How Much Mulch Do I Need for a Flower Bed?
Common flower beds need 2–3 inches of mulch. Here are worked examples for popular sizes, plus the calculator for your exact dimensions.
Common flower bed sizes — bags needed
| Bed size | Area (sq ft) | Depth | Cu ft | 2 cu ft bags |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small bed (5 × 8 ft) | 40 | 2" | 6.7 | 4 |
| Typical front bed (10 × 6 ft) | 60 | 3" | 15.0 | 8 |
| Garden border (20 × 3 ft) | 60 | 3" | 15.0 | 8 |
| Medium bed (15 × 10 ft) | 150 | 3" | 37.5 | 19 |
| Large bed (20 × 15 ft) | 300 | 3" | 75.0 | 38 |
| Full front yard border (40 × 4 ft) | 160 | 3" | 40.0 | 20 |
Based on 2 cu ft bags. Formula: bags = ⌈(sq ft × depth in ÷ 12) ÷ 2⌉.
How to measure your flower bed
Rectangular beds: measure length and width in feet and enter them in the calculator below.
L-shaped or irregular beds: break the bed into rectangles, calculate each area, and add them up. Enter the total in the square footage calculator.
Curved borders: measure the length along the centre of the border and the average width. This gives a reasonable estimate; add 5–10% for irregular edges.
Calculate for your exact flower bed
Bed Size
How the math works
Step 1 — volume
cubic_feet = length_ft × width_ft × (depth_in ÷ 12) Step 2 — cubic yards
cubic_yards = cubic_feet ÷ 27 There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard (3 × 3 × 3).
Step 3 — bags
bags = ⌈ cubic_feet ÷ bag_size ⌉ Rounded up to whole bags — a 2 cu ft bag covers about 8 sq ft at 3″ deep, 12 sq ft at 2″. A cubic yard ≈ 13.5 of those bags.
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True Temper 6 cu-ft Steel Wheelbarrow (Never-Flat)
Bulk mulch lands in a pile on the driveway — a 6 cu-ft barrow is how you get yards of it to the beds without forty trips. The never-flat tire means it is ready every spring.
Bully Tools 16" Steel Bow Rake (USA)
The flat back of a bow rake levels mulch to the even depth this calculator priced, so you do not run short in one spot or pile it too deep over the roots.
VEVOR 4×100 ft Woven Weed Barrier (5.8 oz)
A woven fabric under the mulch blocks weeds without blocking water. One roll covers a typical bed run before you spread.
Worth Garden No-Dig Steel Edging (6-pack)
Steel edging keeps mulch in the bed and off the lawn, so the depth you calculated stays put instead of washing onto the grass.
HANDLANDY Thorn-Proof Leather Gauntlet Gloves
Handling bark mulch and pulling weeds shreds bare hands; pigskin gauntlets take the splinters and thorns.
Truper 10-Tine Bedding / Mulch Fork
A 10-tine bedding fork moves loose mulch far faster than a shovel — it lifts a big bite and lets the fines fall through.
Dry Top 10×12 ft Poly Tarp
Have bulk mulch dumped on a tarp instead of bare concrete — it keeps the driveway clean and makes dragging the last of it to the bed easy.
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Frequently Asked Questions
At 3 inches deep: 10 × 10 × 3 ÷ 12 = 25 cubic feet ÷ 2 cu ft per bag = 12.5, rounds up to 13 bags of 2 cu ft mulch. At 2 inches, you need only 9 bags.
100 × 0.25 ft = 25 cubic feet ÷ 2 = 12.5 bags, rounded up to 13 bags. One 2 cu ft bag covers 8 sq ft at 3 inches, so 100 ÷ 8 = 12.5 — same answer.
For established perennial beds, 2 inches is often enough and reduces the risk of smothering emerging shoots. For annual beds with more bare soil, 3 inches gives better weed suppression and moisture retention. Three inches is the standard recommendation for new beds.
Shredded hardwood (sometimes called "double-ground") is the most common choice — it interlocks to resist washing, decomposes slowly, and looks tidy. Bark nuggets work in low-traffic areas but can wash in rain. Avoid dyed mulch near edibles and light-colored stone near dark plants where contrast looks harsh.
Not usually. If the old layer is not compacted and you are under 4 inches total, just rake it to fluff and add 1–2 inches on top. If the old mulch has become a dense mat, remove it, compost it, and start fresh.