When to Turn On Your Irrigation System
By Jim
Spring in New England is a season of patience. One week the forsythia is blooming and the next, there’s a frost advisory on your phone. If you’re wondering when it’s safe to turn your irrigation system back on — you’re not alone. It’s one of the most common questions we get every spring here on Cape Cod and across the South Shore.
After 95 years in the landscaping business, we’ve learned that timing your irrigation startup correctly isn’t just about convenience — it’s about protecting your system, your lawn, and your investment.
Here’s everything you need to know.
The Short Answer: When Is It Safe to Turn On Irrigation in New England?
Wait until nighttime temperatures are consistently above 32°F — typically mid-April to early May in most of New England.
For homeowners on the Cape and in southeastern Massachusetts, that window often opens a little earlier than inland areas, sometimes as early as mid-April. But the key word is consistently. One warm week followed by a hard frost can crack pipes, damage valves, and set your whole season back.
Why Timing Matters for Irrigation Startup
Turning your system on too early is one of the most common — and costly — mistakes homeowners make each spring. Here’s what’s at stake:
Freeze damage. Even if daytime temps are warm, a single overnight frost can freeze water sitting in your irrigation lines and heads, cracking PVC pipes and destroying backflow preventers.
Wasted water. Grass and plants don’t need irrigation until the ground has warmed and the root systems are actively growing. Running your system too early just washes water away.
System wear. Starting and stopping your system repeatedly due to weather fluctuations adds unnecessary wear on solenoids, valves, and heads.
New England Irrigation Startup: A Month-by-Month Guide
March — Keep It Off
March in New England is unpredictable. Even in mild years, overnight temperatures regularly dip below freezing. Your system should stay winterized. Use this time to schedule your spring irrigation startup appointment so you’re not scrambling in April.
Early-to-Mid April — Watch and Wait
By early April, you might see daytime temps climbing into the 50s and 60s. That’s encouraging — but the ground is still cold and nighttime temps are unreliable. Hold off a little longer. If you’re in a coastal area like Yarmouth or Dennis, the marine influence keeps temps a bit more moderate, but frost risk remains.
Mid-April to Early May — The Sweet Spot for Most of New England
This is typically when it’s safe to schedule your irrigation startup in southeastern Massachusetts and Cape Cod. By mid-April, the 10-day forecast usually shows nights staying reliably above freezing, and your lawn is beginning to wake up and need consistent moisture.
For central and northern New England (Worcester, Springfield, the Pioneer Valley, Vermont, New Hampshire), hold off until early May to be safe.
May — Green Light Across the Region
By early-to-mid May, it’s irrigation season throughout New England. If you haven’t started up yet, now is the time. Your grass is actively growing, soil temps are rising, and spring rains alone often aren’t enough to keep up with hydration needs.
What Happens During a Professional Irrigation Startup?
A proper irrigation startup isn’t just turning a valve. Here’s what a professional inspection covers:
- Backflow preventer test — required in Massachusetts and critical for protecting your drinking water supply
- Zone-by-zone activation — checking each zone for broken heads, misaligned sprinklers, and coverage gaps
- Controller programming — setting run times appropriate for spring (shorter than summer)
- Leak and pressure check — identifying any damage from the winter before it becomes a major repair
- Head adjustment — making sure heads haven’t shifted over winter and are watering your lawn, not your driveway Skipping this step and just turning your system on yourself risks missing problems that only get worse — and more expensive — as the season goes on.
How to Know If Your Irrigation System Survived the Winter
Before startup, watch for these warning signs:
- Wet spots or puddles in your lawn with no rain — could indicate a broken line underground
- Sunken or heaved heads — frost can push sprinkler heads out of alignment
- Water pressure issues — low pressure at one zone often points to a cracked pipe or broken valve
- Controller errors — power surges over winter can reset or corrupt your timer settings If you notice any of these, call a professional before turning the system on. Catching a small repair early is always better than letting it run all season.
Frequently Asked Questions About Irrigation Startup in New England
When should I turn on my sprinkler system in Massachusetts?
In southeastern Massachusetts and Cape Cod, most homeowners can safely start their irrigation systems between mid-April and early May, once nighttime temperatures consistently stay above 32°F. Further inland or north, early-to-mid May is more appropriate.
What temperature is safe to turn on irrigation?
You should wait until your 10-day forecast shows no nights dropping below 32°F. A single hard freeze after startup can damage pipes, valves, and backflow preventers.
Do I need a professional to start up my irrigation system?
In Massachusetts, a licensed irrigator is required to test and certify your backflow preventer — so yes, professional involvement is both practical and legally required for that portion. Beyond compliance, a professional startup catches winter damage before it turns into a mid-summer repair bill.
How long does a sprinkler startup take?
Most residential startups take between 45 minutes and 2 hours, depending on the size of your system and the number of zones. Our team works efficiently so you can get back to enjoying your yard.
Can I do irrigation startup myself?
Homeowners can handle basic steps like turning on the water supply and visually inspecting heads — but testing the backflow preventer and making adjustments zone-by-zone is best left to a certified professional. It also ensures your system is running at peak efficiency from the start.
Cape Cod & South Shore Irrigation Tips
Living near the coast has its advantages — a bit warmer in early spring, fewer hard frost days than inland — but irrigation on Cape Cod and the South Shore comes with its own considerations:
- Sandy soils drain fast. The Cape’s sandy soil doesn’t retain moisture the way clay-heavy soils do, which means your system may need to run more frequently than neighbors off-Cape.
- Salt air and wind. Coastal winds can dry out turf quickly in summer, making a well-calibrated irrigation system even more important.
- Water restrictions. Many Cape Cod towns have seasonal water use restrictions during drought conditions. Your system should be programmed to run during off-peak hours (typically early morning) to stay compliant.
Ready to Schedule Your Spring Irrigation Startup?
At Sears, we’ve been helping homeowners and businesses across Yarmouth and Cape Cod bring their properties back to life each spring since 1931. Our irrigation team handles everything — startup, inspection, programming, and repairs — so you don’t have to worry about a thing.
Don’t wait until your lawn is dry and patchy to think about irrigation. Spring startup slots fill up fast. Give us a call or reach out today to schedule your appointment.
John G. Sears & Son Landscaping is a family-owned landscaping company based in Yarmouth, MA, serving residential and commercial clients across Cape Cod and the South Shore. Established in 1931.
Related Topics:
- How to Winterize Your Irrigation System in Massachusetts
- Spring Lawn Care Tips for Cape Cod Homeowners
- How to Read Your Irrigation Controller
- Signs Your Sprinkler System Needs Repair