If your lawn has dandelions, clover, plantain, or ground ivy showing up every season, no matter what you do, you are dealing with the most persistent category of lawn weeds there is. ArborLawn has been helping Michigan homeowners build cleaner, healthier lawns since 1976, and broadleaf weed control is one of the most common — and most misunderstood — challenges our team addresses every spring. The reason these weeds keep coming back almost always has more to do with lawn health than the weeds themselves.

The Truth About Broadleaf Weeds in Your Lawn

Broadleaf Weeds Are Opportunists

Dandelions, clover, and other broadleaf weeds do not invade healthy, dense turf at random. They establish themselves in lawns where the grass is thin, stressed, or growing in soil conditions that favor weed germination over turf growth. Compacted soil, low pH, poor drainage, and nutrient deficiencies all create the openings that broadleaf weeds exploit. Treating the weeds without addressing those underlying conditions is why so many homeowners find themselves applying the same products year after year with diminishing results.

Dandelions Are Tougher Than They Look

A dandelion’s taproot can reach six or more inches into the soil, and any fragment left behind after hand-pulling will regenerate into a new plant. Beyond the roots, a single dandelion can release up to 200 seeds per flower head — seeds that remain viable in the soil for years. Mowing them down before they seed helps slow the spread, but it does nothing to eliminate the established plants or the seed bank already present in your lawn.

Timing Your Broadleaf Weed Treatment Matters

Broadleaf herbicides are most effective when applied to actively growing weeds. In Michigan, this typically means targeting them in spring and early fall when temperatures are moderate, and plants are taking up nutrients readily. Applications during heat stress or drought are less effective and can cause unnecessary turf damage. Getting the timing right is one of the most important factors separating a professional weed control program from a DIY approach that produces inconsistent results.

A Weed-Free Lawn Starts With Healthy Soil

The most sustainable solution to broadleaf weed pressure is building a lawn that is too healthy and dense to give weeds a foothold. Proper fertilization, aeration, and overseeding work together to fill in the thin areas where weeds establish most easily, creating a competitive turf environment that keeps broadleaf pressure manageable over the long term.

Let’s Build a Lawn Weeds Can’t Compete With

ArborLawn serves Lansing, MI, with targeted broadleaf weed control programs backed by decades of local lawn care expertise. In addition to weed control, we also offer grub treatments, lawn aeration, and mole control to keep your lawn healthy and protected all season long. Contact us today at (517) 882-1941 and let us put a real plan in place against the weeds that keep coming back.