Cut and lift the sod in strips, shake off soil, then edge and level the area so grass runners can’t creep back.
Turning lawn into a garden bed sounds simple until you hit that springy root mat. Pull a little grass, and it snaps back like a carpet. Dig a little deeper, and you’re suddenly hauling heavy slabs of sod.
The good news: grass comes out clean when you cut it the right way and keep the edges under control. This article walks you through a straightforward sod lift you can plant into the same day, plus a couple of lower-dig options if you’d rather trade effort for time.
Pick A Removal Style That Matches Your Timeline
There’s no single “right” way to clear turf. The best choice is the one that fits your bed size, your schedule, and your body.
Fast Start: Lift The Sod And Plant Today
If you want vegetables or flowers in the ground right away, lifting sod is the cleanest reset. You remove grass blades, roots, and most runners in one pass, so the bed starts as bare soil instead of half-alive turf.
Low Dig: Smother The Lawn And Plant Later
If you can wait, sheet mulching can shrink the digging load. You mow low, lay cardboard with overlaps, wet it, then add compost and mulch on top. Penn State Extension lays out the layer order and thickness in Create New Garden Beds with Sheet Composting and Sheet Mulching.
Heat Option: Solarize When Sun Is Strong
In warm months with steady sun, clear plastic pinned tight can weaken turf over time. Iowa State Extension compares several turf-kill paths, including solarization, in How to Kill Grass to Create a New Garden Bed.
Set Up So The Work Stays Neat
A little prep saves a lot of backtracking. Clear hoses, sprinklers, toys, and rocks. Mow the patch as low as your mower allows and rake off loose clippings. Short grass lets your spade bite cleanly.
Tools That Earn A Spot In Your Hands
- Flat spade or sharp shovel: for slicing under sod.
- Edging spade or half-moon edger: for clean border cuts.
- Garden fork: for loosening soil and teasing out runners.
- Mattock: for packed soil and thick roots.
- Wheelbarrow or tarp: for hauling sod away.
- Rake: for leveling and pulling out clumps.
Mark The Bed Shape Before You Cut
Lay a hose on the grass to draw curves, or use stakes and string for straight lines. Step back and look from a few angles. If a curve feels jittery, smooth it now. Once you cut, you’re committed.
How To Dig Out Grass For Garden? Step-By-Step Sod Lift
This is the hands-on approach for a same-day bed. If the soil is slightly damp and your spade is sharp, you can clear a small bed in an afternoon.
Step 1: Moisten Dry Soil The Day Before
If the ground is dusty, water lightly the evening before. You want a firm slice, not mud. If the ground is already damp from rain, skip watering.
Step 2: Cut A Border Line Straight Down
Start on your outline. Drive the spade straight down 3–4 inches all the way around. This border cut keeps sod strips from tearing into ragged chunks and sets the bed edge early.
Step 3: Slice Under The Turf In Short Strips
Angle the spade low and slide it under the turf 1–2 inches deep, right where roots knit into the top layer. Lift slightly as you push forward. Cut strips about 12–18 inches wide so you can handle them without twisting your back.
Step 4: Shake Soil Back Where It Belongs
Lift each strip, then tap and shake so loose soil falls back into the bed. Try not to haul your best topsoil away with the grass. If the sod is thick with soil, scrape a little off with the spade before you move it.
Step 5: Stack Or Roll The Sod
Stack strips grass-side down in a tight pile, or roll them like a carpet. Either way, keep the pile compact so it doesn’t sprawl across the lawn.
Step 6: Pull Runners And Root Mats
Many lawn grasses spread with pale runners near the surface. After the sod is up, scan the bed floor and pull runners you can see. Use a fork to lift a small section, then pick through it. This step is slow, but it’s the part that cuts regrowth later.
Step 7: Loosen The Topsoil With A Fork
Push a fork 6–8 inches into the soil, rock it back, and lift. Work across the bed in rows. You’re opening the soil for roots and water, not turning it into powder.
Step 8: Level The Bed And Build A Real Edge
Rake the soil level, pull out stones and thick roots, then set an edge barrier. A clean edge is more than looks. It slows grass creep from the lawn into the bed.
For a simple spade-cut edge, Kansas State University Research and Extension describes a trench edge cut 4–6 inches deep with a spade in All About Edging.
Handle The Sod Pile Before It Becomes A Problem
Sod adds up fast. Plan where it goes so the pile doesn’t sit in the yard for weeks.
Turn It Into Compost For Later
Stack sod grass-side down, water the pile lightly, then lay a tarp over it to hold moisture. As it breaks down, you’ll get a dark mix you can spread in beds.
Patch Thin Lawn Spots
If you lifted clean, intact strips, you can patch bare lawn areas. Lay strips, press them into contact with soil, then water daily for a week.
Make A Low Berm
Stack sod like bricks, grass-side down, to shape a low berm. Add a layer of soil on top, then plant once it settles. This works best when you’ve got spare soil to cap it well.
