Sprinkler helmets are protective rings that shield pop-up sprinkler heads from mowers and trimmers. Here’s which type actually survives a season.
⏱ 9 min read · Last updated May 2026
Ken Kwiatkowski
Founder of GRASSHOLE Corporation & inventor of the Sprinkler-Guard
Veteran. Florida homeowner who got tired of replacing the same broken sprinkler heads every season. Featured by Kevin Harrington (from Shark Tank). Recipient of the JMI 30 Award. Manufactures in Bradenton, Florida.
Full disclosure: GRASSHOLE Corporation manufactures the Sprinkler-Guard discussed in this guide. Our recommendations come from years of field testing and customer feedback.
Table of Contents
- What is a sprinkler helmet, exactly?
- The 5 Types of Sprinkler Helmets (and Which One Actually Works)
- How to Install a Sprinkler Helmet in 30 Seconds (Step-by-Step)
- Common Mistakes When Picking a Sprinkler Helmet
- What It Costs to Keep Replacing Heads Instead
- Why Sprinkler-Guard Is the Helmet Most Homeowners End Up With
- The Bottom Line
A sprinkler helmet is a protective ring that drops over a pop-up sprinkler head to shield the cap from mower decks, string trimmers, and foot traffic. Some homeowners search “helmet” after seeing the product at Home Depot. Most end up with a flexible plastic guard because the rigid versions crack and the concrete ones sink.
You typed “sprinkler helmets” into Google because something keeps eating your sprinkler heads. Maybe you saw one at the Home Depot end-cap last weekend. Maybe a neighbor told you that’s what you needed. Either way, you want to know if these things actually work, and which one to buy.
Short answer: yes, the right one works. The wrong one is worse than nothing.
Mower decks and string trimmers cause most cap damage on residential sprinkler heads according to LawnStarter’s 2026 repair data. The average homeowner now pays $130 to $360 a year in repeat repair calls, with a single pro replacement running $59 to $150 per head. A helmet’s whole job is to take that hit instead of the head.
What is a sprinkler helmet, exactly?
A sprinkler helmet is the casual name for a sprinkler head protector. It sits flat on the soil around a pop-up head, with the head poking up through the center opening. When the mower deck rolls over the head, the helmet absorbs or deflects the impact so the cap stays intact.
Same product category as a “sprinkler guard,” “sprinkler donut,” “sprinkler ring,” or “sprinkler protector.” Different names, same job.
Where the word “helmet” came from
Home Depot stocks a hard plastic dome product literally branded “Sprinkler Helmet.” That’s where most of the search volume for the exact phrase comes from. People saw the helmet on the shelf, walked away, and Googled it before buying.
The dome shape is one approach. It’s not the only one, and several brands package the same idea differently. Which type works best is the actual question worth asking.
What makes it a “helmet” instead of a flag or a swing joint
A helmet sits on the soil and physically guards the head. Compare that to two adjacent solutions homeowners ask about:
- Sprinkler flags are a small wire stake with a colored marker. They tell the mower operator where the head is. They don’t physically protect anything. Useful for visibility on a property the operator doesn’t know, useless if the operator already knows where the heads are.
- Swing joints are an underground fix. A flexible elbow installed under the head lets the riser tilt instead of snapping when something hits the cap. They work, but they cost $30 to $75 each to install per head per LawnLove, and they don’t protect against grass burial or trimmer cuts.
The helmet is the only above-ground physical guard, and it’s the cheapest of the three at a few dollars per head.
The 5 Types of Sprinkler Helmets (and Which One Actually Works)
Walk into a hardware store or scroll through the Amazon listings and you’ll find five flavors. Same purpose. Very different durability.
| Type | Typical price | What it’s made of | What goes wrong |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete donut | $3 to $9 each | Poured concrete | Cracks from impact, sinks under its own weight, gets covered by grass |
| Rigid plastic dome (Home Depot helmet) | $5 to $8 each | Hard ABS or PVC | Cracks when mower hits it, lifts out of the soil over time |
| DIY PVC pipe collar | $1 to $3 in parts | Cut-down PVC pipe | Sharp edges damage mower blades, looks ugly, no grass-growth control |
| Flag marker only | $2 to $4 each | Plastic stake + flag | No physical protection at all, just visibility |
| Patented flexible guard ring | $5 to $7 each | Flexible Advance ABS with UV Deterrent | Best survival rate, replace one if it ever takes too much abuse |
Concrete donut
The original idea. Cheap, heavy, available at every irrigation supply shop. The problem shows up in season two. SprinklerBuddy, an irrigation professional, documents the failure mode: concrete donuts crack under impact, sink under their own weight, and get buried by grass within a year. The donut’s heaviness actually accelerates soil settling around the head, making cause #1 (mower clipping the cap) worse over time.
