Mulch Calculator: how much mulch do you need?
Enter your bed dimensions and depth to get instant cubic yards, bags, weight and total cost — for any shape, in US, Canadian, UK, Australian or NZ units.
Estimates use standard landscaping conversions (27 cubic feet per cubic yard) and typical 2026 prices and material weights. Actual prices, bag sizes and moisture-dependent weights vary by supplier and region — confirm quantities with your mulch yard before ordering. See the formulas →
Quick answer
To cover 500 square feet with a 3-inch layer of mulch, you need about 4.6 cubic yards (125 cubic feet) — roughly 63 bags of 2 cubic feet. Add 5–10% extra for settling and uneven ground. One cubic yard covers about 108 sq ft at 3 inches deep.
Featured answer
What is a mulch calculator?
A mulch calculator is a free tool that works out how much mulch you need for a garden bed. You enter the area and depth, and it instantly returns the volume in cubic yards and cubic feet, the number of bags required, the estimated weight, and the total cost — so you order the right amount instead of guessing.
Show your working
Mulch formulas & how the math works
Every number above comes from these conversions. Area is found from the shape, multiplied by depth to get volume, then converted to the units you buy in.
Worked example — a 25 ft × 20 ft bed, 3 inches deep
- Area: 25 ft × 20 ft = 500 sq ft
- Depth in feet: 3 in ÷ 12 = 0.25 ft
- Volume: 500 × 0.25 = 125 cubic feet
- Cubic yards: 125 ÷ 27 = 4.63 cu yd
- Bags (2 cu ft): 125 ÷ 2 = 62.5 → round up to 63 bags
- Weight (hardwood ≈ 600 lb/yd³): 4.63 × 600 ≈ 2,780 lb
Order ≈ 4.6 cubic yards (or 63 bags) — add 10% for settling → about 5 yd³ / 69 bags.
Reference charts
Mulch depth, coverage, bag, weight & cost charts
Quick lookups for the five numbers people search for most. All conversions assume the standard 27 cubic feet per cubic yard.
| Where you're mulching | Recommended depth | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Flower & perennial beds | 2–3 in (5–7.5 cm) | Keep light around tender stems |
| Shrub & foundation beds | 3 in (7.5 cm) | Best all-round depth |
| Tree rings (donut, gap at trunk) | 2–4 in (5–10 cm) | Never pile against the trunk |
| New beds / bare soil / weed control | 3–4 in (7.5–10 cm) | Thicker layer blocks weed light |
| Vegetable gardens | 1–2 in (2.5–5 cm) | Use straw or wood chips; replenish |
| Pathways (foot traffic) | 4 in (10 cm) | Compresses; top up yearly |
| Playground (safety surface) | 9–12 in (23–30 cm) | Depends on fall height (ASTM F1292) |
| Depth | Coverage per cubic yard | Coverage per 2 cu ft bag |
|---|---|---|
| 1 inch | 324 sq ft | 24 sq ft |
| 2 inches | 162 sq ft | 12 sq ft |
| 3 inches | 108 sq ft | 8 sq ft |
| 4 inches | 81 sq ft | 6 sq ft |
| 6 inches | 54 sq ft | 4 sq ft |
| Bag size | Bags per cubic yard | Rounded up |
|---|---|---|
| 1 cu ft | 27.0 | 27 bags |
| 1.5 cu ft | 18.0 | 18 bags |
| 2 cu ft | 13.5 | 14 bags |
| 2.5 cu ft | 10.8 | 11 bags |
| 3 cu ft | 9.0 | 9 bags |
| Mulch type | lb / cubic yard (dry) | kg / cubic yard | ≈ lb per 2 cu ft bag |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pine bark | 400–550 | 180–250 | 30–41 |
| Cedar | 375–600 | 170–270 | 28–44 |
| Dyed mulch | 350–550 | 160–250 | 26–41 |
| Hardwood | 500–700 | 225–320 | 37–52 |
| Cypress | 500–650 | 225–295 | 37–48 |
| Compost | 600–1,000 | 270–450 | 44–74 |
| Rubber | 800–1,200 | 360–540 | 59–89 |
Wet organic mulch weighs roughly 20–50% more than dry. Rubber mulch is the exception — its weight stays the same wet or dry.
| Mulch type | Bulk ($/cubic yard) | Bagged ($/2 cu ft bag) |
|---|---|---|
| Hardwood | $30–$45 | $3–$6 |
| Pine bark | $30–$50 | $3–$6 |
| Dyed mulch | $35–$50 | $3.50–$6.50 |
| Cedar | $40–$60 | $4–$7 |
| Cypress | $40–$60 | $4–$7 |
| Compost | $30–$50 | $4–$7 |
| Rubber | $80–$120 | $8–$13 |
Delivery typically adds $50–$210 and is often free on orders of 5–10+ cubic yards. Full installation (material + delivery + labour) runs about $70–$150 per cubic yard.
