Most raised beds grow well with 12–18 inches of loose soil; use bed length × width × depth, then add 10–15% for settling.
Raised beds make gardening feel simpler, right up until you’re staring at pallets of bagged soil and wondering how many you actually need. Buy too little and you’ll end up topping up for weeks as the bed sinks. Buy too much and you’re stuck storing soggy bags, or spreading extra soil where you don’t want it.
This walk-through helps you land on a soil depth that fits what you want to grow, then turns that depth into a clear shopping number. You’ll also learn how settling changes your final fill line, why the native ground under the bed matters, and how to avoid the two most common soil mistakes: buying “topsoil” that compacts like brick, or using potting mix that dries out fast.
What Soil Depth Works In Most Raised Beds
Soil “amount” has two parts: depth (how tall the soil layer is) and volume (how much you need to buy). Start with depth. It’s the choice that shapes everything else.
Common depth targets
12 inches is a solid baseline for many vegetables, salad greens, and herbs when the ground beneath the bed drains well and roots can move down. A lot of gardens do fine at this depth.
18 inches gives you more room for carrots, beets, larger brassicas, cucumbers, and tomatoes. It also buffers watering because there’s more soil mass holding moisture.
24 inches and up fits deep-rooted crops, long-season plants, and beds placed over hard ground where roots can’t use the soil below.
Why the soil under the bed still counts
If your raised bed sits directly on the ground, plant roots often keep going beyond the bed’s soil line when they can. That means a 12-inch fill can act like more than 12 inches of rooting room. One reason many gardeners succeed with medium-depth beds is that the bed soil blends into the native soil under it, and roots treat it as one profile.
If your bed sits on concrete, pavers, a deck, or a compacted base layer, roots can’t go deeper. In that case, your chosen depth is the whole story, so it pays to build higher or grow plants with shorter roots.
How Much Soil To Use In A Raised Bed Garden?
Here’s the clean way to turn a bed into a soil shopping list. You only need three measurements and one simple conversion.
Step 1: Measure the inside of the bed
- Length: measure the inner wall to inner wall.
- Width: measure the inner wall to inner wall.
- Fill depth: decide how deep you want soil, measured from the bed floor upward.
Step 2: Convert depth to feet
Most soil is sold by cubic foot or cubic yard. Convert inches to feet by dividing by 12:
- 6 inches = 0.5 ft
- 12 inches = 1.0 ft
- 18 inches = 1.5 ft
- 24 inches = 2.0 ft
Step 3: Calculate cubic feet
Cubic feet = length (ft) × width (ft) × depth (ft)
That number tells you how many cubic feet of soil fill the bed to your target depth.
Step 4: Convert to cubic yards when ordering bulk
Bulk soil is often sold by the cubic yard.
Cubic yards = cubic feet ÷ 27
Step 5: Add extra for settling and top-ups
Fresh soil sinks as you water, plant, and walk nearby. Add 10–15% to your calculated volume so you can hit your fill line after the first few soakings. If you plan to mix in compost each season, that also helps keep the surface level where you want it.
Soil Choices That Fill A Bed Without Turning Into A Slab
You can do the math perfectly and still get a disappointing bed if the soil blend is off. Raised beds need a mix that drains, holds moisture, and stays airy after repeated watering.
Skip straight “garden soil” bags for full-bed fills
Many “garden soil” or bargain “topsoil” products work better as a thin layer than as the full depth of a raised bed. They often contain fine particles that pack down, then crack when dry. That leads to slow root growth and uneven watering.
Look for a raised-bed mix, or build one
A practical target is a soil blend built around compost plus a loamy base. If you buy bulk, ask the supplier what the mix contains and whether it’s screened. If you’re mixing yourself, aim for these traits:
- Crumbly texture that breaks apart in your hand.
- Even moisture that doesn’t run straight through and doesn’t stay swampy.
- Stable structure that stays airy after watering settles the bed.
Check texture before you commit to a truckload
Texture is about the balance of sand, silt, and clay. Too much clay and the bed can seal up. Too much sand and it can dry out fast. The USDA-NRCS soil health guide includes a quick “feel” method for texture that helps you judge a mix on the spot: Soil Texture And Structure.
Depth guidance from horticulture sources
If you want a grounded baseline, the Royal Horticultural Society notes that about 30 cm (1 ft) works for shallow-rooted plants, while many plants do better with about 45 cm (18 in) or more: RHS Raised Bed Depth Advice.
North Dakota State University Extension also points out that when beds are shallower than 18 inches, blending in suitable native soil under the bed can increase effective rooting depth: Evaluating, Preparing And Amending Lawn And Garden Soil.
Soil Amount For Raised Beds With Different Crops
Pick your bed depth by what you want to grow, then run the volume math. Use the notes column to spot hidden depth needs, like root crops that fork in rocky soil or tomatoes that struggle in tight, dry beds.
