How much compost do I need?
Measure the area in square feet, enter depth in inches, and convert to cubic yards. A 300 sq ft area at 4 inches deep is about 3.70 cubic yards before waste.
Settling and final grade
Soil, topsoil, compost, and fill dirt can settle after placement. Deep fills and raised beds often need extra material compared with a thin topdress.
Bulk delivery vs bags
Bulk soil is often ordered by cubic yard, while bagged soil is sold by cubic feet or quarts. Convert units before comparing prices.
Compost is usually an amendment
Compost is often spread as a thinner amendment layer or mixed into existing soil rather than used as the only deep fill material.
Mulch bed example estimates
Examples are before waste. Add waste for uneven beds, curves, edge spillover, and settling.
| Project example | Area and depth | Cubic yards |
|---|---|---|
| Small border | 100 sq ft at 2 in | 0.62 cu yd |
| Medium bed refresh | 200 sq ft at 2 in | 1.23 cu yd |
| Medium new bed | 200 sq ft at 3 in | 1.85 cu yd |
| Large landscape bed | 500 sq ft at 3 in | 4.63 cu yd |
| Deep mulch area | 500 sq ft at 4 in | 6.17 cu yd |
Mulch coverage by depth
Coverage assumes 1 cubic yard, which is 27 cubic feet. Waste, compaction, settling, and irregular grade are not included.
| Depth | Coverage from 1 cu yd | Coverage from 2 cu yd |
|---|---|---|
| 1 in | 324 sq ft | 648 sq ft |
| 2 in | 162 sq ft | 324 sq ft |
| 3 in | 108 sq ft | 216 sq ft |
| 4 in | 81 sq ft | 162 sq ft |
| 6 in | 54 sq ft | 108 sq ft |
| 12 in | 27 sq ft | 54 sq ft |
Before you calculate
- Measure each bed or border in square feet before choosing depth.
- Use the actual planned mulch depth in inches, because 2 inches and 4 inches can double the order.
- Separate new beds from refresh areas when they need different depths.
Common mistakes
- Measuring only bed length and forgetting to multiply by width.
- Using one depth for every bed when some areas only need a light refresh.
- Ignoring settling, uneven beds, and edge spillover.
Formula
cubic yards = (area * (depth / 12) / 27) * (1 + wastePercent / 100)
Assumptions
- Depth, compaction, moisture, product size, and delivery minimums can change final quantity.
- Measure each bed, pad, path, drain, and border separately when material or depth changes.
- Round up to full bags, tons, cubic yards, rolls, or delivery increments before ordering.
Example
Estimated vegetable compost row bark mulch needed (cubic yards): 2.04 cubic yards
How to use this bark calculator
- Measure each bark or mulch bed in square feet, then split beds into separate estimates when refresh areas and new beds need different depths.
- Choose depth by purpose: use about 2 inches for a light refresh, 3 inches for a common new landscape bed, and deeper layers only where the project calls for them.
- Keep bark or mulch about 6 inches away from tree trunks and avoid piling material against plant stems, siding, or wood structures.
- Enter the bed area, finished depth in inches, and waste percentage, then review the cubic-yard result before ordering.
- Compare bags vs bulk by converting cubic yards to cubic feet; 1 cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet, so check bag volume, delivery minimums, and full-yard rounding before buying.
Before you buy materials
- Bulk mulch is commonly ordered by cubic yard, while bagged mulch uses bag volume or coverage.
- Round up slightly when beds are irregular or you want consistent visual depth.
FAQ
What is the example vegetable compost row bark mulch cubic-yard result?
Use area, installed depth, cubic-foot to cubic-yard conversion, and waste, then calculate the planning result. In the default example, the result is 2.04 cubic yards.
How do I calculate compost in cubic yards?
Use cubic yards = area x (depth inches / 12) / 27, then add waste or settling allowance if needed.
How much soil for a 4 x 8 raised bed?
At 12 inches deep, a 4 x 8 ft bed needs about 1.19 cubic yards before waste. At 10 inches deep, it needs about 0.99 cubic yards.
Should I include extra soil for settling?
Usually yes for deeper fills, raised beds, and loose bulk soil. Settling varies by material and moisture.
Can I compare bulk soil and bagged soil?
Yes, but convert units first. One cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet, so bag volume matters.
Does this choose the right soil mix?
No. It estimates volume. Choose soil, compost, fill dirt, or raised-bed mix based on the project.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.