A raised bed cost calculator helps you estimate the total materials and expense before starting your garden project. Knowing the lumber, hardware, and soil costs upfront prevents overspending and ensures you buy the right quantities on your first trip to the home improvement store.
Raised Bed Calculator
How to Use the Raised Bed Cost Calculator
Planning a raised garden bed without estimating costs first often leads to overspending or multiple trips to the store. Our free raised bed cost calculator gives you a complete materials list and cost breakdown in seconds -- so you know exactly what to buy and what to budget before you start building.
Step 1: Enter Your Bed Dimensions
Set the length and width in feet and the height in inches. The most popular raised bed size is 4 feet wide by 8 feet long -- wide enough for two-arm reach from either side, and long enough for a productive growing space. Common heights are 12 inches for most gardens or 18-24 inches for accessible beds and root vegetables.
Step 2: Choose Your Material
Select from five common raised bed materials:
- Cedar -- naturally rot-resistant, lasts 10-15 years, the most popular choice at $4/linear foot
- Pine -- the most affordable option at $2/linear foot, but may only last 5-7 years
- Composite -- extremely durable (25+ years) at $6/linear foot, made from recycled materials
- Galvanized Metal -- modern look, very long-lasting at $8/linear foot
- Concrete Block -- permanent, heavy, and priced per block at $2 each
Step 3: Set Number of Beds and Soil Fill
If you are building multiple identical beds, increase the count to see the total project cost. Toggle the soil fill option on to include the cost of filling each bed with garden soil mix. Soil is calculated by volume: cubic feet = length x width x (height / 12), then converted to cubic yards.
Step 4: Review Your Cost Breakdown
The calculator shows material cost, soil cost, hardware cost, and landscape fabric cost separately. You get a per-bed total and a grand total for all beds. The materials list table shows exact quantities -- how many boards, screws, corner brackets, cubic yards of soil, and square feet of landscape fabric you need to purchase.
Understanding the Materials List
The lumber calculation is based on the perimeter of the bed multiplied by the number of board courses needed to reach your desired height. Standard lumber boards are approximately 6 inches tall, so a 12-inch bed needs 2 courses around the perimeter. Hardware includes corner brackets and deck screws to hold the structure together. Landscape fabric covers the bottom of the bed to suppress weeds from below.
Tips for Saving Money
Pine is the cheapest lumber option but consider cedar for longevity -- the higher upfront cost is offset by years of extra service life. Buying soil in bulk (by the cubic yard) is significantly cheaper than bagged soil for two or more beds. If building multiple beds, look for volume discounts on lumber at your local yard. Concrete blocks are the cheapest per-bed option for permanent installations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this raised bed cost calculator free?
Yes, the raised bed cost calculator is completely free with no limits. Calculate materials and costs for as many beds as you like. No signup or account required, and all calculations run locally in your browser.
Is my data private when I use this tool?
Absolutely. Every calculation runs locally in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No dimensions, material choices, or personal information are ever sent to a server. Your data stays completely private on your device.
How much does it cost to build a 4x8 raised bed?
A standard 4x8 foot raised bed that is 12 inches tall costs roughly $80-$150 for cedar lumber, $40-$80 for pine, or $140-$200 for composite. Add $40-$60 for soil fill and $15-$25 for hardware. The total varies by material choice and your local lumber prices.
What is the best material for a raised bed?
Cedar is the most popular choice for raised beds because it naturally resists rot and insects without chemical treatment, lasting 10-15 years. Pine is the most affordable but may only last 5-7 years. Composite lumber lasts 25+ years but costs significantly more. Galvanized metal is durable and modern-looking.
How much soil do I need to fill a raised bed?
Multiply length times width times height (in feet) to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. A 4x8 foot bed at 12 inches deep needs 32 cubic feet or about 1.19 cubic yards of soil mix. Most gardeners use a blend of topsoil, compost, and perlite for best drainage and nutrition.
What height should a raised bed be?
The most common height is 12 inches (one foot), which suits most vegetables and flowers. For deep-rooted crops like carrots or potatoes, 18-24 inches is better. If accessibility is a concern, beds 24-36 inches tall reduce bending. Taller beds require more lumber and soil, increasing the overall cost.
Do I need landscape fabric under a raised bed?
Landscape fabric on the bottom of a raised bed prevents weeds from growing up through the soil and stops burrowing pests. It costs about $0.50 per square foot and is recommended for beds placed on grass or weedy ground. Skip it if your bed sits on concrete, gravel, or already-cleared soil.
How accurate is this cost estimate?
This calculator provides a reliable ballpark estimate based on average national lumber and soil prices. Actual costs vary by region, season, and supplier. Material prices can fluctuate significantly, so use this estimate as a starting point and confirm current prices at your local home improvement store.