Table 1 appears after you’ve got the core method down, so you can match the math to real planting plans.
| What you’re growing | Fill depth target | Notes that change the call |
|---|---|---|
| Salad greens (lettuce, arugula, spinach) | 6–10 in | Shallow is fine if watering is steady; mulch helps stop quick dry-down. |
| Herbs (basil, cilantro, parsley) | 8–12 in | Many herbs handle medium depth; avoid waterlogged mixes. |
| Strawberries | 10–12 in | Good drainage matters more than extra height; keep crowns above soil. |
| Beans and peas | 10–12 in | Roots spread wide; give them room and avoid compacted soil. |
| Peppers and eggplant | 12–18 in | More depth buffers heat and moisture swings; stake plants in airy mixes. |
| Tomatoes | 18–24 in | Deeper beds help steady watering; consistent moisture reduces cracking. |
| Brassicas (cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower) | 12–18 in | Heavy feeders; depth helps hold moisture and nutrients through the season. |
| Carrots, beets, parsnips | 18–24 in | Deep, stone-free soil reduces forking; looser texture improves root shape. |
| Squash and cucumbers | 18–24 in | Big plants drink a lot; deeper soil slows drying and helps steady growth. |
| Perennial shrubs or small fruit bushes | 18 in+ | Long-term plants prefer more soil mass; deeper beds handle year-round stress better. |
Buying Soil Without Guesswork
Once you know your target depth, the buying decision is mostly about packaging. Bagged soil is handy for small beds. Bulk delivery wins on cost for large beds, yet it’s only a win if the material is right.
Bagged soil: read the cubic feet on the label
Soil bags are usually labeled 0.75, 1.0, 1.5, or 2.0 cubic feet. Divide your total cubic feet by the bag size to get a count. Add a little extra for settling, then round up to whole bags.
Bulk soil: ask two questions before ordering
- Is it a raised-bed blend or straight topsoil? You want a mix that stays airy.
- Is it screened? Screening cuts down rocks and wood chunks that steal space and complicate planting.
Don’t fill right to the rim
Plan to keep the soil surface a couple inches below the top edge. That space helps when you water, add compost, or spread mulch. It also keeps soil from spilling over during heavy rain.
Volume Examples You Can Copy
Numbers make this click. Here are common bed sizes and fill depths, shown in both cubic feet and cubic yards. Use these as a shortcut, then adjust for your exact bed.
| Bed size (inside) | Fill depth | Soil volume |
|---|---|---|
| 4 ft × 8 ft | 12 in (1.0 ft) | 32 cu ft (about 1.19 cu yd) |
| 4 ft × 8 ft | 18 in (1.5 ft) | 48 cu ft (about 1.78 cu yd) |
| 4 ft × 4 ft | 12 in (1.0 ft) | 16 cu ft (about 0.59 cu yd) |
| 3 ft × 6 ft | 12 in (1.0 ft) | 18 cu ft (about 0.67 cu yd) |
| 2 ft × 8 ft | 12 in (1.0 ft) | 16 cu ft (about 0.59 cu yd) |
| 4 ft × 10 ft | 24 in (2.0 ft) | 80 cu ft (about 2.96 cu yd) |
Simple Ways To Use Less Soil Without Cheating Your Plants
Soil can be the biggest cost in raised-bed setup. You can trim that cost, but keep the root zone healthy. Two approaches work well when used with care.
Use the native ground as part of the root zone
If your bed sits on soil, remove grass and loosen the ground beneath before filling. Even a quick fork-through can help roots move down. Then your bed soil and native soil act together, which means you can often stick with a medium bed height.
Fill the bottom with clean, coarse material only when depth is extra tall
For tall beds built for easier access, some gardeners fill the lower portion with logs, branches, and coarse organic material, then cap with a full-depth layer of planting soil. If you do this, keep the top planting layer deep enough for the crops you want, using the depth targets above. Also expect more settling during the first season as lower layers break down and compact.
Keeping The Bed Full After The First Few Waterings
Settling surprises new raised-bed gardeners. Soil that looked level on day one can drop a few inches after a week of watering. That’s normal. Plan for it and the bed will look and perform better.
Water in layers when filling
As you add soil, water lightly every few inches of fill. It helps the soil knit together evenly and prevents big air gaps. It also gives you a clearer view of where the final level will land.
Top up with compost, not random dirt
When the surface drops, top up with compost or the same raised-bed blend you started with. Mixing random heavy soil into the top layer can create a dense cap that slows water movement.
Mulch keeps your soil investment in the bed
Mulch reduces splash-out during storms and slows surface drying. It also cuts crusting, which helps seedlings push through and keeps watering more even.
A Quick Checklist Before You Order
- Pick your crop list, then choose a soil depth that fits it.
- Measure the inside length and width of the bed.
- Run the volume math in cubic feet, then convert to cubic yards if needed.
- Add 10–15% extra for settling and early top-ups.
- Confirm your soil is a raised-bed blend or a loamy mix that stays airy after watering.
- Keep the final soil line a couple inches below the rim.
References & Sources
- Royal Horticultural Society (RHS).“How To Make A Raised Bed.”Provides practical raised-bed depth ranges and setup notes tied to plant needs.
- North Dakota State University Extension (NDSU).“Evaluating, Preparing And Amending Lawn And Garden Soil.”Notes how shallow beds benefit when suitable native soil under the bed is included in the rooting zone.
- USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS).“Soil Health – Soil Texture And Structure.”Explains soil texture and structure checks that help you judge whether a mix will drain and stay airy.
