For a raised bed bottom, install pest-proof mesh and a breathable weed barrier that drains well and won’t trap water.
Done well, lining the base of a raised bed keeps burrowing pests out, slows weeds, and still lets water and air move through. The goal isn’t to “seal” the bed; it’s to add the right layers where they help. Below you’ll find clear choices, step-by-step setup, and pro tips for long life and easy upkeep.
Lining The Bottom Of Raised Beds — What Works
The best base uses two parts: sturdy wire mesh to block tunneling animals, plus a breathable sheet that smothers sod and weed roots. That combo preserves drainage while protecting your crops. Skip plastic sheeting that traps moisture. Skip thin chicken wire where gophers or rats are active; it rusts fast and the openings are too wide to stop small pests.
Common Liner Materials And When To Use Them
| Liner Material | What It Does | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Hardware Cloth (¼–½ in.) | Blocks moles, voles, gophers; keeps soil in while draining | Under every soil-on-ground bed; staple to the frame |
| Poultry Wire (¾ in.) | Basic barrier with wider mesh; degrades sooner | Low-pressure sites only; not for small rodents |
| Cardboard (2–3 layers) | Smothers grass and many weeds; breaks down to humus | Over lawn or mixed weeds; add 6–8 in. soil on top |
| Breathable Landscape Fabric | Lets water through; slows rhizomes from creeping in | On patios/concrete to hold soil; under soil on sandy sites |
| Burlap | Short-term weed smother; biodegradable | Seasonal beds; quick projects where decay is fine |
| Plastic Sheeting | Stops water and air; creates soggy pockets | Skip for food beds; use only for short solarization projects |
Plan The Base For Your Site
Over Soil Or Sod
For most yards, set wire mesh first, then a weed-smothering layer. Wire stops the tunneling; the sheet weakens turf and perennials under the bed while soil life stays active. Water can still drain into native soil below.
Over Concrete, Pavers, Or Gravel
When the bed sits on a hard surface, put breathable fabric or burlap at the base to keep soil inside the frame. Add a shallow layer of coarse wood chips for extra aeration, then fill with a quality mix. The mesh layer isn’t needed unless pests can reach from edges or gaps.
Step-By-Step: Build A Long-Lasting Base
Tools And Supplies
Wire cutters, staple gun or fencing staples, drill/driver, measuring tape, mallet, landscape pins, scissors or utility knife, gloves, and the chosen liner materials.
1) Square And Level The Footprint
Set the frame where it will live, shim as needed, and check diagonal measurements so the box is square. A level base means tight mesh and even soil depth later.
2) Fit The Wire Mesh
Roll out hardware cloth across the full footprint. Let it climb 1–2 inches up the inside walls so nothing slips through the frame gap. Overlap seams by at least 6 inches and stitch the runs with galvanized wire or heavy zip ties. Staple every 4–6 inches along rails; tap any raised edges down with a mallet.
3) Add The Weed-Smother Layer
Lay two to three layers of plain brown cardboard or one layer of breathable fabric. Wet cardboard until it’s pliable so it molds to the mesh. Overlap sheets by 6–8 inches to block light leaks. Punch a few small holes near corners where water tends to pool; you want steady drainage.
4) Backfill In Lifts
Add soil in 4–6 inch lifts, watering each lift so the mix settles without compacting. That keeps the base layers in place and avoids big air pockets. Aim for 10–12 inches of rich, crumbly soil for greens and herbs; 14–18 inches suits tomatoes, corn, and deep-rooted crops.
5) Test Drainage
Soak the filled bed once. Water should move through and out within a day in mild weather. If the surface stays spongy, pierce the cardboard in a few spots along the low side; if the site is flat and still slow, lighten the mix with coarse composted bark or perlite near the base.
Why Mesh Matters Under Food Beds
Burrowing mammals can strip roots overnight. Wire mesh with small openings stops that, yet still lets earthworms, water, and fines pass. The UC IPM guidance on gopher barriers recommends hardware cloth or ¾-inch poultry wire under beds; in high-pressure yards, many gardeners step down to ½-inch or ¼-inch hardware cloth for better protection. That tweak keeps roots safe without sealing the base.
Mesh Specs That Hold Up
- Opening size: ¼–½ inch for mixed pest pressure; ¾ inch only where gophers are the sole issue.
- Metal and coating: Galvanized steel stands up to wet soil; PVC-coated mesh lasts longer in clay.
- Seams: Overlap at least 6 inches; stitch seams every 4–6 inches.
- Wall tie-in: Run mesh slightly up the inside of the frame to remove edge gaps.
Weed-Smother Layers That Still Breathe
For beds over lawn or mixed weeds, layered cardboard works well. It blocks light, softens thatch, and feeds soil life as it breaks down. Many university guides also use breathable fabric under beds on patios or decks to keep soil inside while letting water pass. See UMN Extension raised bed gardens for notes on hardware cloth and permeable liners in these setups.