The complete guide
How to measure, buy and spread mulch the right way
Written by the MulchMate team · Reviewed for accuracy against 2026 supplier pricing and horticultural guidance · Last updated 29 June 2026
Mulch is one of the cheapest, highest-return things you can do for a garden, but it is also where people most often over-order, under-order, or quietly harm their plants. The calculator above gives you the numbers in seconds. This guide explains what sits behind those numbers — how much to buy, what each type costs and weighs, how deep to spread it, and the handful of mistakes that turn a good mulch job into an expensive one. Everything here lines up with the figures the calculator uses, so you can plan a project end to end on this one page.
What mulch actually is
Mulch is any layer of material spread over the soil surface around plants. It is not dug in — it sits on top, where it acts like a protective skin over the ground. That simple layer does a surprising amount of work: it shades the soil so it stays cooler and holds moisture longer, it blocks sunlight from reaching weed seeds so far fewer of them germinate, and it cushions the soil against the pounding of heavy rain and the baking of direct sun.
Most mulch falls into two broad families. Organic mulches are made from things that were once alive — shredded bark, wood chips, pine needles, straw, leaves and compost. They break down over time and feed the soil as they do. Inorganic mulches — rubber, stone, gravel and landscape fabric — do not break down and never feed the soil, but they last for years with almost no upkeep. Which one suits you depends on whether you want the soil-building benefits of organic matter or the long, low-maintenance life of an inorganic surface.
Why mulch matters: the real benefits
The headline reason most people mulch is weed control, and it works. A layer roughly three inches deep blocks most of the light weed seeds need to sprout, so you spend far less of your summer pulling them. The weeds that do appear come up easily because they are rooted in loose mulch rather than packed soil.
The second benefit is water. Bare soil loses moisture quickly to evaporation, especially in summer. A mulched bed can hold that water far longer, which means less frequent watering and steadier growth — a genuine saving in hot, dry regions where irrigation is expensive. Mulch also moderates soil temperature, keeping roots cooler in summer and insulating them against cold snaps in winter, which reduces the freeze-and-thaw cycle that heaves shallow-rooted plants out of the ground.
Organic mulch adds one more benefit the inorganic types cannot match: as it decomposes, it slowly turns into the kind of rich, crumbly organic matter that improves soil structure and feeds the microbes and earthworms that keep soil healthy. In other words, organic mulch is quietly building better soil every season it sits there. Add the finishing touch — a tidy, uniform bed of fresh mulch instantly makes a landscape look maintained — and it is easy to see why it is the first job most gardeners tackle each spring.
Organic vs inorganic mulch: how to choose
Among organic mulches, the most common choices are shredded hardwood, cedar, pine bark, cypress and dyed mulch. Shredded hardwood is the workhorse: affordable, widely available, and it knits together well so it stays put on slopes. The trade-off is that it breaks down in one to two years and needs topping up. Cedar and cypress cost more but last two to three years and naturally resist insects, so over a five-year window they can actually work out cheaper because you replace them half as often. Pine bark is light and attractive but washes away more easily on slopes. Dyed mulch gives you a crisp black or red colour that lasts longer in mild climates, at a few dollars more per yard for the colouring step.
Compost sits at the border between mulch and soil amendment — it is heavy, rich and excellent for feeding beds, but it breaks down fastest of all. On the inorganic side, rubber mulch (made from recycled tyres) is durable, does not float away, and cushions falls, which makes it popular for playgrounds; its downsides are a high upfront cost and the fact that it never improves the soil, so it is a poor choice for vegetable beds. Stone and gravel last effectively forever but offer no soil benefit and can bake plant roots in hot climates.
Quick rule of thumb: use organic mulch (hardwood, cedar, pine bark) in any bed where you want healthier soil over time, and reserve inorganic mulch (rubber, stone) for high-traffic areas, playgrounds and permanent low-maintenance zones. Skip dyed and rubber mulch around vegetables you plan to eat.
