright growth habit, small pointed leaves, tiny blue flowers; common in disturbed soil
  • Ivy-leaf speedwell (Veronica hederifolia) — Small ivy-shaped leaves; creeping stems; light blue flowers; common in shady areas
  • Thyme-leaf speedwell (Veronica serpyllifolia) — Small round leaves, white flowers with blue stripes; low creeping habit

Key facts about speedwell:

  • Growth habit: Low, creeping, spreads by stems that root at nodes
  • Leaves: Tiny — typically 1/4 to 1/2 inch — round, oval, or ivy-shaped depending on species
  • Flowers: Tiny, four-petaled, blue to pale blue-white with darker stripes
  • Seed production: Prolific — hundreds of seeds per plant, viable 5+ years
  • Root system: Shallow fibrous roots at every node where stems touch soil
  • Life cycle: Winter annual or perennial depending on species
  • Season: Most active spring and fall; goes semi-dormant in summer heat

The name “speedwell” is old English and refers to the plant’s reputation for healing wounds quickly (“speed” your healing). “Veronica” is the Latin genus name, and “bird’s-eye” comes from those distinctive blue flowers with their dark center stripes.

How to Identify Speedwell (vs. Lookalikes)

Speedwell is most often confused with chickweed, henbit, and creeping Charlie. The key differences:

FeatureSpeedwellChickweedHenbitCreeping Charlie
LeavesTiny, round or ivy-shapedOval, pointed, one prominent veinRounded with scalloped edgesRound or kidney-shaped, scalloped
Leaf size1/4 to 1/2 inch1/2 to 1 inch1/2 to 1 inch1 to 1.5 inches
FlowersTiny, blue, four petalsWhite, star-shaped, five deeply notched petalsPink-purple, tubular, two-lippedBlue-violet, funnel-shaped, five petals
StemsThin, thread-like, root at nodesSingle line of hairs on stemSquare stemSquare stem, rooting runners
ScentNoneMild, grassyMinty when crushedStrong minty/earthy smell

The easiest way to identify speedwell: look for tiny round leaves on thread-like stems with a single tiny blue flower. If the plant looks like a miniature ground cover with delicate blue flowers that only open in full sun, it’s almost certainly speedwell.

Why Speedwell Thrives in St. Charles County

Speedwell is perfectly adapted to the conditions that are common in St. Charles County lawns:

Thin turf conditions. Speedwell seeds need light to germinate and bare soil to establish. In St. Charles County, thin turf is most common in:

  • Shady areas under mature oaks and maples
  • New construction lawns with compacted soil
  • High-traffic areas where grass has worn thin
  • Recently seeded areas where grass hasn’t fully filled in

Cool, moist spring weather. Speedwell germinates when soil temperatures reach 45-55°F — typically mid-March to early April in St. Charles County. That’s exactly when we get our spring rains, which speedwell uses to establish quickly before the grass has fully greened up.

Shade tolerance. Corn speedwell and ivy-leaf speedwell handle partial shade much better than tall fescue. In lawns with significant tree cover, speedwell can dominate while the grass struggles.

Low mowing. Speedwell grows prostrate — flat against the ground. Standard mowing at 3-4 inches barely touches it, which means it keeps photosynthesizing and spreading while the grass above it gets cut back.

How to Control Speedwell

Speedwell is less persistent than some lawn weeds, but it can be stubborn if you don’t catch it early. The key is understanding that speedwell is a symptom of thin turf — fix the turf, and speedwell becomes much easier to control.

1. Pre-Emergent Control

Pre-emergent herbicides are moderately effective for speedwell:

  • Isoxaben (Gallery) — Good option for speedwell species
  • Dithiopyr (Dimension) — Some effectiveness on corn speedwell
  • Prodiamine (Barricade) — Limited effectiveness; not the best choice for speedwell specifically

Application timing: Early to mid-April in St. Charles County, before soil temperatures reach 50°F. This targets the spring germination window.

2. Post-Emergent Control (Most Effective)

Speedwell is actually easier to kill with post-emergents than many creeping weeds, but product selection matters:

Most effective options:

  • Triclopyr — Very effective on creeping speedwell species. Apply in spring when plants are actively growing.
  • Dicamba — Good stand-alone option or in combination with 2,4-D
  • Fluroxypyr (Spotlight) — Excellent on speedwell; widely used by professionals
  • Three-way herbicides (2,4-D + dicamba + MCPP) — Effective but may need repeat applications

What NOT to use:

  • Straight 2,4-D alone — Speedwell has moderate resistance to 2,4-D-only products. Always use a combination product.

Timing notes:

  • Spring (April-May): Best time. Plants are small and actively growing.
  • Fall (September-October): Second window. Cool-season growth makes herbicide effective.
  • Summer: Speedwell often goes semi-dormant in heat. Herbicide effectiveness drops significantly. Wait for cooler weather.

3. Cultural Control (Long-Term — Most Important)

Speedwell is a weed of thin turf. Long-term control requires building the kind of dense lawn that speedwell cannot invade:

Thicken the turf. Speedwell seeds need bare soil to germinate. A thick tall fescue lawn blocks light at the soil surface and prevents germination. Overseed thin areas with a quality Missouri-adapted tall fescue blend in the fall.

Fix shade problems. If speedwell is concentrated under trees, consider shade-tolerant turf options. In deep shade where grass won’t grow well, a shade-tolerant ground cover or mulched bed may be a better option than fighting speedwell for years.