Rigid plastic dome (the Home Depot “Sprinkler Helmet”)
The exact product that drove your Google search. A hard plastic dome with a center cutout. Better than concrete on weight. Worse than concrete on flex. When the mower deck makes solid contact, rigid plastic cracks instead of yielding. Some homeowners report it lifting out of the soil after a few aggressive trimmer passes, leaving the head exposed again.
DIY PVC pipe collar
A 4-inch section of PVC pipe cut down to ring height, dropped over the head. Costs almost nothing if you have scrap pipe. Two problems: sharp top edge can damage the underside of a mower deck on direct contact, and grass grows freely inside the ring just like before. You also can’t see it from a distance, which defeats half the visibility benefit.
Flag marker only
A wire stake with a small orange or yellow flag at the top. Stuck in the soil next to the head. Zero physical protection. The flag tells your yard guy “head is here, mow gentle” and that’s the whole job. Useful as a supplement on a brand-new install, useless on its own.
Patented flexible guard ring
The category Sprinkler-Guard built. A flat ring of Flexible Advance ABS with UV Deterrent, 7″ outer diameter with a 3.5″ center opening. The plastic flexes under impact instead of cracking. The wide flange spreads weight across the soil to resist sinking. The ring shape inhibits grass growth at the head perimeter so the cap stays visible mowing after mowing.
The first four types are all variations on “make a ring out of something cheap and hope it works.” The flexible guard ring is the only one engineered for the actual impact physics of a mower deck hitting plastic.
How to Install a Sprinkler Helmet in 30 Seconds (Step-by-Step)
Total time needed: about 6 minutes.
- Step 1: Trim back the grass around the head
Pull back any grass crowding the cap. A hand trimmer or your gloves work fine. You're looking for clear soil in roughly a 7-inch circle around the head. Sweep any clippings out of the work area so the helmet can sit flat. While you're down there, check the head itself. If the cap is already cracked or the riser sits below grass level, fix that first (Step 3 below).
- Step 2: Drop the helmet over the head
Center the helmet so the cap pokes up through the middle opening. Press down evenly with your hand so the flange seats flat on the soil. Done. You should feel resistance once it's seated, not still wobbling on uneven dirt. If you're using a flexible guard ring, the patented shape lets you cut the inner opening larger with a utility knife if your head is on the bigger side. That's an option for heads near the 3-inch maximum, not a step you need on standard pop-ups.
- Step 3: Replace any already-damaged heads first
The helmet protects what you've got. It doesn't fix a head that's already broken. Run your zone before you install. If a head is spraying sideways, leaking when off, or stuck halfway up, swap it out before you protect it. DIY parts run [$3 to $30](https://www.lawnstarter.com/blog/cost/sprinkler-repair-price/) per LawnStarter, or call your irrigation guy if you don't want to dig.
Common Mistakes When Picking a Sprinkler Helmet
Three things show up over and over on the homeowner side of this purchase.
The first mistake is buying based on weight. The instinct says “heavier feels sturdier.” For a sprinkler helmet, weight is the enemy. Concrete donuts sink. Steel rings sink. The flex-and-spread approach beats heavy-and-fixed every time.
The second mistake is buying a single helmet at the irrigation store to “try it out.” Most yards have 15 to 30 sprinkler heads. Protecting one and leaving 19 unprotected just shifts the next breakdown to a head that’s still exposed. The math only works when you do them all.
The third mistake is picking based on color. Green-on-green disappears within a week of grass growth. A helmet you can see from the mower seat is a helmet that gets respected by the mower. The flexible guard ring’s molded shape keeps it visible even when the lawn fills back in.
What It Costs to Keep Replacing Heads Instead
Run the math out two ways. One head, one season, versus protected.
| Outcome | Per head | Typical yard, 5 years |
|---|---|---|
| Pro replacement when a head breaks | $59 to $150 | Several service calls worth, multiplied by however many heads break |
| 20-pack of flexible guard rings ($6.25 per unit) | $6.25 | $125 one-time, covers up to 20 heads |
| Service-call savings on first prevented repair | n/a | Helmets pay for themselves on call #1 |
For deeper math, our sprinkler protection ROI calculator runs the 5-year break-even on guard vs no-guard for any yard size.
The other cost most homeowners don’t run is water. A single broken sprinkler head can waste up to 25,000 gallons per year according to EPA WaterSense. That’s a chunk of your summer water bill leaking into the side of the driveway every cycle the head runs at half-strength.
