Mulch Calculator
Find out exactly how much mulch you need β in cubic yards, cubic feet, and bags.
π Formula
Cubic Yards = (Area sq ft Γ Depth inches) Γ· 324 | Bags = Cubic Feet Γ· Bag Size
π± Recommended Depth
| Purpose | Depth |
|---|---|
| Weed suppression | 3β4 inches |
| Moisture retention | 2β3 inches |
| Decorative | 1β2 inches |
| Tree rings | 2β4 inches |
πͺ΅ Types of Mulch
| Type | Best For | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|
| Wood chips | Trees, shrubs | 2β4 years |
| Shredded bark | Garden beds | 1β3 years |
| Straw | Vegetables | 1 season |
| Pine needles | Acid-loving plants | 1β2 years |
| Rubber mulch | Playgrounds | 10+ years |
What Is a Mulch Calculator?
A mulch calculator is an online tool that tells you exactly how much mulch you need to cover a specific area at a specific depth. Instead of guessing at the store or over-ordering and wasting money, you enter three numbers β length, width, and depth β and the mulch estimator does the rest.
The result comes back in cubic yards (the standard unit for bulk mulch orders), cubic feet (the unit printed on most bags), and number of bags β so you can use the output whether you’re buying from a landscape supply yard or a big-box store.
A good mulch coverage calculator also handles different bed shapes β rectangles, circles, tree rings, and irregular landscaping beds. The one above does all of this.
Why use a mulch estimator instead of eyeballing it?
Because mulch math is deceptively tricky. The numbers jump fast when you add depth. A 200 square foot bed at 2 inches barely needs 1.25 cubic yards. The same bed at 4 inches needs 2.5 cubic yards β double. Most homeowners underestimate this. They buy for the area but forget that depth multiplies everything.
The mulch coverage calculator accounts for all of it automatically.
How to Calculate Mulch Needed β Step by Step
The mulch calculator runs these calculations automatically, but knowing the process helps you input accurate numbers and understand what comes back.
Step 1 β Measure your area in square feet
For a rectangular flower bed or garden bed:
Area = Length (ft) Γ Width (ft)
For a circular bed or tree ring:
Area = 3.14 Γ Radius Γ Radius
For an L-shaped or irregular landscaping bed: split it into two or more rectangles, calculate each separately, and add the totals together.
Step 2 β Decide your mulch depth in inches
Typical depths for most garden beds are 2β3 inches. More on choosing the right depth in the section below β it affects both plant health and how much you need to buy.
Step 3 β Run the mulch calculation formula
Convert depth from inches to feet first: divide by 12.
Volume (cubic feet) = Area (sq ft) Γ Depth (ft) Volume (cubic yards) = Cubic feet Γ· 27
One cubic yard = 27 cubic feet. That’s the one conversion you need to remember for any landscaping project.
Worked Example β How to Calculate Mulch for a Garden Bed
Rectangular garden bed: 15 feet long Γ 6 feet wide, 3 inch depth.
- Area = 15 Γ 6 = 90 square feet
- Depth in feet = 3 Γ· 12 = 0.25 ft
- Cubic feet = 90 Γ 0.25 = 22.5 cubic feet
- Cubic yards = 22.5 Γ· 27 = 0.83 cubic yards
- Bags needed (2 cu ft bags) = 22.5 Γ· 2 = 12 bags
Round up. Order 1 cubic yard of bulk or 13 bags.
Mulch Calculation Formula Explained
For anyone who wants to calculate mulch by hand without a tool, here is the complete mulch calculation formula broken down clearly.
Formula for cubic feet:
Cubic Feet = (Length Γ Width Γ Depth in inches) Γ· 12
Formula for cubic yards:
Cubic Yards = (Length Γ Width Γ Depth in inches) Γ· 324
The number 324 comes from multiplying 12 (inches per foot) Γ 27 (cubic feet per cubic yard). This shortcut lets you go directly from square feet and inches to cubic yards in one step.
Formula for number of bags (2 cu ft bags):
Bags = Cubic Feet Γ· 2
Formula for number of bags (3 cu ft bags):
Bags = Cubic Feet Γ· 3
Quick reference β mulch volume formula by unit:
| You Want | Formula |
|---|---|
| Cubic feet | Length Γ Width Γ (Depth Γ· 12) |
| Cubic yards | Length Γ Width Γ (Depth Γ· 12) Γ· 27 |
| Cubic yards shortcut | (Square feet Γ Depth in inches) Γ· 324 |
| Bags (2 cu ft) | Cubic feet Γ· 2 |
| Bags (3 cu ft) | Cubic feet Γ· 3 |
These are the same formulas the mulch volume calculator uses above β now you can run them yourself if needed.
