Soil Calculator - Calculate Soil Volume for Gardens & Planters

Soil Calculator

Calculate how much soil you need for raised beds, pots, and planters

1

Choose Garden Style

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Raised Bed: Large outdoor garden beds. Results in cubic yards/feet.

Pot/Planter: Containers and elevated planters. Results in quarts/gallons.

Choose based on your container type

2

Select Shape

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Select the shape that matches your planter:

Rectangle: Most common for beds
Square: Equal sides
Circle: Round pots/planters
3

Enter Measurements

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Depth Guidelines:
• 2-4 inches: Top dressing lawns
• 6-8 inches: Herbs & flowers
• 10-12 inches: Vegetables
• 18+ inches: Deep-rooted plants
inches
Soil Volume Needed:
Select a garden style, shape, and enter measurements to calculate.

Fertilizer Recommendation

All-Purpose Fertilizer

Based on 0.5 cup per 5 sq ft coverage

Use this page to calculate how much soil you need for raised beds, pots, and planters. The calculator gives a fast estimate. The estimate helps you buy the right amount of soil.

The calculator works for 3 main shapes, including rectangle, square, and circle. The calculator works for 2 main garden styles, including raised beds and pots or planters. The tool stays simple because most home gardeners use these common layouts.

 

What This Calculator Does

This calculator estimates soil volume. This calculator uses your inside measurements. The volume estimate becomes easier to trust because inside measurements match the real growing space.

This soil estimate supports 3 common decisions:

  1. Calculate the total soil volume for a bed, pot, or planter.
  2. Convert the total volume into bag counts.
  3. Adjust the total amount for settling or compaction.

Quick Overview

Item

Details

Garden styles

Raised bed, pot, planter

Shapes

Rectangle, square, circle

Main result

Soil volume

Extra result

Bag estimate

Extra adjustment

5% to 10% extra soil

 

How to Use This Soil Calculator

Follow these 5 steps:

  1. Choose the garden style for your project.
  2. Select the shape that matches the container or bed.
  3. Enter the inside measurements for length, width, diameter, and depth.
  4. Check the soil volume in the result box.
  5. Convert the soil volume into bags or bulk soil.

Use inside measurements only. Use inside measurements because outside frame sizes overstate the true soil space.

 

Soil Volume Formulas

Soil volume depends on shape and depth. Soil volume changes because each shape uses a different area formula.

Formula Table

Shape

Formula

Use

Rectangle

Length × Width × Depth

Raised bed, trough planter

Square

Side × Side × Depth

Square bed, square planter

Circle

3.14 × Radius × Radius × Depth

Round pot, round tub

Shape Notes

  • Rectangle shape fits most raised beds.
  • Square shape fits compact beds and box planters.
  • Circle shape fits round pots and decorative containers.

Use the radius for circle calculations. Use half the diameter as the radius because a circle formula needs the radius value.

 

Recommended Soil Depth

Soil depth affects root space. Soil depth affects plant health because roots need enough room to spread.

Soil Depth Guide

Depth

Best for

2 to 4 inches

Top dressing, light compost layer

6 to 8 inches

Herbs, lettuce, annual flowers

10 to 12 inches

Most vegetables, mixed raised-bed planting

18 inches or more

Tomatoes, carrots, potatoes, deep-rooted plants

Depth Notes

  • Shallow depth supports light planting such as herbs and greens.
  • Medium depth supports common vegetables such as beans and peppers.
  • Deep depth supports large root systems such as carrots and tomatoes.

Choose 10 to 12 inches for most vegetable beds. Choose deeper layers for root crops because root crops grow down into the soil.

 

Soil Volume Conversion Table

Soil volume becomes easier to use after conversion. Soil volume becomes easier to order because stores sell soil in bags or bulk units.

 

Common Conversions

Unit

Equivalent

1 cubic yard

27 cubic feet

1 cubic foot

0.037 cubic yard

1 cubic yard

27 bags of 1 cubic foot

1 cubic yard

36 bags of 0.75 cubic foot

 

Bag Count Guide

Soil Needed

1 cu ft bags

0.75 cu ft bags

3 cubic feet

3

4

6 cubic feet

6

8

9 cubic feet

9

12

12 cubic feet

12

16

18 cubic feet

18

24

27 cubic feet

27

36

Round up the bag count. Round up the bag count because partial bags are not available.

 

Should You Order Extra Soil?

Yes. Order extra soil for most projects. Extra soil helps because soil settles after watering and spreading.