Why Sprinkler-Guard Is the Helmet Most Homeowners End Up With
We make the patented flexible guard ring described above. Sprinkler-Guard by GRASSHOLE. Built in Bradenton, Florida. Veteran-owned. 300+ five-star reviews from homeowners on Sprinkler-Guard.com and Amazon.
Three things matter for a sprinkler helmet that actually does the job, and Sprinkler-Guard was designed around all three:
- Flexible Advance ABS with UV Deterrent absorbs the mower hit instead of cracking. The plastic gives and recovers.
- 7-inch flange spreads the weight so the ring resists sinking into soft Florida sand or settled Bermuda lawn.
- 30-second install with no tools. Drop, press, done. Most yards finish in under an hour.
Available in 10-pack, 20-pack, 30-pack, and 60-pack on Sprinkler-Guard.com. Free shipping on orders over $100. Featured by Kevin Harrington from Shark Tank.
Frequently Asked Questions
Same product category, different name. "Donut" usually implies the concrete variety. "Helmet" usually implies a plastic dome or ring. Both refer to a protective collar that sits around a pop-up sprinkler head. The materials are what determine how long they last.
If your head is 3 inches or smaller in diameter at the cap, yes. Sprinkler-Guard fits any pop-up head up to 3 inches, which covers nearly every residential model from Rain Bird, Hunter, Orbit, and Toro. Measure the cap if you're not sure.
Count the heads in your yard. Most residential properties have 15 to 30 heads. Buying a 20-pack covers a typical lawn with a couple spares for replacement. Bigger lawns go with a 30-pack or 60-pack.
No. The helmet sits flat on the soil with the head in the center opening. When the head pops up, the spray exits well above the helmet's surface. The helmet protects the cap, it doesn't interfere with the riser or the nozzle.
For the Sun Belt and Southeast US, no. Leave them in place year-round. In freeze-zone climates where you blow out the system in fall, you can leave the helmets seated as long as you can still access the head for any spring start-up work. The flexible ring shape doesn't trap water like a concrete donut does.
A pop-up sprinkler head itself runs [10 to 15 years](https://homeguide.com/costs/sprinkler-head-replacement-cost) per HomeGuide when protected. The helmet's job is to keep the head intact for that span. For abuse-replacement scenarios (someone backed a truck over it, the leaf blower kid scraped it for two summers), the one-by-one swap design lets you replace just that single ring without buying a new system.
You can. PVC pipe cut to ring height, or a section of plastic flower pot with the bottom cut out. The DIY versions don't have the flange shape to resist sinking, they don't inhibit grass growth at the perimeter, and the sharp edges can damage a mower deck on direct contact. For 15 heads at $6.25 each, most homeowners decide the time isn't worth it.
Some Home Depot stores stock a hard plastic dome version. Sprinkler-Guard isn't sold in big-box stores anymore as of 2026, but it ships from Sprinkler-Guard.com and Amazon. The website is the cheaper of the two for the multi-packs, and shipping is free over $100.
The Bottom Line
A sprinkler helmet is the cheapest thing in your yard that prevents the second-most-expensive thing in your yard (the irrigation service call). The category works. The version you pick determines whether you’re still buying replacements three seasons from now.
Skip the concrete donut for the weight. Skip the rigid plastic dome for the cracking. Skip the DIY for the time. The flexible guard ring is what most homeowners end up with after going through one or two of the others first.
For the broader picture on protecting sprinkler heads from mowers (including swing joints, mower-height adjustments, and seasonal timing), the pillar guide on protecting sprinkler heads from lawn mowers has the full breakdown. If you’re already past the helmet question and trying to figure out which product is best, the ranked comparison at best sprinkler head protectors goes deeper on the head-to-head.
Not sure? The Sprinkler-Guard ships in 10/20/30/60-packs. If one ever takes too much abuse, you swap just that one in 30 seconds — no full system to replace.
Shop Sprinkler-Guard
- Starting at $64.99 for a 10-pack
- Free shipping on orders over $100
- 300+ five-star reviews on Sprinkler-Guard.com and Amazon
- Made in the USA by a Veteran-Owned Business in Bradenton, Florida
- Patented design — featured by Kevin Harrington (from Shark Tank)
- No tools required — installs in 30 seconds per head
- One-by-one swap design — if a guard takes too much abuse, swap just that one
Last updated: May 2026. Statistics sourced from EPA WaterSense, Johns Hopkins Medicine, LawnStarter, LawnLove, HomeGuide, IBISWorld. Product specifications and pricing current as of publication date.
