When to Winterize Sprinklers in St. Cloud, FL
In a typical year, winterize your sprinkler system in St. Cloud by January 2. The median first 28°F hard freeze at St. Cloud's NOAA station is January 12 (1991–2020 normals); one year in ten it arrives as early as December 25. Plan for the early end: the one-in-ten date lands about 18 days before the median.
Typical first first 28°F freeze near Jan 12; local deadline about Jan 2. The live 10-day outlook loads here.
Local freeze dates for St. Cloud
| Threshold | Early (1-in-10) | Median | Late (9-in-10) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 32°F (light freeze) | Dec 17 | Jan 6 | Feb 7 |
| 28°F (hard freeze) | Dec 25 | Jan 12 | Feb 10 |
NOAA station: Kissimmee 2 · 8.9 mi away · 60 ft elevation.
- St. Cloud freezes early for the country — treat late September as the start of the danger window, not the middle of fall.
- The 47-day gap between the earliest and latest freeze dates here is wide, so the live outlook matters more than the calendar.
The reference station for St. Cloud is Kissimmee 2 (8.9 mi, 60 ft). First freeze there: 32°F by Jan 6, 28°F by Jan 12. The 28°F freeze has come as early as Dec 25 and as late as Feb 10, a 47-day spread. Spring's last 32°F freeze clears around Jan 28.
Expect the first frost near Jan 6 in St. Cloud and the first hard freeze by about Jan 12. That first freezing night has ranged from Dec 17 to Feb 7, roughly a 52-day spread. On the spring side, the last 32°F freeze clears around Jan 28 and as late as Feb 25 — the green light for reopening water and de-winterizing. With almost no snow in a normal year, cold — not plowing — sets the calendar, and it centers on Jan 28.
Your sprinklers checklist
- Shut off the irrigation water supply at the main valve and, if you have one, the dedicated sprinkler shutoff inside the house.
- Turn off the controller or set it to the "rain" mode so valves do not open while the system is dry.
- Drain the mainline using the manual, automatic, or blow-out method your system was built for; most pros prefer a blow-out.
- Connect a compressor to the blow-out port through a proper adapter and run 40–80 psi, one zone at a time, until the heads mist and clear.Helpful gear: Air compressor blow-out adapter — Recommended pick
- Insulate the backflow preventer and any above-ground valves; this brass assembly is usually the first part to crack.Helpful gear: Insulated backflow preventer cover — Recommended pick
- Cap outdoor hose bibs with foam covers after the hoses come off so the last exposed fittings stay protected.Helpful gear: Foam outdoor faucet covers — Recommended pick
- Open the backflow test cocks a quarter turn so any trapped water has room to expand.
- Log the date and the psi you used; you will want the reference next fall.
What to have on hand
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What this means locally
Against its neighbors, St. Cloud (first freeze Jan 12) runs close to Kissimmee (Jan 12) and close to Ocoee (Jan 13). Across Florida, local prep deadlines in our data range from Jan 1 to Dec 31, so a statewide rule of thumb would miss St. Cloud by weeks. In St. Cloud, that same cold is your cue to protect your indoor pipes and winterize an RV if you own one.
Other winter jobs in St. Cloud
Every task below is dated to St. Cloud's own freeze and snow normals.
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Frequently asked questions
What temperature freezes sprinkler pipes?
Do I need to blow out my sprinklers or just drain them?
What happens if I don't winterize my sprinkler system?
How much does a sprinkler blowout cost?
When should I turn my sprinklers back on in St. Cloud?
Can I winterize sprinklers myself?
Data: NOAA 1991–2020 normals via Kissimmee 2, live outlook by Open-Meteo. Sources · Methodology. Last updated: July 11, 2026.