Published: June 2026 | By: A1 Scoop Warriors | Reading time: ~6 minutes
When Fort Worth homeowners contact us about starting service, the most common question is whether to choose weekly or bi-weekly (every other week) service. It's a reasonable question — and the honest answer depends on your specific situation rather than a blanket recommendation.
This post compares both options directly across the factors that actually matter: yard condition, lawn health, health risk management, and fit with how you use your backyard.
What Changes Between Weekly and Bi-Weekly Dog Poop Removal
The core difference is how long waste sits in your yard before removal:
- Weekly service: Maximum accumulation is 7 days. Each visit removes 7 days of deposits.
- Bi-weekly service: Maximum accumulation is 14 days. Each visit removes up to two weeks of deposits.
Doubling the accumulation window doesn't just double the amount of waste — it changes what the waste has time to do. Two weeks gives nitrogen from deposits time to start burning turf. It gives fly eggs time to hatch and larvae to develop. It gives roundworm eggs time to become infective larvae in the soil. None of those processes complete in the first 7 days.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Weekly | Bi-Weekly |
|---|---|---|
| Max accumulation | 7 days | 14 days |
| Lawn burn risk | Low | Moderate (especially summer) |
| Fly attraction | Minimal | Noticeable in summer |
| Parasite risk | Low (removed before eggs become infective) | Moderate (eggs may develop in soil) |
| Yard usability | Clean enough for daily use | Adequate for light use |
| Best for | 1–3 dogs, active yards | 1 small dog, winter, large yards |
| Cost | Higher (more visits) | Lower (fewer visits) |
When Weekly Service Is the Right Choice
You have two or more dogs. With multiple dogs, two weeks of accumulation creates a significant waste volume. A single large dog produces roughly 5–7 lbs of waste per week. Two large dogs: 10–14 lbs over two weeks, concentrated in the same yard zones. The concentrated nitrogen causes turf damage, and the fly attraction is real. Weekly service keeps accumulation manageable.
You have young children. If kids under 8 play in the yard regularly, weekly is the appropriate standard. Parasite eggs in soil can become infective larvae in 2–4 weeks — bi-weekly service cuts that window close. Weekly service removes waste before the parasite lifecycle becomes a risk.
It's summer in Fort Worth. From June through September, the 95–105°F temperatures accelerate everything: decomposition, odor release, fly breeding, and lawn burn. Weekly service during summer keeps the yard in a condition you'd actually want to use. If you've been on bi-weekly service and the yard is struggling in summer, stepping up to weekly fixes it immediately.
You use the backyard regularly. If you're grilling, hosting, or spending outdoor time in the yard most weeks, you want it actually clean — not "cleaned two weeks ago." Weekly service means the yard is always within a week of its last cleanup.
You're in a close-lot neighborhood. Areas like Hidden Lakes, Fossil Creek, and the neighborhoods near Marine Creek Lake in Fort Worth tend to have smaller lots and fence lines close to neighbors. Odor from accumulated waste becomes a neighborhood issue in these settings. Weekly service prevents the accumulation that generates complaints.
When Bi-Weekly Service Makes Sense
One small dog in a larger yard. A Yorkie, Chihuahua, or small Dachshund in a 3,000+ sq ft yard produces waste that distributes enough that two-week accumulation doesn't create high-concentration burn zones. The total volume is low enough that bi-weekly service keeps the yard in acceptable condition.
Winter months (December–February). In Fort Worth's cooler months, decomposition slows significantly, fly breeding activity drops, and most families spend less time in the backyard. For single-dog households, stepping down to bi-weekly in winter is a reasonable seasonal adjustment.
Budget starting point. Bi-weekly service costs less than weekly. For families evaluating service for the first time, starting bi-weekly with the understanding that you may want to step up gives you a chance to see how it works before committing to weekly costs. A1 Scoop Warriors has no contracts, so you can change your frequency at any time.
Switching Your Dog Poop Removal Schedule Is Easy
One thing that makes this decision easier: you can change it. A1 Scoop Warriors doesn't require long-term contracts, so if you start bi-weekly and find the yard isn't staying clean enough — or if summer rolls around and you want to step up — you can adjust your service frequency whenever you need to.
Most families with one dog start bi-weekly, see how it goes for a month, and then make a decision from there. Families with multiple dogs who start weekly almost never step down — the yard condition difference is immediately noticeable.
We also offer twice-weekly service for households with three or more dogs or for situations where weekly isn't keeping up. For the households that need it, it makes a substantial difference.
Ready to figure out what fits your situation? Get your price here — 60 seconds, enter your address and dogs, we'll send your exact price.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is weekly service really worth the difference in cost over bi-weekly?
For multi-dog yards and yards where children play regularly, yes. The lawn condition, fly situation, and parasite risk are meaningfully better with weekly service. For a single small dog in a large yard, bi-weekly often provides sufficient results for the lower cost.
Can I switch from bi-weekly to weekly without signing a new contract?
Yes. A1 Scoop Warriors has no contracts. You can change your service frequency at any time — up or down — based on how your situation changes. Summer upgrades and winter step-downs are both common.
What happens to the lawn if I choose bi-weekly and have two dogs?
With two dogs on bi-weekly service in a typical Fort Worth yard, you'll likely see some turf yellowing and burn in the high-use zones over time, particularly in summer. The yard stays usable but won't be in the same condition as it would with weekly service. For two-dog households, weekly is the practical recommendation.
Do you serve all areas of Fort Worth on both weekly and bi-weekly schedules?
Yes. Both weekly and bi-weekly service is available across Fort Worth and all 15 surrounding cities we serve, including Keller, North Richland Hills, Watauga, Saginaw, Trophy Club, and more. Service frequency doesn't affect availability.
