Screened Topsoil Bag Coverage Calculator

Updated 2026-05-13

Estimate screened topsoil coverage bags first by dividing the measured area by the product coverage per bag, adding waste, and rounding up. In the default example, the result is 37 bags.

Quick estimate: 37 bags for 200 sq ft with 6 sq ft coverage per bag and 10% waste.

How to calculate screened topsoil coverage bags

Use measured area, coverage per bag from the product label, and waste. Round up to whole bags. The default example returns 37 bags.

Use product-label bag yield

Bag coverage changes by material, bag size, depth, moisture, spread thickness, and supplier packaging. Use the exact label before buying.

Bags are separate from bulk volume

This page returns bags first. Bulk cubic yards, delivery minimums, edging, fabric, and labor should be planned separately.

Soil and topsoil example estimates

Examples are before waste and settling. Final grade, moisture, and material type can change the quantity.

Project exampleArea and depthCubic yards
Lawn topdress500 sq ft at 1 in1.54 cu yd
Light leveling500 sq ft at 2 in3.09 cu yd
New planting bed300 sq ft at 4 in3.70 cu yd
Deeper soil fill300 sq ft at 6 in5.56 cu yd
Low area fill500 sq ft at 12 in18.52 cu yd

Soil coverage by depth

Coverage assumes 1 cubic yard, which is 27 cubic feet. Waste, compaction, settling, and irregular grade are not included.

DepthCoverage from 1 cu ydCoverage from 2 cu yd
1 in324 sq ft648 sq ft
2 in162 sq ft324 sq ft
3 in108 sq ft216 sq ft
4 in81 sq ft162 sq ft
6 in54 sq ft108 sq ft
12 in27 sq ft54 sq ft

Before you calculate

  • Measure inside bed dimensions for raised beds, not the outside lumber footprint.
  • Use different estimates for topsoil, compost amendments, and fill dirt if the project uses layers.
  • Account for settling when filling deep beds or low areas.

Common mistakes

  • Using lawn topdressing depth for raised bed fill.
  • Forgetting that bagged soil is sold by volume and bulk soil may settle.
  • Ignoring existing soil, amendments, and final grade.

Formula

units = ceil((area * (1 + wastePercent / 100)) / coveragePerUnit)

Assumptions

  • Depth, compaction, material density, moisture, and supplier coverage can change the final quantity.
  • Measure separate beds, pads, drains, and borders independently when depths or materials differ.
  • Round up to full bags, tons, cubic yards, or delivery minimums before ordering.

Example

Estimated screened topsoil bag coverage needed: 37 bags

How to calculate screened topsoil bag coverage bags

  1. Measure the project area in square feet.
  2. Enter the coverage per bag from the product label or supplier data.
  3. Add waste for cuts, overlaps, damaged pieces, or layout changes.
  4. Divide adjusted area by coverage per bag and round up to a whole purchasable unit.
  5. Check accessories, trim, fasteners, seams, or prep materials separately.

Before you buy materials

  • Compare cubic-yard bulk delivery with bagged soil volume before buying.
  • For garden beds, verify the material mix rather than buying only by volume.

FAQ

How many bags do I need for screened topsoil bag?

Use project area, product coverage per bag, and waste, then round up to the buying unit when the result is sold as whole items. In the default example, the result is 37 bags.

How do I calculate screened topsoil coverage bags?

Divide measured area by product coverage per bag, add waste, and round up to whole bags.

What is the example screened topsoil coverage bag result?

Using the default inputs, the example result is 37 bags.

Should I use the product label coverage?

Yes. Product-label bag yield is the best source because bag size, material type, depth, and moisture can change coverage.

Does this include bulk delivery or labor?

No. It estimates bags only. Bulk delivery, labor, edging, fabric, and prep should be planned separately.

Related calculators

This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.