A mulch calculator tells you exactly how many cubic yards, cubic feet, and bags of mulch you need for any garden bed. Whether your bed is rectangular, circular, or an irregular custom shape, enter the dimensions and desired depth below to get an instant estimate — plus an optional cost breakdown to compare bulk mulch versus bags.
Garden Bed Mulch Estimator
Mulch Volume Breakdown
How to Use the Mulch Calculator
Buying too little mulch means a wasted trip back to the garden center; buying too much means hauling heavy bags back to the store. This mulch calculator takes the guesswork out of every garden project by computing exactly how many cubic yards, cubic feet, and bags of mulch you need based on your bed shape and desired depth.
Step 1: Choose Your Bed Shape
Click one of the three shape buttons — Rectangular, Circular, or Irregular. The input fields update automatically to match your selection. Rectangular is the most common shape for traditional garden borders. Circular beds are popular for specimen trees, shrubs, and decorative plantings. Use the Irregular option for curved borders, kidney-shaped beds, or any area where you already know the total square footage.
Step 2: Enter Your Dimensions
For a rectangular bed, enter the length and width in feet. For a circular bed, enter the full diameter in feet. For an irregular bed, measure the area (you can break an odd shape into simple rectangles, calculate each area, and add them together) and enter the total square footage. All dimensions are in feet for consistency with how mulch is typically sold in the United States.
Step 3: Select the Mulch Depth
Choose from the quick preset buttons — 2 inches, 3 inches, or 4 inches — or select Custom and enter any depth you need. The standard recommendation for most garden beds is 3 inches: enough to suppress weeds and retain soil moisture without smothering plant roots or blocking oxygen. Two inches is suitable for light top-dressing or areas with good existing coverage. Four inches is ideal for high-traffic paths, hot climates, or new beds where aggressive weed suppression is needed.
Step 4: Set the Number of Beds
If all your beds are the same size, enter the count in the "Number of Beds" field. The mulch calculator multiplies the per-bed volume by the total count and displays combined totals across all result fields. This is particularly useful when setting up a series of matching raised beds or uniform border strips around a property.
Step 5: Compare Bag vs. Bulk Cost
Enter your local bulk mulch price (per cubic yard) and bag price (per 2 cubic foot bag) in the optional price fields. The breakdown panel shows you the total cost for each option side by side. For most projects over 3 cubic yards, bulk delivery from a landscape supplier is significantly cheaper than buying individual bags. Use the bag counts shown for smaller projects or when you only need a partial cubic yard.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this mulch calculator free to use?
Yes, this mulch calculator is completely free with no signup required, no paywalls, and no usage limits. All calculations run entirely in your browser — your project details are never sent to a server and stay private on your device.
Is my data private when I use this tool?
Absolutely. Every calculation runs locally in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No measurements, bed counts, or personal information are ever transmitted to a server. Your data stays completely private on your device.
How many cubic yards of mulch do I need for a 10×20 ft bed?
A 10×20 ft garden bed at 3 inches of mulch depth needs 200 square feet × 0.25 ft = 50 cubic feet, which equals about 1.85 cubic yards. At 2 inches deep you need approximately 1.24 cubic yards, and at 4 inches you need about 2.47 cubic yards. The calculator does this math instantly for any dimensions.
What depth of mulch should I apply?
A 2-inch layer is the minimum for weed suppression and moisture retention. Three inches is the most common recommendation for most garden beds — enough to suppress weeds without smothering plant roots. Four inches is ideal for paths, high-traffic areas, and regions with hot summers. Avoid applying more than 4 inches, which can block oxygen from reaching roots.
How many bags of mulch make a cubic yard?
One cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet. A standard 2 cubic foot bag of mulch covers exactly 2 cubic feet, so you need 14 bags (rounding up from 13.5) to fill one cubic yard. A 3 cubic foot bag covers 3 cubic feet, so 9 bags fill one cubic yard. The calculator shows both bag sizes so you can choose based on local availability.
Is it cheaper to buy bulk mulch or bags?
Bulk mulch (purchased by the cubic yard from a landscape supplier) is almost always cheaper for larger projects. Bulk typically costs $25–60 per cubic yard delivered, compared to $5–9 per 2 cubic foot bag (which works out to $67–$121 per cubic yard). For one small bed, bags are convenient. For three or more full-size beds, bulk mulch saves significant money.
How do I calculate mulch for an irregular-shaped bed?
For an irregular bed, measure the approximate total area in square feet — you can do this by breaking the shape into rectangles and triangles, measuring each, then adding the areas together. Enter that total area in the irregular bed option and select your desired depth. The calculator multiplies area by depth to give you the exact volume needed.
How often should I replenish mulch?
Organic mulches like wood chips, bark, and straw decompose over one to three years depending on climate and mulch type. Inspect your beds each spring — if the mulch has compressed to less than 2 inches, add a fresh 1–2 inch top-up layer. You generally do not need to remove old mulch before adding new material, as the decomposed layer enriches the soil underneath.