A raised bed liner is optional; use one only when it solves rot, pests, weeds, or soil contact problems.
Most raised garden beds work better with an open bottom than with a sealed base. Plant roots get more room, extra water can drain, and worms can move through the soil. A liner helps only when it has a clear job.
The right answer depends on what you’re lining, where the bed sits, and what you’re trying to block. A cloth liner on the sides is different from plastic under the whole bed. One can protect wood. The other can trap water and hurt roots.
Do You Need A Liner In A Raised Garden Bed? The Honest Answer
No, most garden beds on soil don’t need a full liner. If the bed sits over lawn, native soil, or a cleared garden spot, leave the bottom open. The bed can drain after rain, and deeper crops can root below the frame.
A liner makes sense when you’re solving one of these problems:
- Wood sides are breaking down too soon.
- Tree roots are invading the bed.
- Burrowing pests are coming up from below.
- The bed sits on concrete, gravel, or a deck.
- You’re trying to reduce weed pressure at setup.
- You’re working around soil you don’t trust.
For a standard vegetable bed on decent ground, skip plastic across the bottom. Use cardboard for short-term weed blocking if needed, then fill the bed well. University of Maryland Extension notes that raised beds placed on ground allow plant roots to grow down into the soil below, which is one reason an open base works so well. raised beds placed on ground
When A Raised Bed Liner Helps
Protecting Wood Sides
If your bed is made from untreated pine, fir, or other soft wood, lining the inside walls can slow wet soil from sitting against the boards. This doesn’t make cheap wood last forever, but it can buy you more seasons.
Use a breathable or semi-breathable side liner, then leave the bottom open. Heavy plastic stapled to the inside walls can work if you poke drainage gaps near the lower edge. Don’t wrap the whole bed like a bathtub.
Blocking Weeds At Setup
Cardboard is the easiest starter layer for a new bed over grass. Lay it flat, overlap the seams, wet it, then add soil mix. It blocks light long enough to weaken grass, then breaks down.
Newspaper can also work, but it needs enough sheets to block light. Skip glossy paper. A thin layer of paper alone tears and shifts once you start filling the bed.
Keeping Pests Out
If gophers, voles, or moles are common in your yard, use metal hardware cloth under the bed. This is not a soil liner. It’s a pest screen. Choose galvanized hardware cloth with small openings, bend it up the inside edge, and secure it to the frame before filling.
Fabric won’t stop determined chewing animals for long. Plastic won’t either. Metal is the better choice when burrowers are the real problem.
When A Liner Causes Trouble
A liner becomes a problem when it blocks water movement. Vegetable roots need air as much as moisture. If water pools at the base, roots can stall, rot, or grow shallow.
Plastic under the whole bed is the usual mistake. It may seem tidy, but it can turn the bottom layer into a soggy zone. It can also stop worms and soil life from moving between the bed and the ground.
Landscape fabric under a deep bed can also become a headache. Fine roots grow into it, soil clogs it, and weeds may sprout above it anyway. Once the bed is full, removing it is a pain.
For soil fill, aim for a mix that holds moisture but drains well. University of Maryland Extension gives raised bed fill advice, including how topsoil, compost, and soilless mixes can be used by bed depth and site type. raised bed fill advice
| Liner Type | Best Use | Watch Out For |
|---|---|---|
| Cardboard | Short-term grass and weed blocking under a new bed | Breaks down, so it won’t stop tree roots or pests |
| Newspaper | Light weed blocking when layered thickly | Thin layers tear, shift, and let weeds through |
| Hardware Cloth | Stopping gophers, voles, and burrowing pests | Sharp cut edges need folding or trimming |
| Landscape Fabric | Temporary weed control in paths near beds | Can clog under soil and tangle with roots |
| Plastic Sheeting | Side-wall wood protection only | Bad under the full bed because it traps water |
| Burlap | Short-term soil holding in shallow planters | Breaks down quickly in wet soil |
| Geotextile Fabric | Beds on hard surfaces where soil must stay contained | Needs drainage space beneath it |
| No Liner | Most raised beds placed directly on ground | Won’t protect wood or block burrowing pests |
Taking A Raised Bed Liner From Good Idea To Good Build
The safest way to use a liner is to match it to one job. Don’t add layers just because they feel neat. Each layer changes water flow, root growth, or soil contact.
