Lawn Care Provider Hiring Guide: 10 Questions to Ask Before You Sign
Hiring a lawn care provider in St. Charles County shouldn't be a guessing game. This guide walks you through the 10 questions every homeowner should ask before signing a contract โ so you can compare providers fairly and pick the right one.
- 10 essential questions to ask every lawn care provider you call
- Space to write answers side-by-side and compare up to 3 providers
- Red-flag warnings: contract traps, hidden fees, and no-insurance operators
- Printable one-pager you can take to every consultation
10 Questions to Ask Before You Hire a Lawn Care Provider
Print this page or save it on your phone. Call at least 2-3 providers and write their answers side-by-side โ you'll be amazed how much they differ. When you're ready, let us match you with a prescreened provider instead.
Are you licensed, bonded, and insured?
Why it matters: In Missouri, lawn care operators are not required to carry insurance by default. If a worker gets injured on your property or a chemical spray damages your neighbor's shrubs, you could be liable. A legitimate provider carries at least $1M general liability and workers' comp.
What services are included in the quoted price?
Why it matters: A $40/month "mowing" quote may not include edging, blowing, or trimming. A $60/application "weed control" quote may not cover granular fertilizer or spot treatments. Ask for an itemized list of what the price includes.
Is this a month-to-month agreement or a contract?
Why it matters: Many lawn care companies lock you into an annual contract with early-termination fees. If you're unhappy after 2 months, you could owe hundreds to cancel. Month-to-month gives you flexibility, especially in your first year with a provider.
What happens during drought or extreme weather?
Why it matters: St. Charles County summers can hit 95ยฐF+ with drought conditions. Some providers skip visits during drought (lawn goes dormant), others still mow. Some charge for missed visits, others don't. Know the policy before you need it.
Do you have references from current customers in my area?
Why it matters: Any company can show you 5-star Google reviews from 3 years ago. Ask for references from customers in your neighborhood who have a similar lawn size and service scope. Then call them.
What's your communication method and response time?
Why it matters: Do they text, call, or use an app? Can you reach them same-day if you need to reschedule or report a problem? A provider that takes 48 hours to respond during growing season will frustrate you fast.
Who will actually be doing the work?
Why it matters: The owner who gives you a great sales pitch may not be the person mowing your lawn every week. Ask whether they use employees or subcontractors, and whether the crew members are trained on the specific services you're paying for.
What products do you use for fertilization and weed control?
Why it matters: Some providers use generic fertilizers or off-label chemicals that may not be appropriate for tall fescue lawns common in St. Charles County. If you have pets, kids, or a vegetable garden nearby, you'll want to know what's being applied and how long until it's dry/safe.
What's your policy on missed visits or rescheduling?
Why it matters: If it rains all week and your provider can't mow, do they skip that week or come when it dries? Do they credit you for missed services? What's the notice required to reschedule? These policies vary wildly between companies.
Can you provide a written estimate before we start?
Why it matters: Verbal quotes lead to surprises. A written estimate protects both you and the provider. It should include the service scope, frequency, price, duration, and cancellation terms. If a provider won't put it in writing, that's a red flag.
3 Red Flags That Mean "Keep Looking"
If they can't provide a certificate of insurance with your name as additional insured, you're taking on liability. Walk away.
A good provider doesn't need to lock you in. Month-to-month with 30-day notice is the industry standard for reputable companies.
If they won't give you anything in writing, you have no recourse if something goes wrong. Reputable providers put everything in writing.