How Much Mulch Do You Need? β Coverage Chart
Before entering your measurements, use this mulch coverage chart to get a quick ballpark for your project. It shows cubic yards needed for common garden bed and landscaping areas at standard mulch depths.
Mulch calculator in cubic yards β by area and depth
| Area (sq ft) | 1 inch | 2 inches | 3 inches | 4 inches |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 sq ft | 0.15 cu yd | 0.31 cu yd | 0.46 cu yd | 0.62 cu yd |
| 100 sq ft | 0.31 cu yd | 0.62 cu yd | 0.93 cu yd | 1.23 cu yd |
| 150 sq ft | 0.46 cu yd | 0.93 cu yd | 1.39 cu yd | 1.85 cu yd |
| 200 sq ft | 0.62 cu yd | 1.23 cu yd | 1.85 cu yd | 2.47 cu yd |
| 300 sq ft | 0.93 cu yd | 1.85 cu yd | 2.78 cu yd | 3.70 cu yd |
| 500 sq ft | 1.54 cu yd | 3.09 cu yd | 4.63 cu yd | 6.17 cu yd |
| 1000 sq ft | 3.09 cu yd | 6.17 cu yd | 9.26 cu yd | 12.35 cu yd |
Mulch calculator in cubic feet β same areas
| Area (sq ft) | 1 inch | 2 inches | 3 inches | 4 inches |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 sq ft | 4.2 cu ft | 8.3 cu ft | 12.5 cu ft | 16.7 cu ft |
| 100 sq ft | 8.3 cu ft | 16.7 cu ft | 25 cu ft | 33.3 cu ft |
| 200 sq ft | 16.7 cu ft | 33.3 cu ft | 50 cu ft | 66.7 cu ft |
| 300 sq ft | 25 cu ft | 50 cu ft | 75 cu ft | 100 cu ft |
| 500 sq ft | 41.7 cu ft | 83.3 cu ft | 125 cu ft | 166.7 cu ft |
Add 10% to whichever number you land on. Mulch settles in the first few weeks after application β the buffer covers settling, edge waste, and any uneven spreading.
How Many Bags of Mulch Do I Need?
Once the mulch calculator gives you a cubic footage number, converting to bags is simple math. Here’s a complete bag reference so you don’t have to do it in your head at the store.
Key conversion:
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet = 13.5 bags (2 cu ft) = 9 bags (3 cu ft)
Mulch calculator for square feet β bags needed at 3-inch depth
| Garden Bed Size | 2 cu ft Bags | 3 cu ft Bags |
|---|---|---|
| 50 sq ft | 7 bags | 5 bags |
| 100 sq ft | 13 bags | 9 bags |
| 150 sq ft | 19 bags | 13 bags |
| 200 sq ft | 25 bags | 17 bags |
| 300 sq ft | 38 bags | 25 bags |
| 500 sq ft | 63 bags | 42 bags |
| 1000 sq ft | 125 bags | 84 bags |
How many bags of mulch per square foot?
At 3 inches deep, you need roughly 1 bag (2 cu ft) per 8 square feet. At 2 inches deep, 1 bag per 12 square feet. These are the numbers to keep in your head when shopping.
How much does one bag of mulch cover?
| Bag Size | 1 inch deep | 2 inches deep | 3 inches deep | 4 inches deep |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 cu ft bag | 24 sq ft | 12 sq ft | 8 sq ft | 6 sq ft |
| 3 cu ft bag | 36 sq ft | 18 sq ft | 12 sq ft | 9 sq ft |
Always buy one or two extra bags. Opened bags cannot be returned, and a second trip to the store costs more in time than one extra bag costs in money.
Mulch Bags vs Bulk β Which Should You Buy?
This decision matters more than most people realize. Getting it wrong costs money either way.
When bags make sense
Bags work best for small projects β individual flower beds, borders, spot refreshing, or anything under 2 cubic yards. They’re available at any hardware store, no delivery coordination needed, and easy to handle one at a time.
