How To Make A Garden Planter Out Of Pallets | Weekend Build Plan

Build a sturdy pallet wood planter with safe materials, good drainage, and a clean finish in one afternoon.

Want a low-cost container that looks rustic and lasts through the season? A planter from reclaimed shipping wood delivers on budget and style. This guide walks you through safe sourcing, cuts, assembly, lining, and finishing with tips that keep plants thriving.

Project Snapshot

Scan this overview, follow the step-by-step sections below.

Item Details Notes
Skill Level Basic DIY Accurate measuring and square cuts
Tools Circular saw, drill/driver, pry bar, sander Brad nailer speeds slat work
Main Material Heat-treated pallet boards Look for the HT stamp
Fasteners Exterior screws (coated) Stainless for damp climates
Dimensions 24–36 in long; 10–14 in deep Match the plant’s root needs
Liner Landscape fabric or pond liner Prevents soil loss, slows rot
Finish Exterior oil or paint Seal end grain well
Time 3–5 hours Drying time adds a day if painting
Cost Low to moderate Depends on hardware and finish

Check Sourcing And Safety First

Not all shipping wood is equal. Pick slats with an “HT” mark on the block or stringer. That stamp shows the wood was heated to kill pests, not fumigated. Skip anything marked “MB,” which signals methyl bromide treatment. Also pass on boards with oily stains or a harsh odor.

Why fuss over letters? Heat treatment follows an international rule for wood packaging. The mark is your quick screen for projects that live near soil, kids, and pets. If you only see rough paint or no legible mark, choose a different pallet or buy new boards. You can read the official guidance on the ISPM 15 treatment mark.

Materials And Tool List

Gather parts before you pry apart a frame.

  • Two to three heat-treated pallets or reclaimed slats
  • 1×2 or 2×2 battens for the inner frame
  • Exterior screws: 1-1/4 in for slats, 2-1/2 in for structure
  • Landscape fabric or a pond-liner offcut, plus staples
  • Feet or blocks to lift the box off the ground
  • Primer and exterior paint, or penetrating oil
  • Drill/driver with pilot bits and a hole saw
  • Square, tape measure, pencil, and safety gear

Disassemble Without Splitting Boards

Go slow and keep slats intact. Slide a thin pry bar under the ends, lift a hair, then add shims so the wood doesn’t flex and crack. A reciprocating saw with a metal blade can zip through nails between slat and stringer. Sand nail stubs flush.

Plan The Size Around Roots

Plants hate cramped quarters. Herbs and annual flowers like a box 10–12 inches deep. Tomatoes, peppers, and dwarf shrubs want more depth. Longer boxes dry out quicker, so plan added watering if you stretch past three feet.

Build The Inner Frame

Cut four corner posts from 2×2 stock to your target height. Add rails near the top and bottom to form a rigid rectangle. Check for square by measuring diagonals. Pre-drill and drive 2-1/2 inch screws so the frame stays tight.

Attach Side Slats

Rip or sand the outer slats so edges are clean and splinter free. Start at the bottom, leaving a thin gap between boards for airflow. Clamp each piece, pre-drill, then fasten with 1-1/4 inch exterior screws into the rails.

Add The Base

Set support cleats along the lower rails, then span the bottom with slats. Leave narrow gaps to help water escape. If the planter will sit on a deck, drill two or three large drain holes with a hole saw so the core never puddles.

Line, Fill, And Plant

Staple landscape fabric along the interior walls. Overlap corners, then trim at the top edge. Drop a layer of coarse bark or a perforated plastic tray to keep fabric off the drains. Add a peat-free potting mix blended with compost. Water, top up, and then add starts or seeds.

Safe Wood Treatment Choices

If boards look parched, feed the grain with exterior oil. Paint works too. Prime first, then give two thin coats. Seal the end grain and screw holes so water doesn’t wick in. Leave the interior raw or use a liner so roots don’t sit against paint.

Drainage Myths And What Works

Rocks at the bottom don’t help water move through potting mix. They raise the water table and keep roots wet. The fix is simple: reliable holes, breathable mix, and a lifted base so water can exit. For container fundamentals, the RHS container guidance is clear on drainage and plant care.

Set the box on feet, bricks, or plastic spacers. Keep drain paths clear.

