What's in this guide
Why Your Grass Type Is the #1 Factor
Every herbicide label lists which grasses it's safe on β but most homeowners skip this section and just spray. The result can be permanent damage to your lawn that takes months to recover.
The most dangerous mismatches involve warm-season grasses (St. Augustine, Centipede, Zoysia) and commonly used herbicides. Many products safe on Kentucky Bluegrass will bleach or stunt warm-season varieties. The key culprits are atrazine (fine on St. Augustine, toxic to most others) and 2,4-D at high rates (damages St. Augustine and Centipede).
Even when a product is listed as "safe" for your grass type, apply to a 2 sq ft test area and wait 7 days before treating the full lawn. Environmental stress, new seeding, drought, or disease can increase sensitivity to herbicide damage.
Full Herbicide Γ Grass Type Compatibility Chart
β = Safe at label rate | β = Use caution / reduced rate | β = Avoid / will damage | β = Not applicable
| Herbicide / Active | Bermuda | Zoysia | St. Augustine | Centipede | KY Bluegrass | Fescue | Ryegrass |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2,4-D (standard rate) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| MCPP (Mecoprop) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| Dicamba | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| Quinclorac (crabgrass) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| Triclopyr | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| Atrazine | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| Prodiamine (pre-emergent) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
| Imazaquin (nutsedge) | β | β | β | β | β | β | β |
Bermuda Grass Weed Killers
Bermuda is one of the most herbicide-tolerant warm-season grasses, which makes weed control significantly easier than St. Augustine or Centipede. Most broadleaf herbicide blends are safe at standard rates, and it handles quinclorac for crabgrass control without issue.
- Roundup for Lawns (Bermuda) β 2,4-D + MCPP + Dicamba + Quinclorac. Handles broadleaf and crabgrass in one product.
- Ortho Weed B Gon Chickweed, Clover & Oxalis Killer β Triclopyr-based. Use with caution; safe at label rate on dormant Bermuda.
- Prodiamine / Barricade β Excellent pre-emergent for annual grassy weeds. Safe on all Bermuda.
- Quinclorac (Drive XLR8) β Post-emergent crabgrass killer. Fully safe on Bermuda.
- Tenacity (mesotrione) β Safe on Bermuda for nutsedge and broadleaf control.
- Atrazine β Will kill or severely damage Bermuda grass. Not registered for Bermuda use.
- Triclopyr at high rates (actively growing) β Can cause temporary bleaching on actively growing Bermuda in summer. Use on dormant grass only if required.
- MSMA β Restricted use in many states. Can damage Bermuda if over-applied.
Zoysia Grass Weed Killers
Zoysia is moderately sensitive to herbicides β more tolerant than St. Augustine, but more sensitive than Bermuda. Dicamba and triclopyr at high rates are the main concerns. Stick to lower labeled rates and avoid application during heat stress above 90Β°F.
- 2,4-D (low rate) β Safe for broadleaf control. Use the lowest labeled rate; avoid summer applications.
- Quinclorac (Drive XLR8) β Crabgrass control. Safe on Zoysia at label rate.
- Prodiamine / Barricade β Best pre-emergent option. Fully safe.
- Roundup for Lawns (Zoysia formula) β Check label for Zoysia-specific formula or rate.
- Triclopyr β Can cause significant injury on Zoysia. Avoid entirely during active growth.
- Dicamba (high rate) β Use caution; lower rates typically safe but risk of injury exists on stressed lawns.
- Atrazine β Not registered for Zoysia. Will cause damage.
- Imazaquin β Some formulations cause temporary injury. Check label carefully.
St. Augustine Grass Weed Killers
St. Augustine is the most herbicide-sensitive common lawn grass. Many products that work perfectly on other grasses will cause severe, lasting damage here. This is the most critical grass type to get right. Atrazine is one of the few herbicides specifically registered for St. Augustine β a complete reversal from other grass types.
- Atrazine (Spectracide Weed Stop for St. Augustine) β One of the few herbicides specifically safe on St. Augustine. Controls many broadleaf weeds. Not safe on any other grass type.
- 2,4-D at reduced rate (50% label rate) β Use with caution. Avoid in heat. Some St. Augustine cultivars are sensitive even at reduced rates.
- Quinclorac β Safe for crabgrass control on St. Augustine.
- Prodiamine (pre-emergent) β Safe for annual weed prevention. Apply in early spring.
- Dicamba β Will cause severe, lasting injury. Do not use.
- Triclopyr β Causes bleaching and dieback on St. Augustine. Avoid entirely.
