I get this question every summer. A McKinney homeowner watches their water bill climb past $250 in July and asks if they should just rip out the sod and put down synthetic grass. Sometimes yes — sometimes no. Here’s the real comparison from a contractor who installs both.
The honest tradeoffs
Synthetic grass and natural sod are not direct substitutes. They serve different needs at different price points. The fair comparison isn’t “which is better” — it’s “which fits this specific yard, budget, and use case.”
Synthetic grass — the case for
- Zero watering, zero mowing, zero fertilizer
- Always green, even in August dormancy or January freeze
- Handles heavy foot traffic and pet damage without thinning
- No mud after rain
- Pays back over 8-12 years through water and lawn-care savings
Synthetic grass — the case against
- High upfront cost — typically 4-6× the cost of installing real sod
- Surface temperature in direct sun can hit 150°F+ on July afternoons — too hot to walk on barefoot
- Heat radiates back, making nearby patios and structures hotter
- Pet urine smell builds up without proper drainage and rinsing
- Doesn’t help with stormwater runoff (impermeable in many installations)
- Wears out in 12-15 years and needs full replacement
Sod — the case for
- Lower upfront cost
- Surface stays 20-30°F cooler than synthetic in summer
- Absorbs stormwater and helps groundwater recharge
- Lower environmental impact (when irrigated efficiently)
- Bermuda and Zoysia, properly maintained, last decades
Sod — the case against
- Requires weekly mowing in growing season
- Needs irrigation through Texas summers — $80-300/month water bills are common
- Goes brown-dormant November through March
- Vulnerable to drought stress, fungus, and weed invasion
- Wear patches in high-traffic zones (dogs, kids, gates)
When synthetic grass actually wins
Synthetic grass is the right call when one or more of these are true:
- Heavy pet traffic. Dogs destroy sod in narrow side yards faster than it can recover. Synthetic with proper drainage handles dog use indefinitely.
- Tight side yards with no sun. The 6-foot strip between two houses gets neither light nor airflow. Real grass dies. Synthetic stays green.
- Putting greens and play areas. A backyard putting green or kids’ play surface stays consistent year-round.
- Pool surrounds. No mud tracked into the pool, no chlorine kill spots.
- Rooftops, balconies, terraces. Anywhere you need a green look but can’t grow real grass.
- Drought-restriction zones. Some Collin County municipalities have outdoor watering restrictions that make summer lawns nearly impossible to maintain. Synthetic sidesteps the issue.
When sod is the right call
- Full open lawns with sun. A McKinney front yard with full sun and decent irrigation runs cheaper as sod over 10 years than synthetic.
- Family yards where you want grass underfoot. Kids running barefoot, picnics, soft texture — real grass wins.
- Yards where heat matters. If your patio gets blasted by reflective heat from synthetic in summer, the cooling effect of real grass is significant.
- Properties where stormwater runoff is an issue. Real lawns absorb. Synthetic over compacted base often doesn’t.
Cost comparison over 10 years (North Texas)
For a 2,000 sq ft area, rough numbers in 2026 dollars:
Synthetic grass
- Install: significant upfront cost (premium grades cost more)
- Maintenance over 10 years: occasional rinse, brush, infill refresh — minimal
- Water cost: $0
- Lawn care service: $0
- Total 10-year cost: roughly equal to one large landscape install plus light upkeep
Bermuda sod with irrigation
- Install: significantly lower upfront cost
- Water over 10 years: $1,500-4,000 depending on rainfall
- Mowing service over 10 years (or DIY mower replacement): $3,000-6,000 if outsourced
- Fertilizer, pre-emergent, occasional re-sod patches: $800-1,500
- Total 10-year cost: highly variable, often comparable to synthetic on a small yard, cheaper on larger yards
The math flips depending on yard size, water cost trends, and whether you outsource mowing. For small yards (under 1,000 sq ft) synthetic almost always wins on 10-year math. For large yards (5,000+ sq ft) sod is usually cheaper.
The blended approach we often recommend
Most of our McKinney and Allen install jobs end up as partial synthetic projects:
- Synthetic in the side yards where grass dies anyway
- Synthetic in the dog run area
- Synthetic around the pool and on the kids’ play area
- Real sod (Bermuda or Zoysia) on the main front lawn and the larger open areas
This gives you the durability where you need it without the heat and cost penalty of going 100% synthetic.
What makes a synthetic install fail
Cheap installs are the worst purchase you can make in landscaping. The grass itself is the small part of the cost — the base prep, drainage, and seaming is what determines whether it lasts 12 years or 4. Watch for:
- Inadequate base depth (less than 3-4″ of compacted crushed stone)
- No drainage layer or sloped drainage plan
- Cheap infill that mats down within 2 seasons
- Seams glued instead of nailed or seamed with proper tape
- Edging not properly secured — synthetic peels back from edges
We install pet-grade synthetic with infused drainage and proper base prep. Anything less and you’re spending real money on a product that fails fast.
Frequently asked questions
How hot does synthetic grass get in Texas summer?
Surface temperatures in direct full sun routinely hit 140-170°F on 95°F+ days. That’s too hot to walk on barefoot. Lighter-colored synthetic and infused cooling infills cut this by 15-25°F but don’t eliminate it.
Is synthetic grass safe for dogs?
Yes, when installed with proper drainage and pet-grade infill. The grass itself is inert. Issues come from urine pooling without drainage — pet-rated installs use perforated backing and a drainage layer that handles this.
Will HOAs in McKinney or Prosper let me install synthetic grass?
Most modern Collin County HOAs allow synthetic grass in back yards. Front yards are more restrictive — Stonebridge Ranch, Twin Creeks, and Starcreek have specific guidelines you need approval for. We help with HOA submissions when needed.
How long does synthetic grass last in Texas?
Quality pet-grade synthetic lasts 12-15 years with normal use in North Texas. UV degradation in Texas sun is faster than in northern states, so plan on the lower end of that range.
Do you install synthetic grass in Allen and Prosper?
Yes. Our synthetic grass page has the full service overview, and we cover Allen, McKinney, Prosper, and Celina as part of our Collin County install service.
Get a real comparison for your yard
Generic advice doesn’t apply to your specific yard, slope, sun exposure, and use case. We walk every property before recommending sod, synthetic, or a blended approach. Call (903) 462-0316 or request a free quote to talk through your options.