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Mulch & Gravel Calculator

DIY Material

Calculate cubic yards or bags of mulch, gravel, topsoil, or sand needed for any landscaping project.

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ft
in

Recommended: 2–3 inches to suppress weeds

cu ft

Check your bag label — most bagged mulch is 2 cu ft per bag

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Total Volume Needed— —
Bags Required (2 cu ft)— —
Material Est. Cost— —
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Pro Tip: Buy 1–2 extra bags for annual touch-ups in high-washout areas near downspouts.
Note: Estimates account for standard waste factor. Organic materials settle 5–15% after installation; non-flat terrain may require additional ordering.

Buying & Material Selection Guide

For home landscaping, matching your organic mulch or mineral gravel to your design goals is crucial. Double-shredded hardwood mulch locks together well on slopes, while pine bark nuggets last longer but tend to float away in heavy rain. An optimal mulch layer depth is 2 to 3 inches for effective weed suppression and soil moisture retention. If you're selecting stones, pea gravel is standard at a 3/8 inch size, providing a clean texture for walkways, patios, and planter beds. If you are restoring nearby turf, check our guide on lawn sodding and reseeding.

Lush planter beds containing dark shredded wood mulch and light gravel path
Winding garden bed containing clean soil with weed barrier landscape fabric laid down

Site Prep & Pro Installation Practices

Proper bed preparation prevents weeds and soil compaction. Remove all existing weeds, roots, and debris, then grade the soil to prevent standing water. Lay a commercial-grade, non-woven landscape fabric (typically weighing 3 to 4 oz/sq yd) under gravel to separate the stones from the dirt. For walks or parking areas near concrete or asphalt, refer to our driveway sealing cost guideto protect the surrounding layout. When spreading organic mulch, always leave a 2-inch gap around tree trunks and shrub bases; piling mulch directly against bark (known as 'mulch volcanoes') traps moisture and invites rot, fungi, and insect infestations.

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Regulatory Building Standards — NFPA 1 Section 17.1

Cited Standard

Dry organic mulches, such as shredded pine bark, wood chips, and straw, represent significant ignition hazards when placed close to building foundations. Under fire prevention regulations established by NFPA 1 Section 17.1, home builders and landscape designers must maintain a non-combustible safety barrier of at least 18 inches between organic mulch and combustible exterior building materials. Embers from wildfires or discarded smoking materials can easily ignite dry mulch, where the fire can smolder unnoticed before spreading to wood siding or deck structures.

To address this safety concern while maintaining a clean look, designers fill the 18-inch perimeter buffer with non-combustible aggregate materials like river rocks, pea gravel, or volcanic stone. Organic mulches are kept outside this zone. Additionally, when applying organic mulch in planting beds, gardeners should avoid piling it directly against the stems or trunks of plants. This practice—often termed "mulch volcanism"—traps moisture, cuts off oxygen to the root flare, and creates a damp environment that invites fungal rot and wood-boring pests.

Source: National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) - Wildfire MitigationView full standard →
  • Maintain a minimum 18-inch non-combustible buffer from combustible siding.
  • Use non-combustible materials like river rock or gravel within the safety buffer.
  • Avoid organic mulches like wood chips or straw in the immediate foundation zone.
  • Keep organic mulch at least 2 inches away from plant stems and tree trunks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Technical building code (IRC/ASTM) references and trade-tested guidance for your project.

A depth of 2 to 3 inches is ideal. Laying mulch thinner than 2 inches allows sunlight to penetrate the soil, germinating weed seeds. Laying it thicker than 3 inches can suffocate plant roots, restrict soil oxygen levels, and block rain from soaking down to the root zones.

Verified SourceUSDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)Audit LinkConsulted: 2026-07-01

Bulk mulch is sold by the cubic yard (27 cubic feet) and is much cheaper for large areas, but requires transport or delivery. Bagged mulch (usually 2 cubic feet) is cleaner, easier to place exactly where needed without wheelbarrows, and perfect for minor touchups or small flower beds.

Verified SourceLSU AgCenter Gardening PublicationsAudit LinkConsulted: 2026-07-01

Non-woven landscape fabric blocks weeds growing from the soil. However, as wood mulch decomposes on top of the fabric over a couple of seasons, it creates organic soil. Weed seeds blown in by wind or birds will sprout on top of the fabric, meaning some light weeding is always required.

Verified SourceVirginia Cooperative Extension - Landscape FabricsAudit LinkConsulted: 2026-07-01

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