The standard bag size at most stores is 2 cubic feet. Some premium brands sell 3 cubic foot bags. The mulch calculator above handles both.
When bulk mulch saves you money
One cubic yard of bulk mulch from a landscape supply yard typically costs $25β$55. That same cubic yard purchased as 2-cubic-foot bags from Home Depot or Lowe’s costs $54β$95 β before you account for the time and effort of unloading 13β14 individual bags.
For any landscaping project over 2β3 cubic yards, bulk delivery almost always saves money, even after adding a typical delivery fee of $50β$100. Many landscape suppliers offer free delivery at 5 cubic yards or more.
Bags vs. bulk decision guide:
| Project Size | Best Option |
|---|---|
| Under 1 cubic yard | Bags β easy, no minimum order |
| 1β3 cubic yards | Compare local delivery fees before deciding |
| Over 3 cubic yards | Bulk is almost always cheaper |
| Over 5 cubic yards | Bulk, often with free delivery |
Best Mulch Depth for Plants β The Depth Guide
Mulch depth is not just a number for the volume calculation β it directly determines whether your mulch helps or harms your plants. This is the most important thing most mulch guides get wrong or skip entirely.
How deep should mulch be?
The standard answer is 2β4 inches for most garden applications. But the right depth depends on what you’re mulching.
Recommended mulch depth by plant and application type:
| Application | Best Mulch Depth | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Vegetable garden beds | 1β2 inches | Deeper mulch keeps soil too cool for seedlings |
| Annual flower beds | 2β3 inches | Standard weed suppression and moisture retention |
| Perennial beds and borders | 2β3 inches | Most common use β good balance |
| Around shrubs | 2β3 inches | Keep 2 inches clear of stems |
| Around trees | 3β4 inches | Extend to drip line, never against trunk |
| Pathway and walkway coverage | 3β4 inches | Needs edging to stay in place |
| Erosion control on slopes | 3β4 inches | Use shredded, not nuggets β stays put better |
| Playground safety surface | 4β6 inches | ASTM impact-attenuation standard |
| Refreshing existing mulch | 1-inch top-up | Check the current depth before buying |
Is 2 inches of mulch enough?
For most flower beds and perennial borders, 2 inches of mulch provides adequate moisture retention and some weed suppression. It is the minimum functional depth. At 2 inches you will still see some weeds push through, particularly in spring when germination pressure is high. Three inches is the better target if weed control is your main goal.
What is the best mulch depth for weed control?
Three inches is the standard recommendation for reliable weed suppression. At this depth, most weed seeds are blocked from the light they need to germinate β suppressing 70β90% of new weed growth. Below 2 inches, enough light filters through for determined weeds to establish. Above 4 inches, you start causing problems: water cannot penetrate adequately, oxygen exchange at the soil surface drops, and roots begin to suffer.
Two to three inches is the sweet spot. The mulch depth calculator above uses 3 inches as its default for this reason.
The volcano mulch mistake β why it kills trees
If you’ve ever seen mulch piled in a cone against a tree trunk, that’s called volcano mulching. It looks like someone was being thorough. It’s one of the fastest ways to kill a healthy tree.
Mulch against bark traps moisture, promotes fungal rot at the base, shelters rodents and insects that chew through bark, and can cause the tree to grow surface roots that eventually girdle the trunk.
The correct method is the mulch donut β a flat ring with a 3β6 inch clear gap around the trunk, extending outward toward the drip line of the branches. Most tree mulch rings are also too small; tree roots extend well beyond the canopy edge.
Using the Mulch Calculator for Irregular Landscaping Beds
Most real garden beds aren’t clean rectangles. Here’s how to measure accurately for the mulch estimator when your beds have curves, corners, or complex shapes.
Curved or freeform beds: Use the bounding rectangle method. Picture the smallest rectangle that could fully contain the bed. Calculate that area, then subtract 15β20% for the curves and corners that fall outside the actual planted area. For gently curved beds, 10% is enough. For heavily irregular shapes, subtract up to 30%.
L-shaped beds: Split at the inside corner into two separate rectangles. Calculate each with the mulch calculator individually, then add the results together.
Circular beds and tree rings: For a full circle: Area = 3.14 Γ radiusΒ². For a tree ring (donut shape): subtract the inner circle area (trunk gap) from the outer circle area.