Extra Soil Guide

Project Type

Extra Soil to Add

Small indoor pots

0% to 5%

Raised beds

5% to 10%

Uneven spaces

10%

Large bulk orders

10%

Extra Soil Formula

Recommended order volume = Calculated volume × 1.05 to 1.10

 

Compaction Notes

  • Settling reduces the final fill level because water removes air gaps.
  • Uneven surfaces increase soil demand because low spots need more material.
  • Bulk delivery creates small variation because moisture and texture change volume slightly.

Add 5% for small raised beds. Add 10% for large or uneven areas because the fill level drops more often in these spaces.

 

Best Soil Type for Each Project

Soil type matters as much as volume. Soil type changes plant performance because drainage, nutrition, and structure vary across mixes.

Soil Type Table

Project

Best Soil Type

Main Benefit

Raised beds

Raised bed mix

Balanced drainage and structure

Pots and planters

Potting mix

Light texture and strong aeration

Top dressing

Compost or screened topsoil

Surface improvement

Vegetable beds

Soil and compost blend

Better fertility and moisture retention

Raised Bed Blend

A simple raised bed blend uses 3 main parts:

  1. Use 60% topsoil for structure.
  2. Use 30% compost for organic matter.
  3. Use 10% soilless mix for airflow.

This blend improves drainage and fertility in one mix. This blend supports root growth and moisture balance across many vegetables.

 

Bagged Soil vs Bulk Soil

Bagged soil works for small jobs. Bulk soil works for large jobs because the total volume rises quickly.

Buying Comparison

Volume Needed

Better Option

Reason

Small pots

Bagged soil

Easy to carry and store

1 small raised bed

Bagged soil

Simple to manage

Around 1 cubic yard

Bulk soil

Better for larger fills

Several raised beds

Bulk soil

Lower effort per volume

Buying Notes

  • Bagged soil fits small projects including balcony pots and indoor containers.

  • Bulk soil fits large projects including 2 or more raised beds.

  • Mixed buying works both ways because some gardeners buy bulk soil and top up with bags.

Worked Examples

Examples make the result easier to understand. Examples make the result easier to trust because the numbers show each step.

Example 1: 4 ft × 8 ft Raised Bed at 10 Inches Deep

Measurement

Value

Length

4 ft

Width

8 ft

Depth

10 in = 0.83 ft

Volume = 4 × 8 × 0.83 = 26.6 cubic feet

 

Result Type

Amount

Cubic feet

26.6

Cubic yards

0.99

1 cu ft bags

27

5% extra

28

10% extra

30

This raised bed needs about 27 bags at the base level. This raised bed needs about 28 to 30 bags with extra allowance.

 

Example 2: 3 ft × 6 ft Raised Bed at 10 Inches Deep

Measurement

Value

Length

3 ft

Width

6 ft

Depth

10 in = 0.83 ft

Volume = 3 × 6 × 0.83 = 15 cubic feet

 

Result Type

Amount

Cubic feet

15

Cubic yards

0.56

1 cu ft bags

15

0.75 cu ft bags

20

This bed needs about 15 bags at 1 cubic foot each. This bed needs about 20 bags at 0.75 cubic foot each.

 

Example 3: Round Planter

Measurement

Value

Diameter

20 in

Radius

10 in

Depth

12 in

Volume = 3.14 × 10 × 10 × 12

 

Use the circle formula for round pots. Use the circle formula because round pots do not have length and width.

 

Soil Calculator FAQ

How do I calculate how much soil I need?

Measure the inside dimensions first. Multiply the measurements by depth after that. Use the correct shape formula because each shape uses a different area pattern.

 

How much soil do I need for a raised bed?

The amount depends on length, width, and depth. A 4 ft × 8 ft bed at 10 inches deep needs about 26.6 cubic feet.

 

How many bags of soil do I need?

Divide the total volume by the bag size. Round up the result after that. A 12 cubic foot job needs 12 bags at 1 cubic foot each.

 

Should I order extra soil?

Yes. Add 5% to 10% extra for most outdoor projects. Outdoor projects need extra soil because settling lowers the fill level.

 

What soil works best for raised beds?

Use a raised bed mix or a soil-compost blend. Raised beds perform better with blended soil because the mix improves drainage and fertility.

 

Can I use this calculator for compost or mulch?

Yes. Use the same volume method for compost, mulch, or topsoil. The method stays the same because each material fills space by volume.

 

What depth works best for vegetables?

Use 10 to 12 inches for most vegetables. Use 18 inches or more for deep-rooted crops because deep roots need more growing space.

 

Quick Buying Checklist

Check these 5 items before ordering:

  1. Measure the inside space of the bed or planter.
  2. Choose the correct shape for the calculation.
  3. Confirm the depth unit in inches, feet, centimeters, or meters.
  4. Round up the bag count to the next whole number.
  5. Add extra soil for settling when needed.
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