Many customers ask me the same question: “Which mower should I buy?” Their lawns range from a small half‑acre yard to a farm of dozens of acres. Buy too small – mowing becomes a chore and the machine breaks down quickly. Buy too big – you waste money, and the machine is awkward to handle.
Today we’ll go by lawn size and give you clear recommendations for each range – and why.
- Under 1 Acre – Push or Small Self‑Propelled Mower
1 acre is about 4,047 square metres, roughly half a standard football pitch. For lawns under 1 acre, we’re usually talking about home gardens, small B&Bs, or small plots on the edge of town.
Best choice:
- Push mower (20–22 inch deck)
- Self‑propelled mower (saves pushing effort, good for gentle slopes)
Why:
- Small area – a push mower will finish in 20–30 minutes
- Affordable – a decent push mower costs about $200–500
- Easy to store – most can be stored upright, taking little space
- Simple maintenance – you can change blades and spark plugs yourself
Watch out:
If your lawn has flower beds, trees, or many corners, a push mower is more manoeuvrable than big machines. But if the operator doesn’t want to push, or there is a slight slope, spend an extra $100–200 for a self‑propelled model – it’s well worth it.
Bottom line: Under 1 acre, a push mower is enough. If the user is elderly or prefers less effort, recommend self‑propelled.
- 1 to 2 Acres – Large Self‑Propelled or Small Zero‑Turn
This size is no longer small. With a push mower it could take 90 minutes per cut – and mowing four times a month in summer gets exhausting.
Best choice:
- Large self‑propelled mower (22–30 inch deck)
- Small zero‑turn mower (30–36 inch deck, also called ZTR)
Why:
- Large self‑propelled has a 30% wider deck than standard push mowers, saving about 30% of time
- Zero‑turn can turn on the spot – very fast around trees and flower beds – another 30–40% faster than self‑propelled
How to decide:
- If your lawn is flat and regular‑shaped, a large self‑propelled offers great value
- If there are many obstacles or irregular shapes, spending a few hundred dollars more on a zero‑turn is absolutely worth it
Bottom line: For 1–2 acres, choose large self‑propelled if budget is tight; choose small zero‑turn if you want to save time and effort.
- 2 to 5 Acres – Zero‑Turn or Small Garden Tractor
This is a “large lawn”. A push mower is no longer realistic – a single cut could take two to three hours and leave you exhausted.
Best choice:
- Zero‑turn mower (36–54 inch deck)
- Small garden tractor (42–48 inch deck, with steering wheel)
Why:
- Zero‑turns can run at 8–10 km/h – a 2‑acre lawn done in 40 minutes to an hour
- Garden tractors are more comfortable to sit on, and many can pull a cart, spread fertiliser, or collect leaves – multi‑purpose
Which one?
- Pure mowing, maximum efficiency → zero‑turn, fastest cut
- Need to tow things, spread fertiliser, sweep leaves → garden tractor is more versatile
Note: If the lawn has slopes steeper than 15°, a zero‑turn may slip or tip – a garden tractor is safer there.
Bottom line: For 2–5 acres, zero‑turn is the mainstream choice. If you need multi‑purpose ability, go for a garden tractor.
- Over 5 Acres – Commercial Zero‑Turn or Large Garden/Compact Tractor
Over 5 acres is typically a small farm, ranch, estate, golf course, or commercial maintenance operation. Mowing is no longer a chore – it’s a serious job.
Best choice:
- Commercial zero‑turn mower (54–72 inch deck)
- Large garden tractor / compact utility tractor (60+ inch deck, possibly with rear PTO)
Why:
- Commercial zero‑turns can run 12–15 km/h – tens of acres per day
- Built tougher – can run several hours daily without breaking down
- Wide decks – 60 inches covers 1.5 metres per pass, doubling efficiency
Extra advice:
- If you also do other farm work (tilling, hauling hay bales, spreading manure), skip the zero‑turn and go straight to a large garden tractor or even a compact utility tractor – mowing becomes just one attachment.
- Commercial zero‑turns are perfect for contractors who specialise in lawn care.
Bottom line: Over 5 acres, don’t try to save money – buy commercial grade. Cheap machines won’t survive one summer at this workload.
Quick reference table – give this to your customers
Lawn size | Recommended type | Deck width | Approx. time per acre | Price range (approx.) |
<1 acre | Push / self‑propelled | 20–22″ | 30–45 min | $200–600 |
1–2 acres | Large self‑propelled / small ZTR | 22–36″ | 15–30 min | $600–2,500 |
2–5 acres | Zero‑turn / garden tractor | 36–54″ | 10–20 min | $2,500–6,000 |
>5 acres | Commercial ZTR / large tractor | 54–72″ | 5–15 min | $6,000–20,000+ |
Final words
Beyond size, also consider terrain (flat or sloping), obstacles (trees, flower beds), and the operator’s physical strength and mechanical experience. But size is the first filter – choose the right size and you solve 80% of the problem.
If you’re a dealer or farmer, bookmark this article. Next time a customer asks “Which mower should I buy?”, just pull it out. And if you need specific product recommendations – from push mowers to commercial zero‑turns, including OEM/ODM customisation – feel free to contact us.
Choose the right machine, and mowing becomes not a hard job, but a simple, efficient, even enjoyable one.