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Raised Bed Soil Calculator

Enter your bed size and get exactly how much soil to buy — in cubic feet, cubic yards and bags — plus a square-foot planting layout and a step-by-step build guide.

How much soil do I need?

ft
ft
in
beds
You need 32 cubic feet of soil
≈ 1.19 cubic yards · fills 1 bed 12 in deep
Bags @ 1.5 cu ft
22 bags
Bags @ 2 cu ft
16 bags
Bulk soil
1.2 cu yd
💡 Best-mix recipe (Mel's Mix): blend 10.7 cu ft compost, 10.7 cu ft peat moss or coir, and 10.7 cu ft coarse vermiculite (⅓ each).
🛒 Buy ~5–10% extra — soil settles after the first watering, and beds sink a bit each season as organic matter breaks down. Top up with compost every spring.

How many plants fit? (square-foot method)

ft
ft
Per square footCrops
1 plantTomato, pepper, eggplant, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, squash (give it 2 squares), corn
4 plantsLettuce, Swiss chard, kale, bok choy, marigold, basil, parsley
9 plantsBush beans, spinach, beets, turnips, peas, arugula
16 plantsCarrots, radishes, onions, garlic, scallions
📏 A raised bed works best at 3–4 ft wide so you can reach the middle from either side without stepping in it.

Plan the whole garden in your pocket

The Clearly app pairs this raised-bed calculator with a zone planting calendar, plant spacing, a deer-resistant plant finder and 13 building & landscaping calculators — all offline.

Get the app

How to build a raised garden bed

  1. Pick a sunny, level spot. Most vegetables want 6–8 hours of direct sun. Set the bed where you'll walk past it — out of sight is out of mind.
  2. Size it so you can reach the middle. Keep beds 3–4 ft wide and any length. Leave 2 ft paths between beds for a wheelbarrow.
  3. Build the frame. Untreated cedar, hemlock, or composite lasts longest; a 2-board-high frame (about 10–12 in) suits most crops. Corner posts or brackets keep it square.
  4. Loosen the ground and lay cardboard. A layer of plain cardboard on the soil smothers grass and weeds while letting roots and worms through.
  5. Fill with a good mix. Use the calculator above for quantities. Mel's Mix — ⅓ compost, ⅓ peat or coir, ⅓ vermiculite — is the gold standard, or blend quality topsoil with compost 50/50.
  6. Water it in and top up. Soak the bed, let it settle a day, then add more mix to bring it back to the top.

How deep should a raised bed be?

  • 6 in — fine for lettuce, herbs, radishes and other shallow-rooted greens if the bed sits on open soil.
  • 10–12 in — the all-purpose depth for most vegetables.
  • 18 in+ — best for deep feeders like tomatoes, carrots and potatoes, and a must if the bed sits on concrete, gravel or a deck.

The best soil mix for raised beds

Raised beds live or die by their soil. Don't just shovel in native dirt — it compacts and drains poorly in a frame. Aim for a light, rich blend:

  • Mel's Mix — equal parts (by volume) compost, peat moss or coconut coir, and coarse vermiculite. Drains well, holds moisture, feeds plants.
  • Simple 50/50 — good-quality screened topsoil blended half-and-half with compost, if buying the three-part mix isn't practical.
  • Feed it every year. Add 1–2 inches of fresh compost each spring to replace what the last crop used.

What grows best in a raised bed?

Almost everything — but raised beds shine for crops that love loose, warm, well-drained soil: tomatoes, peppers, lettuce and greens, carrots and root crops, bush beans, herbs, and strawberries. Use the planting calendar to time each one to your zone, and keep the deer-resistant plant finder handy if deer share your yard.

Raised bed FAQ

How much soil do I need for a 4x8 raised bed?
A 4 ft × 8 ft bed filled 12 inches deep holds 32 cubic feet — about 1.2 cubic yards, or roughly 21 bags of 1.5 cu ft soil. At 6 inches deep it's half that. Use the calculator for your exact depth.
Can I use bagged garden soil to fill a raised bed?
Yes, but read the label — "garden soil" and "raised bed mix" are formulated to fill beds, while "potting mix" is lighter and pricier and better for containers. For a big bed, bulk soil by the cubic yard is far cheaper than bags.
Do I need to line the bottom of a raised bed?
No plastic — it traps water. Lay plain cardboard or several sheets of newspaper to block weeds; it breaks down and lets roots reach the soil below. Add hardware cloth under the bed only if burrowing rodents are a problem.
How wide should a raised bed be?
3–4 feet, so you can comfortably reach the center from either side and never have to step in the bed and compact the soil.