Lowe’s spring sale ends May 6
- Lowe’s spring sale hit its advertised end on Tuesday, May 6, with SpringFest-style offers on mulch, soil, annuals, patio items, and tools still live. - The clearest hook was garden basics: $2 Sta-Green 2-cubic-foot mulch bags, low-cost annuals, and broader lawn-and-garden markdowns layered with member delivery perks. - It matters because this is peak yard-project season, and Lowe’s spent spring pushing loyalty perks and same-day delivery to win urgent outdoor spending.
Lowe’s spring sale matters for one simple reason — it bundles the boring stuff people actually need right now. Mulch. Soil. Annuals. Trimmers. Patio basics. And on Tuesday, May 6, that sale window was hitting its advertised end, which made this less of a “browse whenever” event and more of a last-call moment for anyone trying to get a yard or porch in shape. (hip2save.com) ### What was ending on May 6? The short version is Lowe’s spring sale push — often branded around SpringFest or “Spring Into Deals” — had a May 6 cutoff on a bunch of promoted offers. Deal sites were flagging that end date for lawn-and-garden discounts and selected tool promos, and Lowe’s own spring savings page was still steering shoppers toward seasonal categories like mulch, lawn mowers, and outdoor power equipment. (hip2s([hip2save.com)hat were the standout deals? The eye-catcher was basic yard supply pricing. Hip2Save highlighted Sta-Green Premium 2-cubic-foot mulch bags at $2, down from $3.98, through May 6. The same roundup also pointed people to cheap annuals and other starter garden buys — the kind of items that pull people into stores in early May because they’re easy, visible upgrades. (hip2save.com(hip2save.com) spring sale page was broader than that — lawn and garden, grills, patio furniture, appliances, and tools were all in the mix. And DealNews had a separate Lowe’s DeWalt promotion live, with discounts on more than 100 offers, including some tool-and-battery bundles and buy-one-get-one mechanics that matter more to DIY shoppers than flashy percentage-off headlines do. (([hip2save.com)hy was Lowe’s pushing this so hard? Because spring is the money season for home improvement. Lowe’s said in late March that it was kicking off peak season early and tying the deals to loyalty perks and faster fulfillment. The company also said MyLowe’s Rewards and MyLowe’s Pro Rewards members could get free same-day delivery on eligible orders over $25, including select mulch purchases. That is a pretty direct attempt to remove(lowes.com)s home. (corporate.lowes.com) ### What did Lowe’s officially put behind the sale? The company’s March 25 announcement laid out a larger spring campaign starting March 26, with rotating deals across lawn and garden, seasonal goods, grills, power equipment, paint, and appliances. The early SpringFest phase included offers like 5 for $10 Sta-Green mulch, 2 for $12 garden soi(corporate.lowes.com)big outdoor-spending wave. (corporate.lowes.com) ### Why does the May 6 date matter? Because these aren’t evergreen prices. A mulch bag at $2 or a heavily promoted DeWalt bundle works best when shoppers feel a deadline. Early May is also when a lot of people finally commit to spring projects — weather is warmer, Mother’s Day planting is close, and neglected yards start looking urgent. Lowe’s was basically using that calendar pressure on purpose. (hip2save.com) ### What’s the catch for shoppers? Location and timing. Deal posts noted that pricing and availability could vary by store or region, and some offers were online while others were in-store only. Tool promos also tend to flip fast, especially daily-deal style listings, so “through May 6” does not always mean every item survives until the end of the day in every market. (hip2save.com)powered yard gear, May 6 was a real deadline, not just marketing wallpaper. Lowe’s used cheap garden staples and delivery perks to turn peak spring chores into a hurry-up purchase. (hip2save.com)