Cardboard Tips
- Stick to plain brown corrugated sheets; peel off tape and glossy labels.
- Wet thoroughly during install so it conforms to the base and starts to soften.
- Cover with at least 6 inches of soil or compost to block light and speed decay.
Breathable Fabric Tips
- Choose woven, water-permeable fabric rated for landscape use.
- Pin it flat with landscape staples every 12 inches so soil can’t slip under.
- Avoid stacking multiple layers; one layer is enough and drains better.
Soil, Drainage, And Root Run
The base should drain free and give roots room. A good mix blends compost, high-quality topsoil, and coarse aeration pieces. Think crumbly, not sticky. If your yard sits over heavy clay, the wire-plus-cardboard setup lets water percolate into native soil while roots grow in a lighter medium above.
Depth Targets
- Leafy greens: 8–10 inches
- Peas, beans, peppers: 12–14 inches
- Tomatoes, corn, carrots, parsnips: 16–18 inches
When You Might Skip A Weed Sheet
If the bed sits on bare soil you’ve already cleared and mulched, and deep tap-rooted crops are the plan, you can use mesh only. That keeps maximum contact with the soil food web. You’ll still top the bed with mulch after planting to block new weed seeds from above.
Cutting And Fastening — Clean Details
Safe Cuts
Wear gloves and eye protection. Cut mesh with aviation snips or a cutoff wheel. Bend sharp tails flat and staple them under a rail or fold them back into the seam.
Fast Staples
For wood frames, place galvanized staples every 4–6 inches on all sides. For metal frames, pre-drill and use self-tapping screws with wide washers. On masonry, pin fabric with masonry nails and washers before you set the box in place.
Mesh Size And Pest Blocking Guide
| Mesh Opening | Blocks | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ¼ inch | Voles, young rats, mice, moles, gophers | Strong protection; good for food beds |
| ½ inch | Moles, gophers, most voles | Balanced flow and strength |
| ¾ inch | Gophers only | Use in low-pressure sites; degrades faster |
What About Treated Lumber And Liners?
Many gardeners build frames from pressure-treated wood. Research summaries from university programs report minor copper rise at the soil edge with modern treatments, with no measured increase inside tested crops in raised beds built with these boards. If you still want a buffer, you can add a thin interior liner of fabric against the side walls before backfilling. For background, see the University of Maryland’s review of material safety for raised beds.
Seasonal Care So The Base Keeps Working
Annual Check
- Probe the base in spring near seams; if you feel gaps, add a short patch of mesh and staple it under the soil.
- Top up soil as the cardboard layer finishes breaking down in year one.
- Keep a light mulch on top to stop windblown weed seeds from sprouting.
When To Replace Mesh
Galvanized hardware cloth often lasts 5–10 seasons in most soils. In beds with constant winter wet, expect the shorter end of that range. If pests return or you see red rust when you probe, plan a re-line during the next crop swap.
Sample Builds For Common Scenarios
Over Lawn With Gophers Or Voles
Mesh first (¼–½ inch), stapled tight, edges canted up the rails. Two layers of wet cardboard, overlapped. Fill with soil, water in lifts, and plant. This keeps tunneling out and weakens the turf below.
Over Concrete Patio
Line with breathable fabric to retain soil. Add a 1–2 inch cushion of coarse wood chips, then soil. No mesh needed unless pests can enter from edges. Watch drainage during the first soak and pierce fabric near corners if water lingers.
On Sandy Soil With Tall Beds
Mesh at base, then a single layer of fabric to slow sand migration. Backfill with a moisture-retentive mix. Mulch after planting to reduce evaporation.
Fast Troubleshooting
Water Pools Near Corners
Punch a few pencil-thick holes through the barrier near the low side. Check that soil isn’t compacted; blend in coarse compost at the surface and water again.
Rodents Return
Find the entry point. Seal seams with 6-inch overlaps, stitch with wire, and add staple rows. If the site has rats, step down to ¼-inch mesh and repair any sidewall gaps.
Weeds Pop Up Midseason
Most arrive from above. Add 2 inches of straw or shredded bark, pull escapes before they seed, and keep soil covered year-round.
Quick Shopping List
- 1 roll galvanized hardware cloth (¼–½ in. openings)
- Staples or screws with washers; wire for stitching seams
- Plain cardboard or one roll of breathable landscape fabric
- Landscape staples, utility knife, wire cutters, gloves
Why This Setup Stays Productive
The wire base keeps roots safe, the sheet layer knocks back old turf and rhizomes, and the soil mix above stays loose. Worms can still move in. Water drains the way it should. That balance is the whole aim of lining the base: protection without bottlenecks.
Citations and further reading: UC IPM guidance on underground fencing and mesh under beds; UMN Extension notes on hardware cloth and permeable liners for raised beds. Linked above in-line.
