BACKGROUNDAccurate weed detection is a prerequisite for precise automatic precision herbicide application. Previous research has adopted the laborious and time‐consuming approach of manually labeling and processing large image data sets to develop deep neural networks for weed detection. This research introduces a novel semi‐supervised learning (SSL) approach for detecting weeds in turf. The performance of SSL was compared with that of ResNet50, a fully supervised learning (FSL) method, in detecting and differentiating sub‐images containing weeds from those containing only turfgrass.RESULTSCompared with ResNet50, the evaluated SSL methods, Π‐model, Mean Teacher, and FixMatch, increased the classification accuracy by 2.8%, 0.7%, and 3.9%, respectively, when only 100 labeled images per class were utilized. FixMatch was the most efficient and reliable model, as it exhibited higher accuracy (≥0.9530) and F1 scores (≥0.951) with fewer labeled data (50 per class) in the validation and testing data sets than the other neural networks evaluated.CONCLUSIONThese results reveal that the SSL deep neural networks are capable of being highly accurate while requiring fewer labeled training images, thus being more time‐ and labor‐efficient than the FSL method. © 2024 Society of Chemical Industry.