---
title: "When to Plant Centipede vs. Bermuda Sod in Aiken&#8217;s Sandy Soil"
url: https://www.hereaiken.com/2026/06/10/when-to-plant-centipede-vs-bermuda-sod-in-aikens-sandy-soil/
date: 2026-06-10T15:23:53-04:00
modified: 2026-06-10T15:24:30-04:00
author: ""
categories: ["Home and Garden"]
site: "HERE Aiken"
attribution: "HERE Aiken"
---

# When to Plant Centipede vs. Bermuda Sod in Aiken&#8217;s Sandy Soil

> Centipede vs. bermuda is the single biggest lawn decision an Aiken homeowner will make. Here's how to pick, and the exact sod-installation window for each in Aiken's sandy Zone 8a soil.

*Source: [HERE Aiken](https://www.hereaiken.com/2026/06/10/when-to-plant-centipede-vs-bermuda-sod-in-aikens-sandy-soil/) — June 10, 2026 by *

## The two warm-season grasses that actually work in Aiken

Aiken County sits in USDA Zone 8a with sandy, low-organic, slightly acidic soil and long hot summers — the exact conditions that punish cool-season lawns and reward warm-season grasses. Two species dominate the city’s residential lawns: centipede grass and bermuda grass. Picking the right one for your yard is the single biggest decision you will make as a homeowner here, and the timing of when you put it in the ground is almost as important as which one you choose.

## Centipede grass — the low-maintenance default

Centipede is the default residential grass across Aiken, Houndslake, Woodside, and most of the older neighborhoods on the west side of town. It loves Aiken’s sandy acidic soil, tolerates heat, and asks for very little fertilizer — in fact, over-fertilizing centipede is one of the most common ways Aiken homeowners kill their own lawns. It does not love shade and does not love foot traffic, but for a typical front-yard installation it is hard to beat.

**Best sod-installation window for centipede in Aiken:** late April through mid-June. The soil temperature needs to be consistently above 65°F before centipede roots will take hold. Sodding earlier than mid-April is a coin flip; sodding after July puts the new sod under maximum heat stress before it has established a root system.

## Bermuda grass — the high-performance option

Bermuda is the choice for sunny lots, athletic fields, golf course lots, and any yard that takes heavy foot traffic. It greens up earlier in the spring than centipede, recovers fast from damage, and handles Aiken’s August heat like a champion. The trade-off is maintenance: bermuda wants more water, more fertilizer, more mowing, and aggressive edging to keep it out of beds and walkways.

**Best sod-installation window for bermuda in Aiken:** May through July. Bermuda needs even warmer soil than centipede — at least 70°F — and rewards a true summer install with rapid root development.

## What the local soil test will tell you

Before you sod anything, get a Clemson Extension soil test from the Aiken County Extension office on Park Avenue. A $6 sample tells you exactly what amendments your lot needs and whether your soil pH is low enough to favor centipede (which actually prefers pH 5.0-6.0) or balanced enough for bermuda (which prefers pH 6.0-7.0). Doing this once, before sod goes down, is worth more than three years of guessing.

## Bottom line for an Aiken yard

If you have a typical Aiken lot — partial sun, sandy soil, average foot traffic, and a budget that wants to fertilize twice a year — go with centipede and install it in May. If you have a sunny lot with kids and dogs and you want a country-club lawn, go with bermuda and install it in June. Either way, the soil test comes first.