How to calculate how much mulch you need
The whole calculation comes down to one idea: volume. You need to know how much three-dimensional space your mulch layer will fill, and mulch is sold by volume — in bags measured in cubic feet, or in bulk measured in cubic yards. Here is the process the calculator runs for you.
- Measure the area. For a rectangle, multiply length by width. For a circle, use π × radius². For a triangle, use half of base × height. Irregular beds are easiest to handle by breaking them into rectangles and circles, working out each piece, and adding them together.
- Choose a depth and convert it to feet. Most beds want two to four inches. Because area is in feet, the depth has to be in feet too — so divide the inches by 12. Three inches becomes 0.25 feet.
- Multiply area by depth to get cubic feet. A 500-square-foot bed at 0.25 feet deep is 125 cubic feet.
- Convert to the unit you buy in. Divide cubic feet by 27 to get cubic yards (125 ÷ 27 ≈ 4.6 cubic yards), or divide by the bag size to get the number of bags (125 ÷ 2 ≈ 63 bags of two cubic feet).
- Add a buffer. Add five to ten percent for settling, uneven ground and the edges of beds, so you are not left a couple of bags short on the last stretch.
That is the entire method. The reason a calculator helps is not that the math is hard — it is that the unit conversions (inches to feet, cubic feet to cubic yards, cubic feet to bags) are exactly where mistakes creep in, and a single slip can leave you with a pile twice the size you needed sitting in the driveway.
How far mulch goes: coverage and bag math
The single most useful fact in mulching is this: one cubic yard of mulch covers about 108 square feet at three inches deep. That number changes with depth, because the deeper you spread, the less ground a fixed volume covers. At one inch a cubic yard stretches to 324 square feet; at two inches, 162; at three inches, 108; and at four inches, just 81. The pattern is simple — coverage equals 324 divided by the depth in inches — and the coverage chart above lays out the common depths.
Bags work the same way. Because a cubic yard is 27 cubic feet, it takes 13.5 bags of two cubic feet, 18 bags of 1.5 cubic feet, or 27 bags of one cubic foot to equal a single yard. A two-cubic-foot bag — the most common size — covers roughly eight square feet at three inches deep. Knowing this lets you sanity-check any quote in your head: if a supplier says you need a yard for a small tree ring, you know something is off, because a yard would bury it.
The shortcut landscapers use: length × width × depth-in-inches ÷ 324 = cubic yards. The 324 already folds in both the conversion to feet and the divide-by-27, so you skip two steps. A 25 × 20 bed at 3 inches is 25 × 20 × 3 ÷ 324 ≈ 4.6 cubic yards — the same answer, faster.
What mulch costs in 2026
Mulch pricing splits cleanly into two ways of buying. Bagged mulch from a home-improvement store runs about three to eight dollars for a two-cubic-foot bag, with most standard types landing between three and six dollars. That is convenient for small jobs, but it adds up fast: because it takes 13.5 bags to make a cubic yard, bagged mulch works out to roughly 40 to 80 dollars per yard-equivalent before you have factored in your own time loading and cutting open every bag.
Bulk mulch from a landscape supply yard is cheaper per unit. Standard hardwood runs about 30 to 45 dollars a cubic yard, pine bark 30 to 50, dyed mulch 35 to 50, and premium cedar or cypress 40 to 60. Rubber mulch is the outlier at 80 to 120 dollars a yard. On top of the material, bulk delivery typically costs 50 to 210 dollars depending on distance, though many yards waive it entirely once you order five to ten yards or more. If you would rather not touch a shovel, full installation — material, delivery and labour combined — generally runs 70 to 150 dollars a cubic yard.
The practical takeaway is a clear break-even point. For anything under about one cubic yard (roughly 13 bags), bags usually win on convenience and total cost. Once a project passes two cubic yards, bulk is typically 15 to 35 percent cheaper per yard even after the delivery fee — and the gap only widens as the job gets bigger. The cost chart above breaks the numbers down by type.
Common mulching mistakes to avoid
The most damaging mistake by far is volcano mulching — piling mulch in a tall cone against a tree trunk. It looks tidy, but it traps moisture against the bark, invites fungal disease and rot, encourages roots to grow up into the mulch and strangle the tree, and over a few years can quietly kill an established specimen. Mulch should be spread in a flat, wide "donut," never a volcano, with a clear three-to-six-inch gap of bare soil around the trunk so the base can breathe.