Comparison Table: Ways To Get Rid Of Lawn Grass
Use this as a quick match-up between effort, speed, and cleanup.
| Option | Best Fit | What To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Hand sod lift with spade | Small to mid beds; plant same day | Slow in packed soil; knee work |
| Sod cutter rental | Large beds; straight runs | Rental cost; tough on slopes |
| Fork-and-pull runner cleanup | Any bed after sod lift | Missed runners can resprout near edges |
| Sheet mulching with cardboard | Plant later; low digging | Needs time; edges still need a barrier |
| Solarization with clear plastic | Hot season; full sun | Plastic must be sealed tight; slow |
| Rototill then rake out roots | Reworking a big zone | Chops roots; can stir up weed seed |
| Selective herbicide then removal | Stubborn perennial turf; long lead time | Follow label timing; keep spray off plants |
| Raised bed on top of lawn | Bad soil; quick build | Needs lots of soil; edge creep still possible |
Stop Grass From Coming Back
Regrowth usually comes from two places: roots left in the bed, and living turf pressing in from the sides. You can beat both with a few moves.
Clean The Bed Floor Before You Add Compost
Rake slowly and pull any stringy runners you spot. If the turf was dense, work the fork under the top inch, lift, then pick through by hand. Keep going until you can rake without snagging long runners.
Build A Barrier That’s Deep Enough
Choose one of these and do it before mulch goes down:
- Cut trench edge: a V-shaped trench that grass roots struggle to cross.
- Metal or plastic edging: set it 4 inches deep or more.
- Pavers: a hard border that also gives you a mowing strip.
Mulch Makes Patrol Easy
After planting, add 2–3 inches of mulch and keep it an inch away from stems. Mulch dims the soil surface, so new grass shoots stand out and pull out easier.
Build Better Soil Without Overworking It
Soil under turf can be tight from mowing and foot traffic. After you loosen it, a thin compost layer helps texture and water movement.
Do A Quick Drain Check
Dig a hole about 8 inches deep, fill it with water, and see how fast it drains. If it drains within a few hours, most garden plants will cope well. If it sits overnight, avoid stepping on the bed when it’s wet and add compost in small doses over time.
Add Compost In Modest Amounts
Spread 1–2 inches of finished compost and mix it into the top 6 inches with a fork. If your soil is sandy, compost helps hold water. If it’s clay-heavy, compost helps it crumble instead of forming hard plates.
Check Local Soil Maps If You Want More Detail
If you like data, the USDA NRCS tool can show mapped soil types for a chosen area. Getting Started With Web Soil Survey explains how to draw an area and pull the report.
Table: Dig Depths And Edge Targets
These numbers keep your cuts consistent from one side of the bed to the other.
| Task | Target | Payoff |
|---|---|---|
| Mow before cutting | As low as mower allows | Cleaner spade work |
| Border cut depth | 3–4 inches | Sharp outline, fewer tears |
| Slice under sod | 1–2 inches | Lifts roots, keeps topsoil |
| Loosen soil depth | 6–8 inches | Room for roots and water |
| Compost layer | 1–2 inches | Better texture over time |
| Mulch layer | 2–3 inches | Less weeding, steadier moisture |
| Edge barrier depth | 4 inches or more | Slower turf creep |
Planting Day Tips
Once the bed is level, water it lightly and let it sit for 10–15 minutes. That settles loose soil so you don’t plant into air pockets.
For Seeds
- Rake the top inch smooth.
- Water with a gentle spray so seed stays put.
- Keep the surface damp until sprouts stand up.
For Transplants
- Dig holes twice as wide as the root ball.
- Set plants at the same depth as the pot line.
- Press soil in with your hands, not your boots.
First Month Care That Keeps The Bed Clean
Walk the edge once a week. If you spot a grass shoot, pull it and follow it back to the runner. Early pulls are quick pulls.
Water well, then let the top inch dry before the next watering. Roots follow moisture down. Shallow daily watering keeps roots near the surface and dries out fast in heat.
Finish Line Checklist
- Outline cut clean and checked from a distance
- Sod lifted in strips, soil shaken back in place
- Runners pulled from the bed floor
- Soil loosened, leveled, and cleared of clumps
- Edge trench or barrier set before mulch
- Compost mixed in, then planting started
- Mulch added and kept off stems
References & Sources
- Penn State Extension.“Create New Garden Beds with Sheet Composting and Sheet Mulching.”Explains cardboard, compost, and mulch layers for converting lawn into a bed with less digging.
- Iowa State Extension and Outreach.“How to Kill Grass to Create a New Garden Bed.”Compares turf removal choices, including solarization and smothering, so you can match the plan to your timeline.
- Kansas State University Research and Extension.“All About Edging (REV 2022).”Explains trench edging depths that slow grass roots from crossing into a bed.
- USDA NRCS.“Getting Started With Web Soil Survey.”Details how to access mapped soil data for a selected area so you can plan amendments with fewer guesses.
