From Spotlight: Ready for Summer? Make Sure Your House and Yard Are Too!

Summer Home Maintenance Tips — Specifically for June

Invest in quality tools while they’re on sale this month.

Wooden work bench with red peg board covered in tools
Image: Devyn Caldwell

Temps start to soar in June when days start to get longer.

Stop your energy and water bills from soaring , too, with these summer home maintenance tips:

#1 Stop Buying Cheap Tools

Happy Father's Day to everyone: It's tool sale month! Repairs and home improvement projects go much smoother with quality tools — and you'll like the results more. This month, take advantage of sales to buy quality brands for less or buy used tools at a local auction or estate sale. Then ditch those make-do tools that have always frustrated you.

#2 Stop Heat-Drying Your Dishes

Assorted bowls, cups, and dishes stacked into dish dry rack

You're already paying extra to pump cool air into your house. Don't pay even more to use the heat-dry setting on your dishwasher. It can double your electrical load.

Instead, open the dishwasher immediately after it runs, and pull out the racks. The evaporating steam will speed-dry the dishes. Some dishwashers have an air-dry button that will automatically prevent heat drying.

#3 Stop Watering Your Lawn So Much

Three sprinklers behind house with stone retaining wall
Image: Will Olma

Lawns are a bit picky about their drinking schedule. Rather than daily soaks, they prefer deep, infrequent watering, which promotes deeper root growth. In general, lawns need about 1 inch of water per week. In a well-watered lawn, you can stick a screwdriver 6 to 8 inches into the dirt without resistance.

#4 Stop Putting Bricks in the Toilet

Light blue bathroom with white sink, toilet, and tile
Image: Fotosearch/Getty

Summer may be water-conscientiousness season, but putting a brick in your toilet is the wrong means to that well-meaning end. Brick crumbles when exposed to water for too long. Instead, switch to a high-efficiency toilet. At $90 to $330 per toilet, the $130 annual water savings to replace it with a WaterSense- labeled model is worth it. Or just swap your brick with a half-gallon milk jug filled with sand.

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Kelley Walters

Kelley Walters is a Southern writer and editor. She focuses on interior design and home improvement at outlets from HGTV to Paintzen. She lives in Italy a month every year, drinking Negronis and writing in internet cafes.