We reclaim overgrown properties in Imperial, Allegheny County — $350–$650 is typical for most lots, though severely neglected properties can run higher. First frost mid-October; green-up in early-to-mid April. We build our approach around what the season and the property actually left behind, not a fixed formula.
Western Pennsylvania adds its own complications to overgrown cleanup work. The terrain across Beaver, Allegheny, Lawrence, and Mercer counties isn't flat — Pittsburgh-area suburbs especially have lots that slope hard toward creek drains or drop off behind retaining walls, and maneuvering heavy equipment on those grades takes experience and the right machines. The weed pressure here is also serious. A lawn left uncut through a Pennsylvania summer doesn't just get tall — it gets invaded. Goldenrod comes in thick. Pokeweed sends up canes that can reach six feet. Multiflora rose pushes out of fence lines and hedgerows. Bramble runs along the edges. By late August, parts of a neglected suburban lot can be genuinely impassable. What we've also learned is that clearing dense overgrown areas doesn't just fix the appearance of a property — it disturbs what was living in that cover. Tick populations nest in exactly this kind of habitat. Rodents den in it. Ground wasps and yellow jackets build colonies underneath heavy vegetation. Once we've cleared a property, we often recommend following up with a pest barrier spray treatment around the perimeter and any remaining woody edges — not as an upsell, but because it's the honest next step.
For Imperial specifically: first frost mid-October; green-up in early-to-mid April. The Route 79 and Route 30 corridor location means Imperial properties experience the same seasonal patterns as the broader western Allegheny County suburban zone.
When we're finished, you have a usable yard again. Property lines become visible. You can walk the entire lot. If there's a fence, you can see it. The driveway and sidewalks aren't bordered by a wall of vegetation. What you have at that point is a clean baseline — a property you can hand off to a regular maintenance crew, start mowing yourself, or bring us back to maintain on a schedule. Getting to that starting point is what the overgrown cleanup delivers.
We pull up to a property that's been sitting and the first thing you notice is how quiet it is inside that vegetation. It's dense. You can't see the ground. You don't know what's down there until you start moving through it. That's why the walk-through matters — we've found everything from buried concrete blocks to coiled garden hose to the kind of wire fencing that wraps around a spindle and stops a machine cold. Once we've confirmed what we're working with, we start at the tallest setting and work our way through in sections. The brush mower handles the heavy stuff. The string trimmer gets into areas the mower can't reach — along foundation walls, inside fence corners, around any objects we've identified in the sweep. As material comes down, it gets loaded. We're not waiting until the end to deal with the debris. By midday, a property that looked impenetrable in the morning starts to show its shape again. By the time we blow the hard surfaces and load the last of the trailer, you can see property lines you couldn't find a few hours earlier. That transformation is the whole point of what we do.
Most suburban overgrown cleanups in our service area run $350–$650 for a quarter- to half-acre lot with moderate neglect. Severely overgrown properties or larger lots typically run $700–$1,400 or more. We can't give you an accurate number without seeing the property — the range is too wide. Every quote is based on a site visit.
Yes — Garden Soon provides overgrown lawn cleanup in Imperial and throughout our service area. Call (724) 201-9484 or use the contact form to confirm your address and schedule.
Rolling terrain with some grade changes typical of western Allegheny County. Most suburban lots are manageable with standard equipment. Properties near the highway corridors sometimes have irregular rear lot lines abutting commercial areas or transportation infrastructure. We adjust our equipment and approach based on what's actually there.
We handle properties regardless of how long they've been sitting — including properties that haven't been touched in three or more years. The longer it's been, the more likely it is that the job will need two visits and that invasive plants like multiflora rose or pokeweed have moved in, but that's a workload question, not a whether-we-can-help question. We've cleared properties that were genuinely impassable.
We load everything we cut and haul it off the property when we leave. On a badly overgrown half-acre, that can mean filling a trailer twice before we're done. We don't pile it at the curb or leave bags for trash pickup — debris removal is part of what we quote, and the property is clear when we're finished.
It depends on how long it's been neglected and what's underneath. Properties that sat one or two seasons usually have enough surviving turf that the lawn recovers reasonably well once light and airflow are restored. Properties that have been overgrown for several years often have significant bare soil exposed after the cleanup, and those areas will either need overseeding or will fill in with whatever germinates first — which is often weeds. We'll tell you honestly what we see when we do the site visit.
When we clear an overgrown area — tall grass, dense brush, a property that's been sitting a season or two — we regularly find evidence of what was living in it. Ticks nest in leaf litter and tall grass. Ground wasps build colonies in undisturbed soil. Spiders take over dense vegetation, and rodents use thick ground cover for shelter. Once the habitat is gone, those populations don't disappear — they relocate toward the nearest structure. A perimeter barrier spray in the weeks after a major cleanup addresses that displacement directly.
Once a property is cleared and back to a manageable state, keeping it there is what regular mowing is for. Most properties coming out of an overgrown cleanup need two to three weeks before they can go on a standard mowing schedule — the ground needs to firm up and the remaining turf needs to stabilize. When that window passes, a consistent mowing schedule is what prevents the same situation from developing again.
Once the property is cleared, here's what we can take on in Imperial for ongoing maintenance:
Year-round turf health — fertilization, weed control, grub prevention, and winterizer timed to the western PA growing season.
Weekly or biweekly mowing with edge trimming and blowdown. We cut at the right height for cool-season turf and adjust for growth rate.
Spring and fall cleanup — leaf removal, debris, bed edging, ornamental cutbacks, and disposal.
Family- and pet-safe perimeter spray applied around the home exterior — foundation band, entry points, and window frames.
Vegetable garden design, site assessment, planting plans, and seasonal coaching.
Garden Soon
Licensed & insured in PA · Rated 4.8★ on Google
Providing Overgrown Lawn Cleanup in Imperial, PA and surrounding areas.