How to Volunteer When You Don’t Have Your Own Lawn Equipment
June 29, 2026 · I Want To Mow Your Lawn
The Equipment Barrier Is Real—But It’s Not a Deal Breaker
Someone sees the need. A neighbor’s yard has gotten away from them. An older adult on a fixed income can’t afford to hire help. A veteran returning home has other priorities than fighting overgrown grass. The impulse to help is there, clear and genuine.
Then comes the quiet thought: I don’t have a lawn mower.
It’s a practical concern—and an understandable one. A typical walk-behind lawn mower costs around $322 on average, and that’s before factoring in maintenance, fuel, or storage space. For someone interested in volunteering but not yet ready to make that investment, the barrier can feel real enough to stop them from signing up.
The good news: it doesn’t have to.
Why This Matters
I Want To Mow Your Lawn has logged more than 12,500 requests for help since launching during the pandemic. The need is enormous, and volunteers are the heartbeat of the organization. But the organization also understands that not every potential volunteer walks in with a shed full of equipment—and that’s okay.
Path 1: Borrow or Receive Equipment Through IWTMYL
The most direct route is to work within the IWTMYL ecosystem. The organization runs a “Pay It Forward” initiative where landscapers and equipment owners donate or lend unused mowers and tools to volunteers who need them. It’s a simple idea with powerful results: equipment that’s sitting idle gets matched with someone ready to help.
When signing up to volunteer, volunteers should mention they need equipment access. The IWTMYL team works to connect people with available resources in their area.
Path 2: Borrow from Your Community
Not every solution requires a nonprofit infrastructure. Neighbors, friends, and local community networks are often willing to lend tools. Facebook Marketplace, Nextdoor, and Buy Nothing groups have become informal tool-sharing hubs in many communities. A simple post—”I’m volunteering to mow yards for neighbors in need and looking to borrow a mower”—can yield unexpected generosity.
There’s also something valuable in that ask itself. It opens a conversation. It signals what’s happening and why. More often than not, people respond to that story.
Path 3: Start Small and Grow
Some volunteers begin by helping with smaller tasks that don’t require a full mower: edging, weed-pulling, clearing debris, or general tidying. These tasks matter. They build momentum. And they create a foundation for larger help down the road, whether through borrowed equipment or future upgrades.
The Real Point
Lawn care isn’t the goal—dignity is. When an older adult no longer has to choose between yard maintenance and groceries, when a veteran’s property stops signaling neglect, when a neighbor feels seen and supported by their community, that’s what this is about.
Equipment is just the tool. The real resource is someone willing to show up.
Ready to volunteer? Sign up through IWTMYL’s volunteer portal, and mention your equipment situation in the intake form. The team will help match available resources with your willingness to help. Want to make it fun? Download the MOW app at iwanttomowyourlawn.com/play or find it in the App Store—track hours, connect with other volunteers, and see the impact happening across your state and beyond.
Borrowed Equipment 101: Tips for Volunteering Safely and Effectively Without Your Own Mower
Using borrowed or loaned equipment comes with a few best practices. Learn how to operate unfamiliar mowers safely, maintain borrowed tools responsibly, and handle common scenarios so you can help with confidence—and respect for the equipment owner’s property.
Safety First: Operating an Unfamiliar Mower
Before you take a borrowed mower to a neighbor’s yard, spend 10–15 minutes getting to know it on neutral ground—ideally at the equipment owner’s home or your own property. Walk through the basics:
Start mechanism: Pull cord, electric button, or key ignition? Practice starting and stopping until it’s muscle memory.
Height adjustment: Understand how to raise and lower the cutting deck. Most homeowners prefer grass cut to 2.5–3.5 inches; check what the neighbor prefers.
Throttle and direction: Know whether it’s a push mower (you control speed) or self-propelled (it has its own power). Test directional control on flat ground.
Safety features: Locate the kill switch, blade brake, and any emergency stops.
Never assume you know how a mower works. Different brands and models vary. A five-minute conversation with the owner—or a quick YouTube video specific to that model—can prevent accidents and damage.
Before You Mow: Site Prep and Communication
Borrowed equipment is trusted equipment. Respect that trust by preparing the yard properly:
Walk the perimeter: Look for hidden obstacles—stakes, sprinkler heads, decorative rocks, dog toys—that could damage the mower or create safety hazards.
Clear debris: Remove branches, sticks, and anything larger than a pencil. Debris can jam blades or fly out as projectiles.
Check for wet grass: Wet grass clogs mowers and damages soil. If the yard is damp, ask the neighbor if it can wait 24 hours, or use a push mower (which clogs less than rotary models).
Confirm expectations: Talk to the neighbor about preferred cutting height and direction. Some prefer stripes; others just want it manageable.
Operating Borrowed Equipment: Common Mistakes to Avoid
Don’t mow over wet or long grass repeatedly. If grass is more than 4 inches tall, raise the blade to its highest setting for the first pass, then lower it for subsequent passes. Trying to cut too much at once stresses the borrowed mower.
Don’t let the blade run continuously when not mowing. Idling wastes fuel and puts unnecessary wear on borrowed equipment. Start it when you’re ready to mow; stop it when you pause.
Don’t ignore the fuel or battery level. Return borrowed equipment with the same fuel/charge you found it, or better. If it’s electric, plug it in after use. If it’s gas, top off the tank or ask the owner what’s expected.
Don’t force adjustments or repairs. If something feels stuck or broken, stop and contact the equipment owner. Don’t try to fix it yourself.
Inspection and Return: Protecting the Relationship
After mowing, spend five minutes on equipment care:
Clean the deck: Use a stick or small brush to remove grass clippings from underneath. Dried grass promotes rust and corrosion. Never use a hose while the engine is warm.
Check for damage: Look for bent blades, loose bolts, or unusual sounds you didn’t hear before. Document anything out of the ordinary and inform the owner.
Return it promptly and clean. Don’t keep borrowed equipment longer than necessary. Return it clean, fueled (or charged), and with a simple thank-you.
The Bigger Picture: Building Trust and Reliability
Being a great borrowed-equipment volunteer means being the person people trust with their tools. That reliability—showing up prepared, treating equipment with respect, communicating clearly—builds relationships that ripple through entire communities. Other volunteers notice. Neighbors notice. And that trust opens doors to helping more people, more consistently, over time.
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I Want To Mow Your Lawn Inc. is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and registered charity with PayPal Giving Fund. EIN: 85-3447661. Your donation is tax-deductible.
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