How To Turn A Pallet Into A Vertical Garden | Small-Space Upgrade

A pallet vertical garden uses a cleaned, heat-treated pallet, landscape fabric, and pockets of potting mix to grow plants upright.

Got a sunny wall and a free pallet? You can build a sturdy vertical garden in an afternoon. This guide shows the safe way to pick a pallet, prep it, add pockets, and plant it so the whole frame stays tidy, watered, and productive through the season now.

What You Need And Why It Matters

Vertical gardens live in tight spaces and shallow soil, so inputs need to be dialed in. A sound pallet, a lightweight potting mix, and secure fabric pockets keep roots happy and your fence clean. The list below covers the hardware plus a few smart extras.

Item Purpose Tips
Heat-treated pallet (HT stamp) Safe frame Avoid “MB” marks; pick dry, unbroken boards.
Landscape fabric (or burlap) Back & pocket liner UV-stable fabric lasts longer outdoors.
Exterior screws & washers Secure fabric Washers spread load so fabric won’t tear.
Staples (stainless) Reinforce seams Staples hold folds before you screw them down.
Potting mix (soilless) Root zone Look for bark/peat/coir and perlite; no garden soil.
Slow-release fertilizer Steady feeding Blend into mix per label; top up midseason.
Drip line or soaker hose Even watering Mount along the top rail; add emitters to pockets.
Deck screws & brackets Mounting Fix into studs, masonry anchors, or a fence post.
Sandpaper & exterior stain Finish Knock down splinters; seal to extend life.
Gloves, eye protection Safety Old pallets can splinter; protect your hands.

Choose A Safe Pallet: Read The Stamp

Start with safety. Look for the IPPC stamp on a stringer or slat. You want “HT” for heat-treated wood. Skip anything marked “MB” (methyl bromide) or pallets with unknown stains, strong odors, or rot. Many older pallets may carry legacy treatments, so scrutiny pays off, especially if you plan to grow edibles.

Where possible, source from a local business that stores dry goods, not chemicals. Avoid pallets that carried food spills or solvents. Sand rough edges and pull protruding nails. If boards are loose, drive new exterior screws through the slats into the stringers.

Plan Your Layout: What Grows Well Upright

Shallow pockets suit compact plants with fibrous roots. Think leaf crops, herbs, strawberries, trailing flowers, and small succulents. Deep-rooted or top-heavy plants fight gravity and dry out too fast.

Good Picks For A Pallet Garden

Leafy greens: loose-leaf lettuce, spinach, baby kale. Herbs: thyme, oregano, chives, mint (bag mint to contain it). Flowers: calibrachoa, lobelia, nasturtium, pansy. Small fruit: alpine strawberries. For shade, use ferns and heuchera; for sun, mix petunias, verbena, and basil.

How To Build The Pallet Vertical Garden (Step By Step)

1) Square, Sand, And Seal

Lay the pallet face down. Check it sits flat. Sand splinters and sharp edges. Brush off dust and seal exposed wood with a thin coat of exterior stain or penetrating oil. Let it dry fully.

2) Wrap The Back

Cut a sheet of landscape fabric to cover the entire back and sides. Fold edges under for strength, then staple every 5–8 cm. Add a line of screws with washers along the frame to lock the fabric in place. This turns the pallet into a shallow box and keeps mix from leaking.

3) Create Pockets

On the front, cut strips of fabric the width of each pallet bay. Form a U-shaped sling against the back boards, leaving a 12–18 cm pocket depth. Staple the sides, then add screws and washers along the top edge of each pocket. Reinforce corners with extra staples.

4) Add Irrigation

Run a short header line across the top board and tee off drip emitters to each pocket. If you prefer a soaker hose, pin a length along the top pocket so water trickles down through lower tiers. Include a pressure reducer and filter if you’re tying into a hose bib.

5) Fill And Pre-Water

Blend slow-release fertilizer into the potting mix. Fill pockets loosely and water until the mix settles. Add more mix to top off. This step prevents later sagging and helps the fabric stretch to its working shape.

6) Plant Tight, Then Tuck

Stagger plants so roots share space without crowding. Tuck trailing varieties near the pocket lip so they spill over and shade the fabric. Water again to settle roots. Keep the pallet lying flat for a week so plants root in, then stand it upright and secure it.

Turning A Pallet Into A Vertical Garden: Rules And Safety

This section collects must-know points about pallet stamps, treatment codes, and safe reuse so you can plant with confidence. The short version: pick heat-treated wood, keep the frame clean, and mount it securely. For the official treatment programs and mark meanings, see the USDA APHIS wood packaging programs.

Stamp Cheat Sheet

  • IPPC logo: marks compliant wood packaging.
  • Country code: two-letter ISO code near the logo.
  • Unique number: identifies the facility.
  • Treatment code: “HT” = heat-treated; “MB” = methyl bromide.

When in doubt, pass on unmarked pallets. Mystery wood can carry pests or unknown residues.

Mounting Options That Don’t Wreck Your Wall

Weight adds up fast. A wet pallet with plants can top 25–35 kg. Anchor into studs or a fence post with heavy brackets. For masonry, use sleeve anchors. If you rent, hang the pallet on a freestanding A-frame or lean it on blocks and tie it back with chain so wind can’t tip it.

Potting Mix And Watering: The Small Details That Matter

Use a soilless mix made for containers. It drains fast yet holds air, which roots love. If pockets pull away from the wood after drying, rewet slowly until the mix swells and seats again. Drip irrigation for home gardens keeps moisture more even and saves water on hot days.

Seasonal Planting Ideas

Cool Weather

Plant spinach, arugula, pansies, dianthus, and parsley. Add a row cover on cold nights. Trim often to keep pockets full and tidy.

Warm Weather

Try basil, thyme, trailing petunias, portulaca, and strawberries. Pinch runners and spent blooms to keep energy in the plants you want.

Low-Water Palette

Mix sedums, ice plant, echeveria, and sempervivum. Use a gritty cactus blend and water less often. These hold shape and color through heat.

Common Problems And Quick Fixes

Sagging Pockets

Add a hidden cedar lath across the pocket face, screwed into side slats, to support weight without blocking growth.

Dry Edges, Wet Middle

Water long enough for moisture to reach the bottom pockets. If runoff escapes between the fabric and wood, press the mix back to the edges and water again.

Algae On Fabric

Increase air flow and let the surface dry between waterings. A light scrub with a brush clears residue without harming plants.

Quick Planting Plans You Can Copy

Theme Pocket Mix Notes
Herb Bar Basil, thyme, oregano, chives, parsley Keep mint in its own pot to prevent spread.
Salad Wall Loose-leaf lettuce, spinach, baby kale Succession plant every 3–4 weeks.
Sun Spillers Petunia, verbena, calibrachoa, lobelia Pinch blooms to boost branching.
Shade Texture Heuchera, ferns, ivy, lamium Rich color with morning light and afternoon shade.
Strawberry Grid Alpine strawberries + thyme Clip runners; add straw mulch in top pockets.
Succulent Sampler Sedum, echeveria, sempervivum Use gritty mix; tilt slightly to drain.

Care Calendar: Month-By-Month Tasks

Spring: Build, plant cool crops, set irrigation, and start light feeding. Early summer: swap to heat lovers, add shade cloth if leaves scorch. Late summer: deadhead weekly, flush with clear water once to prevent salt buildup. Fall: replant with pansies and herbs, reduce water as days shorten. Winter: empty annual pockets or switch to evergreens where freezing won’t split the mix.