Callback Request — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Artificial turf in Augusta takes a beating. Between the heat radiating off Summerville driveways, the occasional heavy rain that tests drainage, and the demands of families who want a yard that actually stays green year-round, fake grass gets worn down faster than you'd think. Maybe your patches are matting up where the kids play. Maybe seams are separating. Maybe the infill has compacted so much that water just sits there instead of draining like it should. That's what we fix. We've worked yards across West Augusta, Forest Hills, and Olde Town—places where the sandhill soil drains better than Atlanta clay, but that doesn't mean your turf is immune to wear. We handle repairs that most installers skip: reseaming, infill top-ups, backing restoration, and spot replacements that actually blend with what's already there. It's not just about patching a hole; it's about making sure your yard functions the way artificial turf is supposed to. We come out, diagnose what's actually wrong, and give you honest options instead of pushing a full replacement you don't need.
Augusta's sandhill terrain is actually an advantage for artificial turf—that loamy, sandy base drains way better than the clay-heavy soil you fight in Atlanta. But that same drainage works against you if infill gets compacted or if seams develop gaps. The heat around Fort Eisenhower and the Riverwalk corridor can degrade cheaper turf faster, especially in south-facing yards that get hammered by afternoon sun. Neighborhoods like Summerville have mature trees that create shade patterns shifting throughout the season, which affects how evenly your turf wears. Most Augusta properties are quarter-acre to half-acre lots—big enough that a small repair job saves you thousands versus tearing out and reinstalling. HOA communities in Forest Hills sometimes have strict landscape rules, so repairs need to match existing turf specs exactly. Richmond County's humidity and occasional hard rains mean your drainage layer matters more than most people realize. We assess backing condition, infill migration, and whether your base has settled unevenly over time.
Yes. Matting usually means the pile has been compressed by heavy foot traffic or the backing is breaking down underneath. We can often restore it by cleaning out debris, re-fluffing the pile, and topping up infill where it's migrated. If backing is compromised, we repair just that section instead of a full replacement—saves you most of the cost.
Your sandhill soil drains faster than clay-based areas, which is good, but it also means infill can migrate during heavy rain. We account for that in repairs. Summer heat here is intense too, so seams and backing can fail faster if the original install didn't account for thermal stress. We use materials and methods built for Richmond County's climate.
Depends on the job. A seam repair might run $200–500. Infill top-up across a few hundred square feet, $300–700. Backing restoration on a larger area, $800–1,500. We give a free assessment first so you know exactly what you're paying for before we start.
That's the question we answer on-site. We examine your existing turf's pile height, infill type, and backing to match it as closely as possible. If the original is discontinued or degraded too much, we talk through visible seams and whether a full replacement makes sense for your HOA approval.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.