Zone 7B Grass Types
Best grasses for transition zone Zone 7B. Detailed species guides with photos, care tips, and seed recommendations.
289 counties · 25 states · 5° to 10°F

Tall Fescue
A tough, deep-rooted bunch-type grass that thrives in the transition zone and Northern climates. Turf-type tall fescue cultivars offer improved color and density over older varieties, with excellent heat and drought tolerance for a cool-season grass.
Soil: clay, loam, adaptable
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Bermudagrass
The dominant warm-season lawn grass across the Southern United States. Bermudagrass spreads aggressively via stolons and rhizomes, creating an extremely dense turf that handles heat, drought, and heavy traffic. Requires full sun and goes dormant in winter.
Soil: sandy loam, loam, adaptable
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Zoysiagrass
A dense, carpet-like warm-season grass that tolerates more cold and shade than bermudagrass. Zoysiagrass establishes slowly but once mature forms an incredibly thick turf that crowds out weeds. Popular in the transition zone where it bridges cool and warm season options.
Soil: loam, clay-loam
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Buffalograss
A native North American prairie grass that thrives on neglect. Buffalograss needs minimal watering, mowing, and zero fertilizer once established. Ideal for large, open areas in the Great Plains and arid Western regions where water conservation is a priority.
Soil: clay, clay-loam, heavy soils
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Centipedegrass
Known as the lazy man's grass, centipedegrass requires less mowing, fertilizing, and watering than most warm-season options. It spreads slowly via stolons and prefers acidic, low-fertility soils. Over-fertilizing is the most common mistake — it actually performs worse with too much nitrogen.
Soil: sandy, acidic, low fertility
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Blue Grama
A native shortgrass prairie species that survives extreme drought, cold, and poor soils. Blue grama grows only 6-8 inches tall and features distinctive eyelash-shaped seed heads. Ideal for low-input, naturalized landscapes in the Western and Great Plains states.
Soil: sandy, clay, well-drained, alkaline

Dichondra
Not a true grass but a ground cover with small, round, lily-pad-shaped leaves that forms a soft, dense carpet. Dichondra is popular as a lawn alternative in mild Southern California and desert Southwest climates. It handles shade well but cannot tolerate foot traffic or cold winters.
Soil: loam, well-drained, fertile