Ring area = 3.14 Γ (outer radiusΒ² β inner radiusΒ²)
Multiple separate beds: Calculate each garden bed separately using the mulch calculator for garden beds, then sum the totals. This is the most accurate approach for front yard landscaping with several distinct planting areas.
The 10% rule for all projects: Always add 10% to your final calculated volume before ordering. Mulch compresses in the first few weeks, uneven spreading wastes material at the edges, and running slightly over is far better than running short mid-project.
Landscaping Mulch Calculator β Types of Mulch and What They Cover
The garden mulch calculator gives you the right quantity for any mulch type. But the type you choose affects depth recommendations, coverage efficiency, cost, and how long it lasts before needing replacement.
Shredded hardwood mulch
The most widely used mulch in the US. Shredded hardwood breaks down over 1β2 years, feeds soil as it decomposes, and knits together after settling so it stays put reasonably well. Available everywhere, affordable, and suitable for almost every planting bed.
Best for: general garden beds, perennial borders, shrub beds. Lifespan before replenishment: 1β2 years. Cost: $3β$7 per 2 cu ft bag / $25β$45 per cubic yard bulk.
Cedar mulch
Same core function as hardwood mulch plus natural cedar oils that discourage certain insects from nesting in the bed. Breaks down more slowly than standard hardwood β often 2β3 seasons before replenishment. Costs 20β40% more per yard but the extended lifespan partly offsets that.
Best for: decorative beds, entranceways, areas with recurring insect problems. Lifespan: 2β3 years.
Bark mulch β pine bark and nuggets
Pine bark holds color well and looks polished in formal landscaping. Bark nuggets are chunkier β better drainage than shredded, but they scatter more easily on slopes and in heavy rain. Pine bark gradually acidifies the soil, which benefits acid-loving plants like azaleas, rhododendrons, and blueberries.
Best for: ornamental beds, formal landscaping, around acid-loving plants. Lifespan: 1β3 years depending on particle size.
Pine straw mulch
Dried pine needles are the dominant mulch across the southeastern US β cheap, locally abundant, and effective. Pine straw interlocks after settling, which makes it unusually resistant to washing on slopes. It acidifies soil slightly, making it ideal for acid-loving plants.
Best for: slopes, large areas, acid-loving plants, southeastern US gardens. Lifespan: refresh annually.
Dyed mulch β black, red, brown
Standard wood mulch that has been color-treated to maintain a consistent appearance through the season. Undyed hardwood fades from brown to gray in a few months; dyed mulch holds its color 1β2 seasons. Most commercial dyes are iron oxide-based and safe around plants. Worth checking the source material if using near vegetables.
Best for: high-visibility front yard beds, entranceways.
Wood chips
Raw wood chips β often free from local tree services or municipal programs β provide excellent weed suppression and slow decomposition. Less tidy-looking than shredded bark but highly functional for pathways, large tree rings, and utility areas.
Best for: pathways, tree rings, large low-visibility areas. Cost: often free.
Rubber mulch
Made from recycled tires. Permanent, no decomposition, good cushioning for playgrounds. Trade-offs are real: it can leach compounds into soil over time, absorb and re-radiates heat, and does nothing for soil health. Keep away from vegetable gardens and edible plants.
Best for: playground safety surfaces only.
Straw and grass clippings
Straw is a go-to for vegetable gardens β cheap, organic, biodegradable, and keeps soil moisture in. Grass clippings (dried before use) add nitrogen as they break down. Apply clippings in 1-inch layers only β thick fresh clippings mat together, trap heat, and damage plants.
Best for: vegetable gardens, temporary coverage, thin top-dressing.
Soil and Mulch Calculator β Understanding the Difference
A common question when planning a landscaping project: should I be calculating mulch or topsoil?
Mulch goes on top of existing soil. Its job is to conserve moisture, suppress weeds, moderate soil temperature, and gradually add organic matter as it breaks down. It is not a growing medium β plants don’t root in mulch.
Topsoil is the actual growing medium. It’s used to build up low spots, fill new raised beds, or replace poor-quality soil. You plant into the topsoil. You mulch over the topsoil.
When you need both: New beds often need topsoil to bring the depth up to grade before mulch is applied on top. In this case, calculate topsoil volume and mulch volume separately β same formula for both, since both are measured in cubic yards.
A combined soil and mulch calculator works identically to the mulch-only version β the formula doesn’t change, only the material changes.