For Beds On Soil
Clear thick weeds first. Set the frame level. Add cardboard if grass is still present, then fill the bed. Leave the soil below open unless you have pest trouble.
If you add hardware cloth, place it before the frame is filled. Cut it larger than the bed footprint so it can bend up the sides. Secure it inside the frame so pests can’t squeeze around the edge.
For Beds On Concrete Or Pavers
Here, a liner has a different job. It keeps soil from washing out while letting water escape. Use geotextile fabric or a planter-style base with drainage holes. Raise the bed slightly on feet, blocks, or slats so water can leave.
Don’t set a sealed wooden box flat on concrete. Water trapped under the bed can stain the surface, sour the lower soil, and speed up wood decay.
For Beds On Decks
Deck beds need extra care because water and weight matter. Use a contained planter bed, not a bottomless frame. Add drainage holes, a fabric layer to hold soil, and a tray or gap system that keeps wet soil off boards.
Check weight before filling. Wet soil is heavy. A tall bed on a deck may need a lighter mix and a shallower planting plan.
Materials To Avoid Inside Food Beds
Food beds deserve cleaner material choices. Avoid old carpet, painted scrap wood, mystery plastics, roofing felt, and treated debris from unknown projects. These may break down, smell bad, or add unwanted residues to the soil.
Modern pressure-treated lumber is often used for garden beds, but many gardeners still prefer a barrier between treated wood and soil. Oregon State University Extension explains pressure-treated wood choices for raised bed construction and the trade-offs by wood type. pressure-treated wood choices
If you want the cleanest route, use cedar, redwood, stone, untreated lumber, metal beds made for gardening, or food-safe planter materials. Then add a side liner only when it solves a real problem.
| Situation | Use This | Skip This |
|---|---|---|
| Bed over lawn | Cardboard layer, open bottom | Plastic bottom sheet |
| Gopher or vole pressure | Hardware cloth | Fabric or cardboard alone |
| Soft wood frame | Side-wall liner | Sealed plastic base |
| Concrete patio | Geotextile plus drainage gap | Flat sealed box |
| Trusted garden soil below | No liner | Extra layers with no job |
Best Setup For Most Gardeners
For a normal backyard bed, use this simple setup:
- Place the bed where it gets enough sun for your crop.
- Remove woody weeds and sharp debris.
- Add overlapping cardboard if grass is present.
- Add hardware cloth only if burrowing pests are a known issue.
- Leave the bottom open for roots and drainage.
- Line only the inside walls if wood life is your main concern.
- Fill with a loose, fertile mix suited to the bed depth.
This setup keeps the bed simple, drains well, and avoids the biggest liner mistake: sealing the bottom. It also leaves you room to fix problems later. If weeds rise, mulch the surface. If boards age, add a side barrier during a refill. If pests arrive, deal with that bed before the next planting cycle.
Final Pick For Your Bed
Use no liner for most raised beds sitting on healthy ground. Use cardboard for a new bed over grass. Use hardware cloth for burrowing pests. Use a side liner to slow wood decay. Use breathable fabric only when the bed sits on a hard surface and soil needs to stay contained.
The one liner to be careful with is solid plastic under the entire bed. It sounds protective, but it often creates the exact problem a raised bed is meant to fix: poor drainage. Give roots air, give water a way out, and add only the layer your site actually needs.
References & Sources
- University Of Maryland Extension.“Growing Vegetables In Raised Beds.”Supports open-bottom bed use, bed sizing, and root movement into soil below.
- University Of Maryland Extension.“Soil To Fill Raised Beds.”Supports soil fill choices for raised beds by depth and site type.
- Oregon State University Extension Service.“Pressure-Treated Wood For Raised Bed Construction In Oregon.”Supports wood selection notes for raised bed frames and side-wall barrier decisions.