Raise the mowing height. Tall fescue should be mowed at 3.5-4 inches. Higher grass casts more shade on the soil surface, which suppresses speedwell germination. Low mowing (under 3 inches) opens up the canopy and invites speedwell in.

Improve drainage. Speedwell likes consistently moist soil. If you have areas that stay wet, improve drainage and let the soil dry between waterings to favor deep-rooted grass over shallow-rooted speedwell.

Aerate compacted soil. Speedwell thrives where grass roots struggle in compacted clay. Core aeration in the fall opens the soil structure and helps grass roots outcompete speedwell for space and nutrients.

4. Hand Removal (for Small Areas)

For patches under 2-3 square feet, hand removal is effective if you’re thorough:

  • Speedwell roots are shallow — individual plants pull up easily
  • The challenge: stems that have rooted at multiple nodes will stay behind if you only pull the center
  • Use a garden rake to scarify the entire patch, collecting all the stem fragments
  • Bag everything — stem fragments can reroot if left on the soil
  • Overseed immediately after removal to fill the bare ground before new speedwell germinates

5. The Temperature Window

Speedwell is most vulnerable during specific temperature windows:

  • Best: 55-75°F (April-May and September-October)
  • OK: 75-85°F (late May, early September) — effectiveness drops but still works
  • Poor: Above 85°F (June-August) — speedwell is stressed or semi-dormant; herbicide doesn’t translocate well
  • Poor: Below 45°F (November-February) — plants not actively growing

Plan your herbicide applications within the 55-75°F window for best results.

FAQ

Is speedwell the same as creeping Charlie? No. Creeping Charlie (ground ivy) has larger round scalloped leaves, square stems, a strong minty smell, and funnel-shaped purple flowers. Speedwell has tiny round leaves, thread-like stems, no mint smell, and flat blue flowers with four petals.

Why does speedwell only flower in the morning? Speedwell flowers are sensitive to light. They open fully in morning sun and close up in the afternoon heat or on cloudy days. This is normal — the plant is still alive and spreading even when you can’t see the flowers.

Will speedwell take over my whole lawn? It can spread to cover thin, bare patches quickly, but it doesn’t compete well with healthy tall fescue. Speedwell is typically a problem in the early stages of lawn establishment or in areas where the grass is struggling for other reasons. Fix the underlying turf issue, and speedwell recedes naturally.

Can I just overseed over speedwell? Not effectively. Speedwell forms a dense mat that blocks grass seed from reaching the soil. You need to remove the speedwell first (herbicide or raking), then seed into bare soil, then keep the new grass thick enough to prevent speedwell from returning.

Does pre-emergent for crabgrass also stop speedwell? The standard crabgrass pre-emergents (prodiamine, dithiopyr) have limited effectiveness on speedwell. Isoxaben is better. If you’re managing both crabgrass and speedwell, you may need two different products or a combination product.

When to Call a Professional

If speedwell covers more than 10-15% of your lawn or keeps returning after multiple seasons of treatment, it’s a sign of a deeper turf problem — usually soil compaction, shade, or thin turf. A local provider can:

  • Diagnose the underlying cause (compaction, shade, pH, fertility)
  • Apply professional-grade herbicides with better speedwell activity
  • Core aerate and overseed with the right grass variety for your conditions
  • Set up a multi-season plan to build the dense turf that crowds out speedwell

If you’re in St. Charles County and tired of watching speedwell spread every spring, tell me about your lawn. I’ll connect you with a provider who understands how to fix the conditions speedwell needs to thrive.

Speedwell Control Calendar for St. Charles County
SeasonActionWhy
MarchScout emerging plantsSpeedwell greens up early — catch it small
Early AprilApply pre-emergent (isoxaben)Prevents spring germination flush
April-MaySpot-treat with triclopyr or three-way herbicideBest kill window — plants actively growing
June-AugustKeep mowing at 3.5-4 inchesTaller grass shades soil; suppress summer growth
SeptemberSpot-treat fall regrowthSecond flush — catch it before winter
September-OctoberCore aerate + overseed tall fescueFixes the thin turf that speedwell exploits
OctoberApply pre-emergent (isoxaben)Prevents winter annual germination
Year-roundFix underlying issuesShade, drainage, compaction — whatever speedwell is signaling

Bottom Line

Speedwell is a weed that tells you something about your lawn. Thin grass? Compacted soil? Too much shade? Speedwell fills the gap. The good news: speedwell isn’t aggressive in healthy turf. If you fix the conditions that let it in, speedwell will fade on its own.

The strategy: spot-treat in spring, aerate and overseed in the fall, and don’t let thin spots stay bare. Speedwell seeds need light and bare soil — deny them both, and the problem solves itself.

If you’re in St. Charles County and speedwell keeps finding its way into your lawn year after year, reach out. I’ll help find a provider who can build the kind of dense, healthy turf that keeps speedwell out.

Ready to hire help?

Need Lawn Care Help?

Midwest Lawn Care connects St. Charles County homeowners with trusted local lawncare providers — free, no obligation.

Request Lawn Care Help

Planning ahead?

Get the Free Seasonal Checklist

Download the month-by-month St. Charles County lawn care checklist so you know what to do before each season.

Get the Checklist

Comparing providers?

Quote Prep Checklist

Know what to ask, what to look for, and how to compare quotes side-by-side before you hire anyone.

Get the Checklist

Identifying weeds?

Free Missouri Weed ID Cheat Sheet

Quick-reference printable guide to 16 common lawn weeds in St. Charles County. Leaf shape, flower color, growth habit, and control method for each.

Unlock the Cheat Sheet