When to Apply Mulch β Timing by Season
Most homeowners mulch once in spring and forget about it. Here’s what actually works by season.
Spring β the most important window Apply after soil has warmed, not while it’s still cold. Mulching over cold soil traps cold in and delays root activity. Wait until nighttime temperatures are consistently above 40Β°F. This is also the best window for weed suppression β annual weeds germinate in early spring, and getting mulch down before they establish is far more effective than applying it after.
Summer β moisture focus A mid-summer top-up reduces watering frequency noticeably. Two to three inches of mulch can cut supplemental irrigation needs by 25β50% in hot conditions. If your spring mulch has compressed below 2 inches, a 1-inch refresh is usually all you need.
Fall β root protection Apply fall mulch after the first hard frost. Mulching too early in autumn insulates warmth in the soil and can delay the dormancy that perennials need. Once the ground has cooled, mulching protects roots from freeze-thaw cycles that heave soil and damage shallow root systems.
Winter Useful in mild climates for extending the growing season at the margins. In cold regions, heavy mulching after ground freeze protects deep roots through winter.
Mulch Calculator Cost Estimator β 2026 Price Guide
The mulch coverage calculator gives you the volume. These are the current US average prices to build your project budget.
Bagged mulch prices (per 2 cu ft bag)
| Mulch Type | Price per Bag |
|---|---|
| Basic shredded wood | $3β$5 |
| Shredded hardwood (natural brown) | $4β$7 |
| Dyed black mulch | $4β$8 |
| Dyed red mulch | $4β$8 |
| Cedar or cypress mulch | $5β$9 |
| Pine bark nuggets | $4β$7 |
| Pine straw (per bale) | $5β$8 |
| Rubber mulch | $8β$15 |
Bulk mulch prices (per cubic yard β landscape supply yards)
| Mulch Type | Price per Cubic Yard |
|---|---|
| Basic hardwood / wood chip | $25β$40 |
| Shredded hardwood | $30β$50 |
| Dyed mulch (black or brown) | $30β$55 |
| Cedar mulch | $35β$60 |
| Cypress mulch | $35β$60 |
| Playground wood fiber | $30β$50 |
Delivery fees typically run $50β$100 from most local suppliers. Orders of 5+ cubic yards often qualify for free delivery.
Tips to reduce mulch cost:
- Spring, Memorial Day weekend, and late summer are when big-box stores run 25β50% mulch promotions
- Coordinate with neighbors and split a bulk delivery fee
- Check your municipality β many cities offer free wood chips or composted mulch year-round
- Ask local tree services β many will drop a load of wood chips free rather than pay for disposal
Mulch Application Tips That Actually Matter
The landscaping mulch calculator gives you the right amount. Here’s how to apply it so it works as intended.
Edge your beds before you start. Crisp bed edges keep mulch contained through the season. Unedged mulch migrates into the lawn, thins out, and needs replacing sooner.
Pull weeds first β mulch does not kill them. Mulch blocks new weed seed germination. It does not kill weeds that are already established. Mulching over existing weeds just gives them cover. Clear the bed first.
Keep mulch off plant crowns and stems. The crown of a plant β where stem meets soil β needs airflow. Mulch packed against stems traps moisture and causes crown rot. Maintain a 2β3 inch clear gap around every stem.
Use cardboard under mulch for persistent weeds. Lay flattened cardboard directly on bare soil before mulching. It biodegrades in 1β2 seasons, adds organic matter, and blocks weeds more effectively than plastic landscape fabric β without fragmenting into the soil.
Apply fresh mulch on top of old mulch. If the existing layer is still intact, top it up rather than replacing it. Only remove old mulch that has compacted into a hard, water-repelling mat.
Keep mulch away from foundations. A gap of at least 6 inches between any mulched area and your house foundation, deck posts, or door frames prevents moisture buildup against structural wood and reduces termite risk.
Mulch and Soil Health β What Happens Under the Surface
Most people think of mulch as a cosmetic treatment. What’s happening in the soil underneath is where the real long-term value builds.
As organic mulch breaks down, it feeds soil microorganisms β bacteria, fungi, nematodes, and earthworms β that form the living network supporting healthy root systems. A bed mulched consistently over several seasons builds soil structure that improves drainage in clay-heavy soil and water retention in sandy soil.
