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Lifespan · Durability · Guarantee · Essex-Wide

How Long Does Artificial Grass Last?

What actually determines how many years you get out of a lawn, why two identical-looking installations can age completely differently, and what to check before you commit.

Updated July 2026 7 min read

Written by Dean Giggins, owner of Essex Artificial Grass Ltd - on site for every installation across the county.

How long an artificial lawn lasts is one of the most common questions we get asked on a site visit - and it's a fair one, since it's usually the biggest single factor in whether artificial grass works out cheaper than a natural lawn over time.

The honest answer is that lifespan isn't fixed by the product alone. Two gardens with the same grass can age very differently depending on how they were installed and used. This guide covers what actually determines lifespan, and what to look out for so your lawn gets the years it's supposed to.

1

How Long Does It Actually Last?

As a general guide, a good-quality artificial lawn, properly installed, typically lasts 10 to 15 years before it needs replacing. That's the range we design and guarantee against - our supplied and installed lawns come with a 10-year product guarantee as standard.

Lifespan and guarantee aren't the same thing. A guarantee covers manufacturing defects and premature failure. Actual lifespan depends heavily on installation quality and how the garden is used day to day - which is why two lawns from the same product line can perform very differently.

Cheaper, thinner turf sold without proper backing or UV stabilisation will fall well short of this range, regardless of who installs it. That's a large part of why we only supply the Supreme range.

2

What Affects the Lifespan

Five factors do most of the work in determining how long a lawn actually lasts, and only one of them is really about the product itself.

FactorEffect on Lifespan
Quality of materialsUV-stabilised polyethylene fibres resist fading and wear far better than cheaper, unstabilised alternatives
Installation methodA proper sub-base, drainage and seamless joins are what allow a lawn to reach its full expected lifespan
Usage levelHeavy daily use from children or large dogs wears a lawn faster than a low-traffic ornamental garden
Maintenance routineRegular brushing and debris removal prevents matting and premature wear of the pile
Weather exposureEssex's mix of exposed coastal gardens and sheltered inland plots affects how quickly grass weathers over time

Notice that three of the five - installation, maintenance, and to some extent usage - are things a homeowner or installer has direct control over. Product quality alone doesn't determine the outcome.

3

How to Maximise the Lifespan

Once a lawn is installed correctly, these four habits are what get you towards the top end of its expected lifespan rather than the bottom.

1

Keep Up Routine Maintenance

A regular brush and rinse clears debris before it has the chance to work its way into the pile and cause premature matting.

2

Address Heavy-Use Areas Early

A shock pad under a swing set or trampoline, or an early repair to a worn section, stops a small issue from becoming a full re-lay.

3

Keep Hot Objects Off the Grass

Barbecues, fire pits and chimineas placed directly on the pile can melt or scorch the fibres - always use a heatproof mat or base underneath.

4

Choose the Right Pile for Your Garden

A denser, shorter pile like our Supreme 35mm holds up better under heavy family or pet use than a longer, softer pile chosen purely for looks.

4

Is It a Worthwhile Investment?

The upfront cost is higher than reseeding a patchy lawn, but the comparison changes once you factor in what a natural lawn costs to maintain over the same 10 to 15 years.

Over 10-15 YearsNatural LawnArtificial Grass
MowingWeekly during the growing seasonNone
Watering & feedingOngoing cost and effortNone
Reseeding worn patchesRecurring, especially in shaded or heavy-use spotsNot required
Appearance consistencyVaries with season and weatherConsistent year-round

Whether it pencils out for you depends on how you value your own time as much as the pounds and pence - if weekend mowing and reseeding isn't something you want to keep doing for the next decade, that's where the real return sits.

5

Common Myths About Lifespan

A few outdated assumptions still come up regularly on site visits, usually based on older or lower-grade artificial grass.

The MythThe Reality
"It fades quickly in the sun"Modern UV-stabilised fibres are designed to hold their colour for years, not fade within a season or two
"It wears out easily"Good-quality fibres are built to withstand years of foot traffic and UK weather without breaking down
"It's high-maintenance to keep looking good"A light, occasional brush and rinse is enough - nowhere near the routine a natural lawn needs
6

Why Installation Is the Real Deciding Factor

We're regularly called out to look at lawns fitted by other companies that are failing well before the 10-year mark - and in almost every case, the grass itself isn't the problem.

An inadequate sub-base leads to an uneven surface and pooling water, which accelerates wear at low points and around the edges.
The wrong membrane traps moisture beneath the grass, encouraging moss and mould that shorten the effective life of the lawn well before the fibres themselves wear out.
Poorly joined seams are one of the most common early failure points - a join that lifts or separates within a few years is almost always a fitting issue, not a product one.

This is why our installation process is the same on every job, and why the guarantee we offer is tied to how the lawn is put in, not just the grass we supply.

7

A Lawn Built to Last, Done Properly

The pattern below is one we see repeated across Essex, and it illustrates the gap between a lawn that reaches its full expected lifespan and one that doesn't.

A Common Pattern

A Lawn Failing Years Ahead of Schedule

A typical case: a lawn fitted a few years earlier already showing lifted seams, an uneven surface and standing water after rain - all signs of a rushed or inadequate sub-base rather than a worn-out product. The kind of call-out we see regularly across Chelmsford, Basildon and Southend.

The fix is to strip back to the ground, install a proper compacted sub-base with correct falls for drainage, and re-lay with properly joined seams and sealed edging. Done this way, a lawn should comfortably reach - or outlast - its expected 10 to 15 years.

Every garden is different, so this is a general pattern rather than a specific quote. If you'd like to see completed installations we've worked on, our case studies and gallery show finished gardens across Essex.

8

Frequently Asked Questions

A good-quality lawn, properly installed, typically lasts 10 to 15 years. Our supplied and installed lawns are backed by a 10-year product guarantee as standard.
Yes. Small sections can usually be cut out and replaced without needing to relay the entire lawn, provided the sub-base underneath is still sound.
No special care - a simple routine of occasional brushing and rinsing, keeping debris clear, and avoiding hot objects on the surface is enough to get a lawn towards the top end of its expected lifespan.
In most cases we're called out to look at, it comes down to installation - an inadequate sub-base, the wrong membrane, or poorly joined seams - rather than the grass itself wearing out.
It can, particularly on the same worn strip of lawn day after day. Choosing a denser, shorter pile like our Supreme 35mm for high-traffic gardens helps the lawn hold up to that kind of daily use.
Yes. Every lawn we supply and install across Chelmsford, Basildon, Billericay, Southend-on-Sea, Brentwood, Colchester, Rayleigh, Grays, Hornchurch and the surrounding areas comes with a 10-year product guarantee. See our guarantee page for full details, or get in touch for a free site visit.
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