The second mistake is going too deep. More mulch is not better. Beyond about four inches, mulch starts to suffocate roots, repels light rain before it can soak in, and creates a damp, airless zone where stems rot. Two to four inches is the right range for almost every bed; reserve deeper layers for playground safety surfaces, which follow their own safety standards. The flip side — too thin — is just as common: a layer under two inches lets enough light through that weeds push straight up and the moisture benefit largely disappears.
Other frequent slips include mulching right up against plant stems (leave a small gap there too), laying fresh mulch over a thick, matted old layer instead of loosening it first, and using fine wood mulch around vegetables without compensating for the small amount of nitrogen it can temporarily pull from the soil as it breaks down. None of these are hard to avoid once you know about them.
Pro landscaping tips
A few habits separate a professional-looking bed from an amateur one. First, edge before you mulch. A clean, slightly recessed edge between lawn and bed gives the mulch a crisp border and stops it spilling onto the grass. Second, weed and water first. Pull existing weeds and, if the soil is dry, give the bed a good soak before spreading — mulch will hold that moisture in rather than keep new rain out. Third, rake to a uniform depth rather than dumping and leaving piles; an even layer both looks better and performs better.
For colour and longevity, choose the right material for the job: cedar or coarse bark on slopes and paths where it needs to knit together and resist washing, finer mulch in flat ornamental beds. If you want the deep black or red look, buy quality dyed mulch — the cheap stuff fades grey within a season. And when you order, round your bulk quantity up to the nearest half-yard rather than ordering bag by bag; the small surplus is cheap insurance against running short halfway through.
When to mulch: seasonal timing
The classic time to mulch is mid-to-late spring, once the soil has warmed and you have cleared winter debris. Mulching too early, while the ground is still cold, can keep the soil from warming up and slow your plants down. Spring mulch sets beds up for the growing season by locking in moisture just as the weather turns dry. This is also the busiest buying season, so supply yards have the best selection — and the highest demand.
A lighter autumn application is worth considering in cold climates: a fresh layer going into winter insulates roots against hard freezes and reduces the frost-heave that lifts shallow-rooted perennials out of the ground. On the buying side, the cheapest time to order is actually the off-season. Many yards run discounts of ten to twenty percent for orders placed in January and February, and some clear stock at the end of the season — so if you can store it or plan ahead, booking early can shave a real amount off the bill.
Buying and delivery guide
Once you know your volume, the buy-versus-deliver decision is mostly about scale. Bags make sense when you need under a yard, when you have no way to handle a loose pile, or when you are topping up a small area. The premium you pay per yard is offset by being able to buy exactly what you need and carry it in a normal car.
Bulk delivery is the value option for anything larger. A standard pickup truck can carry one to three cubic yards depending on the mulch's weight, so for a yard or two you can collect it yourself and skip the delivery fee. Beyond that, delivery is usually worth it — and remember the free-delivery threshold. If a yard delivers free at five yards and you need four and a half, ordering the extra half-yard is essentially free mulch that saves you the entire delivery charge. Most suppliers also set a minimum order (often three to five yards) for delivery, so very small bulk orders can carry a small-load surcharge that erodes the saving.
Before you haul it yourself: a cubic yard of dry wood mulch weighs roughly 400 to 800 pounds, and wet mulch can top 1,000. That is within a full-size pickup's limit when dry, but check the payload sticker inside your driver's door before loading — especially after rain, when even one yard can push a half-ton truck to its limit.
Maintenance and replacement
Organic mulch is not a one-time job — it breaks down, which is part of its value but means it needs refreshing. Most organic mulches want topping up every one to two years, or whenever the layer thins below about an inch or turns grey and matted. Cedar and cypress stretch that to two or three years; rubber and stone effectively never need replacing.
The good news is that "refreshing" rarely means starting over. If the existing layer is under two inches and is not mouldy or matted, you simply rake it to loosen and fluff the surface, remove any slimy or compacted patches, and spread a thin one-to-two-inch top-up to bring it back to your target depth. Because you are only adding the difference, a top-up uses far less material — and money — than a full replacement. Plan for organic mulch to settle ten to fifteen percent in its first year, which is exactly why that small waste buffer at the ordering stage keeps your finished depth on target. Keep an eye out for the warning signs that it is time for fresh mulch: a faded grey colour, a crust that sheds water instead of absorbing it, or weeds beginning to find their way through. Address those and a well-mulched bed will look sharp and do its job year after year.
Questions & answers
Mulch calculator FAQ
The 30 questions people ask most about measuring, buying and spreading mulch.