- MCPP (Mecoprop) β Known to injure St. Augustine. Avoid products containing MCPP.
- Most three-way broadleaf blends (2,4-D + MCPP + Dicamba) β Avoid. The MCPP and Dicamba components will damage your lawn.
Centipede Grass Weed Killers
Centipede is nearly as sensitive as St. Augustine. It's a low-maintenance, low-fertility grass that is easily stressed by over-application of any chemical. The safest approach is atrazine for broadleaf and prodiamine for prevention. Avoid quinclorac and most three-way blends.
- Atrazine β Best broadleaf option for Centipede. Specifically registered. Apply at label rate only.
- Prodiamine (pre-emergent) β Best prevention option. Fully safe on Centipede.
- 2,4-D (reduced rate only) β Only at 50% of label rate. Never in summer heat. Stress increases sensitivity.
- Quinclorac β Known to cause severe injury on Centipede. Avoid for crabgrass control β use pre-emergent instead.
- Dicamba, MCPP, Triclopyr β All cause significant injury. Avoid entirely.
- High-nitrogen fertilizer + herbicide combos β Centipede is very sensitive to excess nitrogen. Never use weed-and-feed products.
Kentucky Bluegrass Weed Killers
The most common Canadian lawn grass and dominant in the northern US. Kentucky Bluegrass has excellent herbicide tolerance and can handle all standard broadleaf killers, three-way blends, and crabgrass herbicides at full label rates. This is the easiest grass type for weed control.
- Killex Concentrate (Canada) β 2,4-D + MCPP + Dicamba. Ideal for Canadian Bluegrass lawns. Our top-rated choice.
- Weed B Gon Lawn Weed Killer β Same three-way formula. Fully safe at label rate.
- Roundup for Lawns β Adds quinclorac for crabgrass. Safe on Bluegrass.
- Prodiamine / Barricade (pre-emergent) β Excellent for crabgrass prevention. Fully safe.
- Triclopyr (for ground ivy, wild violet) β Safe on Kentucky Bluegrass. Best for tough-to-kill broadleaf weeds.
- Atrazine β Will damage or kill Kentucky Bluegrass. Strictly a warm-season grass product.
- Any herbicide above label rate β Though tolerant, over-application causes temporary yellowing and stress.
- Application to newly seeded areas β Wait until lawn has been mowed 3β4 times before any herbicide use.
Tall & Fine Fescue Weed Killers
Fescues are among the most herbicide-tolerant cool-season grasses. They handle all standard three-way broadleaf herbicides well. The main caveat: Creeping Red Fescue (used in shade mixes) is somewhat more sensitive than Tall Fescue and should be treated at lower rates during heat stress.
- 2,4-D + MCPP + Dicamba blends β Fully safe on all Fescue varieties at standard rates.
- Quinclorac β Crabgrass control. Safe on Tall and Fine Fescue.
- Prodiamine (pre-emergent) β Best prevention. Fully safe.
- Triclopyr β Safe for tough broadleaf weeds (wild violet, ground ivy). Use full label rate on Tall Fescue; reduce by 25% on Fine Fescue.
- Atrazine β Not registered for Fescue. Will cause damage.
- High-rate dicamba on Creeping Red Fescue β Reduce rate by 25% on fine-textured Fescue varieties in shade or stressed conditions.
Perennial Ryegrass Weed Killers
Perennial Ryegrass is commonly found in lawn mixes alongside Kentucky Bluegrass and Fescue. It has very similar herbicide tolerance to Kentucky Bluegrass β tolerating standard three-way broadleaf blends and quinclorac-based products well at full label rates.
- 2,4-D + MCPP + Dicamba blends β Fully safe at label rate. Same tolerance as Kentucky Bluegrass.
- Quinclorac β Safe for crabgrass control on Perennial Rye.
- Prodiamine (pre-emergent) β Safe. But avoid applying when overseeding.
- Atrazine β Not registered for Ryegrass. Will cause damage.
- Application within 4 weeks of overseeding β Pre-emergents block seed germination. Post-emergents damage young seedlings. Time applications carefully.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Guides
Best Post-Emergent Weed Killers (2026)
Our top-ranked post-emergent products for every weed type and region.
Read guide β How-To GuideHow to Kill Crabgrass in Your Lawn
Step-by-step crabgrass control for every grass type.
Read guide β Buyer's GuideBest Pre-Emergent Weed Killers (2026)
Stop weeds before they start β top 5 reviewed and compared.
Read guide β