Pallet Markings And What They Mean

Common stamps include a country code, a producer number, and a treatment code. HT means heat treated. MB means methyl bromide. KD means kiln dried, which controls moisture but says nothing about pests by itself. EPAL and IPPC logos appear on many blocks.

Close Variant: Making A Pallet Wood Planter Box The Right Way

This section groups the best practices so your box looks tidy and lasts.

Pick Sound Stock

Select straight boards with tight grain and no soft spots. Avoid deep splits. If you must cut around a crack, rip the slat into two narrow pieces and use them near the top where loads are light.

Mind Fastener Choice

Coated deck screws resist rust. In coastal air, step up to stainless. Pre-drilling prevents splits in dry pine. Countersink so heads sit flush and won’t snag fabric.

Protect The Deck Or Patio

Standing water stains stone and wood. Stick felt pads or rubber feet under the base runners. A shallow spill tray under long planters prevents drip marks near doors.

Where To Place Your Planter

Most herbs crave six to eight hours of sun. Leafy greens enjoy some shade in hot months. Near walls, watch for rain shadows. Wind tunnels dry boxes fast, so set a saucer stone or drip line if needed.

Soil Volume And Plant Spacing

Match the box to the crop. Heavier feeders need deeper mix and room to stretch. Tuck in short roots near the edge and taller plants at the back for light.

Plant Type Depth Target Spacing Guide
Basil, thyme, oregano 10–12 in 8–10 in apart
Lettuce, spinach 8–10 in 6–8 in apart
Tomato (compact) 14–18 in 1 per 14–18 in square
Peppers 12–14 in 12–14 in apart
Dwarf shrub 16–20 in 1 per box

Step-By-Step Build Sequence

1) Cut Parts

Break down slats to consistent length. Rip any rough edges clean. Cut rails and posts from straight stock. Label parts so matching sides stay together.

2) Assemble The Frame

Lay out a rectangle on a flat surface. Clamp the corners, check square, and fix with screws. Add a mid-span rail on long sides to stiffen box.

3) Skin The Sides

Start at the base and work upward. Keep the first course level; the rest will follow that line. Use a spacer block to set even gaps. Check that slats end on solid wood, not thin air.

4) Add The Bottom And Feet

Span the base with slats over support cleats. Drill drain holes near center line. Attach feet or runners so the planter sits off the surface.

5) Line And Fill

Staple fabric, trim, and tuck edges. Add mix, water to settle, and top up. Place the planter where it will live before the final fill.

6) Finish And Cure

Brush on oil or paint and let it dry. A light sand between coats yields a smooth touch.

Care Through The Season

Water deeply, then let the top inch dry. Feed with a slow-release blend at planting, then top-dress with compost midseason. Trim leggy growth to keep air moving.

Common Mistakes To Avoid

  • Using boards with a faint “MB” stamp
  • Skipping drain holes or feet
  • Filling with dense garden soil instead of potting mix
  • Driving long screws into thin slats near edges
  • Painting inside surfaces that touch damp mix

Sourcing Tips And Substitutes

Ask small retailers or warehouses for spare skids clean and dry. Many give them away. If safe stock is scarce, buy inexpensive fence boards, then mix them with reclaimed pieces for the same look.

When Treated Lumber Comes Up

Modern copper-based treatments are common in outdoor projects. Studies show trace movement into soil at low levels. If you still want separation, add a plastic liner, seal cut ends, and keep food crops toward the center so roots sit away from walls.

Design Ideas That Scale

Stack two boxes for more depth. Cap the top with ripped slats for a picture-frame rim. Build a narrow version to sit on railings, with through-bolts and brackets for safety.

Simple Cut List For A Medium Box

Use this starting point; adjust to your boards.

  • Sides: 12 slats at 30 in
  • Ends: 8 slats at 12 in
  • Bottom: 6 slats at 28 in
  • Frame rails: four at 28 in
  • Posts: four at 12 in
  • Feet: two at 28 in

Finish Choices That Last

Penetrating oil brings out grain and repels water. Paint gives a crisp color block and hides mismatched wood. Re-coat once a year and touch up scuffed corners after storms.

Wrap-Up: Plant Now, Build More Later

You have a sturdy box that drains well and looks good. With safe stock, sharp tools, and a simple frame, the next build goes even faster. Grow herbs by the kitchen door today and plan a matching pair by the weekend.