🌱 501(c)(3) Nonprofit · EIN 85-3447661 · Est. 2020

Blog

How Case Managers Can Connect Clients with Free Yard Care

June 11, 2026 · I Want To Mow Your Lawn

The Barrier Nobody Plans For

A case manager sits across from an older adult during a home visit. The conversation covers medications, mobility aids, meal delivery, and transportation. But as the manager glances out the window at an overgrown yard, a question goes unasked: Who’s going to mow that?

Yard maintenance doesn’t usually appear on a care plan checklist. Yet for many older adults, veterans, and neighbors in financial hardship, an unkempt lawn becomes a barrier to independence, dignity, and staying home safely.

Why Yard Care Matters More Than Appearance

The numbers tell a clear story. 75% of adults aged 50 and older would prefer to stay in their homes as they age, and 93% of adults 55+ who want to age in place cite keeping up with outdoor maintenance as one of the most practical challenges.

Physical barriers are real. Bending, heavy equipment, uneven terrain, and summer heat create legitimate health risks. One in four adults over age 65 suffers a fall each year, and yards with broken paths or overgrown areas compound that risk.

There’s also a financial truth: about 40% of older Americans rely exclusively on Social Security income, averaging approximately $1,913/month. When lawn care costs $50 to $210 per visit, that’s a choice between yard maintenance and groceries—a choice many lose.

Beyond the practical: unkempt yards can trigger code violations and fines. They also affect whether older adults feel pride in their homes and whether they’re willing to invite friends over—factors that directly influence social connection and mental health.

What Case Managers Should Know

Yard care is part of aging in place. A well-maintained home exterior supports independence, prevents falls, maintains community standing, and reduces stress on the client and their family. It deserves the same attention as meal delivery or mobility support.

Free options exist. Several nonprofit organizations now connect volunteers with older adults, veterans, and neighbors in need of free lawn care. These aren’t one-time charity moments—they’re structured programs designed to provide temporary relief while respecting dignity.

How to Make the Referral

Assess the need during home visits. Ask directly: “Are you able to keep up with mowing, trimming, and yard work?” Listen for financial barriers, physical limitations, or safety concerns. Document it as part of the client’s support plan.

Know the local options. I Want To Mow Your Lawn (IWTMYL) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit operating across all 50 states with 1,800+ volunteers. The organization connects older adults over 65, veterans, disabled individuals, and those in financial hardship with free volunteer lawn care. The process is straightforward: clients (or their case managers, family members, or caregivers) submit an inquiry through IWTMYL’s website, and the organization locates nearby volunteers to help.

Share the resource with clients and families. Mention it as a practical option during care planning conversations. Some clients won’t ask for help unless it’s explicitly offered—framing it as a community support program (not charity) lowers the barrier to accepting assistance.

Follow up. After a referral is made, check in with the client. Did the volunteer visit happen? Is the yard in better shape? This small follow-up signals that you care about their whole home environment, not just medical care.

A Practical Addition to Care Plans

Case managers are already stretched thin. But adding one question—”Who handles the yard?”—and one referral can mean the difference between a client aging safely at home and one who loses independence because outdoor maintenance became unmanageable.

Free volunteer lawn care programs exist precisely because this gap matters. They work best when professionals like case managers know about them and make the connection.

Want to Help Your Clients Find Support?

If a client or neighbor needs free yard care, IWTMYL accepts referrals and inquiries through their website. Case managers can also help clients explore the organization’s app-based tools for finding nearby volunteer support.

Interested in volunteering? Sign up to become a volunteer and help your community. Or try the MOW app to find volunteer opportunities near you—available on the App Store and Google Play.

📖
Deep Dive

The Case Manager’s Deep Dive: Assessing Yard Care Needs and Documentation Best Practices

Yard maintenance often gets overlooked in care planning—but it’s a critical safety and independence issue. This guide walks case managers through assessment questions, documentation strategies, and specific referral language that actually gets results.

Support our foundation to unlock this resource

A donation of any amount unlocks all bonus guides, templates, and deep dives for 30 days.

100% goes toward connecting volunteers with neighbors in need.

Have a group? Organize a Community Service Day — we'll match your team with neighbors who need help.
Want to help us reach more neighbors? Our Marketing Toolkit has copy-ready posts, press materials, and flyers you can share in five minutes.

Share this article

Daily puzzle + volunteer tools.Play MOWGet the iPhone app

Supported by partners and community champions

Google Walmart Kubota Milwaukee Tool STIHL