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Why Do My Irrigation Zones Overlap Incorrectly? (What Homeowners Need to Know)

Let me start with something I hear all the time when I’m out walking a property with a homeowner:

“Bob, some parts of my lawn get hammered with water, and other areas barely get anything. Why is everything overlapping wrong?”

And I’ll usually smile and say:

👉 “That’s one of the clearest signs your irrigation system isn’t working as a system.”

Because here’s the truth:

👉 Irrigation overlap is supposed to happen—but it has to be done correctly.
👉 When it’s not, your lawn ends up fighting your system instead of benefiting from it.

And if you’ve been dealing with this for a while, you already know what that looks like:

  • Wet, soggy patches that never dry out
  • Dry spots that just won’t green up
  • A lawn that looks inconsistent no matter how much you water

👉 That’s frustrating—and it’s not random.

So let’s walk through what’s really going on, what it costs to fix, and how to get your system dialed in the right way.

First—Overlap Is NOT the Problem (Bad Overlap Is)

This is where most homeowners get tripped up.

You see water overlapping and think:

👉 “That must be wrong.”

But in reality:

👉 Proper irrigation design requires overlap.

It’s called head-to-head coverage.

That means: – Each sprinkler head reaches the next one
– Coverage overlaps evenly across the entire zone

👉 That’s how you get consistent watering.

When it’s done right, your lawn doesn’t have winners and losers.

👉 Everything gets what it needs.

What Incorrect Overlap Actually Looks Like

When overlap is wrong, here’s what you’ll notice:

  • Muddy circles around certain heads
  • Dry strips between sprinklers
  • Patchy color differences across the lawn
  • Grass that grows unevenly—even in the same zone

👉 That’s not a watering problem. 👉 That’s a distribution problem.

And distribution is everything.

Why This Happens (The Real Root Issue)

Here’s the big idea I want you to understand:

👉 Irrigation systems don’t fail all at once—they drift out of balance.

And when they drift:

👉 Overlap becomes uneven.

Sometimes it starts small—just one head slightly off.

But over time?

👉 It compounds into a system-wide issue.

The 12 Most Common Reasons Zones Overlap Incorrectly

Let’s go deeper than most articles ever will.

1. Poor Original Design (Most Common)

This is the big one.

If your system wasn’t designed correctly from the start:

👉 Heads were placed based on convenience—not coverage

Result: 👉 Uneven overlap from day one

2. Heads Too Far Apart

When spacing is too wide:

👉 Water never reaches the next head

Result: 👉 Dry gaps that never recover

3. Heads Too Close Together

The opposite problem.

👉 Too much overlap

Result: 👉 Overwatering and soggy soil

4. Misaligned Heads (Very Common Over Time)

Heads shift due to: – Foot traffic
– Lawn mowing
– Ground movement

👉 Even a slight angle change throws everything off

5. Mixed Sprinkler Types in One Zone

This is extremely common.

  • Spray heads (fast output)
  • Rotor heads (slow output)

👉 Same zone, different watering rates

That guarantees uneven overlap.

6. Pressure Imbalance

If pressure varies across a zone:

  • Some heads spray farther
  • Others fall short

👉 Overlap becomes inconsistent instantly

7. Wrong Nozzles Installed

Different nozzles = different spray patterns.

👉 If they’re mismatched, overlap breaks down

8. Plant Growth Blocking Spray

Over time: – Shrubs grow
– Grass thickens

👉 Spray patterns get blocked without you noticing

9. System Changes Over Time

Repairs and additions:

👉 Slowly throw off original design

10. Slope and Water Movement

Water doesn’t stay where it lands.

👉 It moves downhill

Which changes how overlap behaves in real life

11. Uneven Soil Conditions

Some areas absorb faster than others.

👉 Even with good overlap, results look uneven

12. Poor Zone Design (Mixed Conditions)

Combining: – Sun + shade
– Turf + beds
– Flat + slope

👉 Creates conflicting watering needs

A Real Story From the Field

A homeowner told me:

“Bob, one side of my yard is soaked, and the other side won’t grow.”

We walked it together.

What we found:

  • Heads too close in one section
  • Too far apart in another
  • Mixed nozzles across the zone

Individually? 👉 Small issues

Together? 👉 Total imbalance

We corrected spacing and matched the system.

Result: 👉 Within weeks, the lawn evened out

Why This Problem Gets Worse Over Time

Here’s what most people don’t realize.

👉 Overlap problems create a feedback loop.

  • Wet areas stay wet → roots weaken
  • Dry areas thin out → coverage worsens
  • Homeowner waters more → imbalance increases

👉 The system becomes harder to manage every season

What It Costs to Fix Overlap Issues

Let’s talk real numbers.

Minor Adjustments

  • Re-aiming heads
  • Small corrections

👉 $150 – $400

Nozzle Corrections

👉 $200 – $800+

Head Relocation or Additions

👉 $300 – $1,500+

Pressure Balancing

👉 $300 – $1,200+

Full Zone Redesign

👉 $1,500 – $5,000+

Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: Minor Dry/Wet Spots

👉 $200 – $600

Scenario 2: Noticeable Patchiness

👉 $600 – $2,000

Scenario 3: Whole Yard Inconsistent

👉 $2,000 – $5,000+

The Hidden Cost of Doing Nothing

If you ignore it:

  • Water waste increases
  • Lawn health declines
  • Maintenance costs rise

👉 You end up paying more long-term

Simple 5-Minute Test You Can Do Today

Run your system and observe:

  • Do sprays reach the next head?
  • Are there dry gaps?
  • Are some areas getting hit twice as much?

👉 This tells you everything you need to know

How We Fix This the Right Way

Step 1: Evaluate Coverage Pattern

We watch where water actually lands

Step 2: Identify Imbalance

Too much vs too little

Step 3: Correct Layout

Spacing and positioning

Step 4: Match Components

Nozzles, heads, and pressure

Step 5: Fine-Tune the System

Balance everything

What a Properly Balanced System Feels Like

  • Even coverage across the yard
  • No dry or soggy spots
  • Minimal adjustments needed

👉 It just works

FAQ (What Homeowners Always Ask)

“Is overlap supposed to happen?”

👉 Yes—but evenly

“Do I need more sprinkler heads?”

👉 Not always—better placement matters more

“Will fixing this really improve my lawn?”

👉 Almost always—and often quickly

Final Thoughts from Bob Carr

If your irrigation zones overlap incorrectly, your system isn’t broken.

👉 It’s unbalanced.

And once you fix that balance:

👉 Your lawn responds fast

Because irrigation isn’t about water.

👉 It’s about how that water is delivered.

Ready to Fix Your Coverage the Right Way?

If your irrigation system isn’t covering your yard the way it should, let’s take a look.

👉 Call TLC Incorporated today
👉 Or schedule your irrigation inspection

We’ll show you exactly what’s happening—and fix it right the first time.

This entry was posted on Friday, April 10th, 2026 at 10:00 am. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.