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Best time of year for aquatic weed removal in Florida

Florida's growing season never really stops, but vegetation is more vulnerable at certain points. Time the work right and you cut visit count by a third.

Mike Johnson
Mike Johnson
Founder & Lead Operator · February 10, 2026 · 5 min read
Best time of year for aquatic weed removal in Florida

Florida's growing season never fully shuts down, but vegetation does cycle. Picking the right month for removal is the cheapest optimization a lake owner can make.

The annual cycle

  • December–February: vegetation at its lowest mass; water cooler; clearer; cheapest assessment and removal
  • March–April: rapid spring greenup; ideal window for booming and pre-season harvest
  • May–August: peak growth; reactive removal only; 30–50% pricing premium
  • September–October: still growing but slowing; second-best window for proactive work
  • November: late-season cleanup before next year's cycle

Why early-year work pays

A hyacinth harvest in January removes a population of 100 plants. The same harvest in July removes 100 plants — but those plants would have produced 1,000 by August. The January visit changed the trajectory of the whole season; the July visit just bought three weeks.

What we recommend

  • January assessment with photo log
  • February or early March pre-season harvest
  • May checkup
  • July checkup
  • October post-season cleanup

That is five touches per year on a heavily-infested lake — about $4,500–$8,500 in our service area. Most clients run two or three touches and accept slightly worse coverage; full-season programs are reserved for HOAs and properties with strict aesthetic requirements.

Frequently asked questions

What month should I schedule aquatic weed removal in Florida?

January through March is optimal. Vegetation biomass is at its annual low, water clarity is best for assessment, and crews are not in peak-season pricing. A January harvest holds 2–3x longer than a July harvest of the same coverage.

Can I do aquatic weed removal in summer?

Yes, and most reactive jobs happen in summer because that is when the problem becomes visible. Summer work costs more and the results last less long because the lake is rebuilding biomass rapidly. Plan ahead and pay less.

Mike Johnson
About the author
Mike Johnson
Founder & Lead Operator

Founder of Aquatic Cleanup. Florida-licensed aquatic-vegetation operator working private lakes, HOA retention ponds, and waterfront properties across Volusia, Lake, Seminole, and Orange counties.

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