Mulch and soil temperature: Two to three inches of mulch keeps soil measurably cooler than bare soil in summer β a significant benefit for shallow-rooted plants and vegetables during heat stress. In winter, the same layer insulates roots from hard freezes.
Mulch and moisture retention: Mulched beds consistently require 25β50% less supplemental irrigation than bare soil in comparable conditions. For anyone gardening in a hot or dry climate, this is a real, measurable reduction in water bills and effort over a full season.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many inches of mulch should I use?
For most garden beds, 2β3 inches is the standard recommendation. Two inches provides baseline moisture retention. Three inches is better for weed suppression. Four inches is the upper limit for most plantings β beyond that, you risk blocking water penetration and suffocating roots. Vegetable gardens are the exception: keep mulch at 1β2 inches so soil warms properly for heat-loving plants.
How do I calculate mulch for my garden?
Measure your bed length and width in feet and multiply them to get the square footage. Decide your depth in inches and divide by 12 to convert to feet. Multiply area Γ depth in feet to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 to get cubic yards. Or use the mulch calculator at the top of this page β enter length, width, and depth, and it handles the entire calculation instantly.
How many bags of mulch do I need?
Divide your total cubic feet by 2 (for 2 cu ft bags) or by 3 (for 3 cu ft bags). At 3 inches deep, a 100 sq ft bed needs about 13 bags of 2 cu ft mulch. A 200 sq ft bed at the same depth needs about 25 bags. Use the bag table above or the mulch calculator to get the exact number for your dimensions.
What is the formula for mulch calculation?
The standard mulch calculation formula is: Cubic Yards = (Length Γ Width Γ Depth in inches) Γ· 324. For cubic feet: Cubic Feet = Length Γ Width Γ (Depth Γ· 12). For bags: divide your cubic feet by your bag size. The mulch volume calculator above runs all of these simultaneously.
Is a mulch calculator accurate?
Yes, for standard rectangular beds, a mulch calculator is very accurate β it uses the same formula professional landscapers use. For curved or irregular beds, the accuracy depends on how precisely you measure. Using the bounding rectangle method and subtracting 10β20% for curves gives you a reliable estimate within one bag for most projects. Always add 10% to your final number to account for settling.
How do I calculate mulch by hand?
Use this shortcut: multiply your square footage by your depth in inches, then divide by 324. That gives you cubic yards directly. Example: 150 sq ft Γ 3 inches = 450 Γ· 324 = 1.39 cubic yards. For bags, multiply cubic yards by 13.5 (for 2 cu ft bags) to get your bag count.
How many bags of mulch per square foot?
At 3 inches deep, you need approximately 1 bag (2 cu ft) per 8 square feet. At 2 inches deep, 1 bag covers about 12 square feet. At 1 inch deep, 1 bag covers 24 square feet. Use these ratios to do a fast store-aisle estimate, then verify with the mulch calculator before you buy.
What is the best mulch depth for weed prevention?
Three inches is the target. At this depth, most weed seeds are deprived of the light they need to germinate, suppressing 70β90% of new weed growth. Two inches works but allows some breakthrough. Four inches crosses into the territory that can harm plant roots. Three inches is where weed control and plant health overlap most favorably.
How often should I replenish mulch?
Check the existing depth each spring before ordering. If it’s still at 2 inches or above, it’s functional β you may only need a light top-up. If it has compressed below 2 inches, add a 1-inch refresh layer. Full replacement is only necessary when old mulch has fully decomposed into the soil or hardened into a water-repelling mat. Shredded hardwood typically needs refreshing every 1β2 years; cedar and pine bark every 2β3 years.
What is the difference between a mulch calculator and a soil calculator?
A mulch calculator estimates the volume of surface mulch needed to cover a planting bed at a specified depth. A soil calculator estimates the volume of actual growing medium needed to fill or build up a bed. Both use the same formula β area Γ depth Γ· 27 for cubic yards β but they serve different purposes. Mulch sits on top of soil; soil is what plants root into. Many landscaping projects need both, calculated separately.
Getting the volume right is the first step β and the mulch calculator handles that instantly. The rest is judgment: the right depth for your plants, the right type for your goals, and applying it in a way that actually builds a healthier bed over time.
Do it right once, and your garden stays cleaner, your soil improves season by season, and your watering routine gets noticeably shorter. That’s a real return on a Saturday morning and a few cubic yards of bark.
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