Potting Soil Calculator

Calculate potting soil volume for containers, raised beds, and planters. Covers standard pots, grow bags, window boxes, and custom shapes.

About the Potting Soil Calculator

Filling containers and raised beds with the right amount of potting mix avoids wasteful overbuying and frustrating mid-project shortages. A large patio planter might need 3 cubic feet of mix, while a 4x8-foot raised bed requires nearly 32 cubic feet — well over a dozen bags. Getting the math wrong means either hauling heavy bags back to the store or running out with half the bed empty.

Container soil calculations involve simple volume geometry — cylinders for round pots, rectangular prisms for raised beds — but the real-world complications trip people up. Tapered pots hold far less than straight-sided ones. Raised beds don't need to be filled entirely with premium potting mix — the bottom third can be filled with cheaper bulk material. And bagged potting soil is sold in confusingly varied units: quarts, cubic feet, liters, and bag sizes that rarely state actual volume.

This calculator handles all common container shapes and raised bed sizes, converts between all volume units, and computes the number of bags needed in any standard size. It also calculates Mel's Mix (1:1:1 compost, peat, vermiculite) or custom blends, estimating the amount of each component. Whether you're filling one patio pot or ten raised beds, accurate volume calculation prevents waste and keeps your budget on track.

Why Use This Potting Soil Calculator?

Potting soil is expensive — $5-15 per bag — and heavy to transport. Calculating the exact volume prevents waste and ensures you buy everything in one trip. This calculator handles the geometry so you can focus on planting. This potting soil calculator helps you compare outcomes quickly and reduce avoidable mistakes when making day-to-day care decisions. Use the estimate as a planning baseline and confirm final decisions with a qualified professional when risk is high.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select the container type (round pot, rectangular, grow bag, or custom)
  2. Enter the container dimensions — diameter × height for round, L × W × H for rectangular
  3. For tapered pots, enter both top and bottom diameters
  4. Choose the fill level (full, 90%, 75%, or custom)
  5. Select your soil mix type (pure potting mix or custom blend)
  6. View the total volume and number of bags needed
  7. Add multiple containers to compute a combined total

Formula

Round pot: V = π × (D/2)² × H. Tapered pot: V = π × H/3 × (r₁² + r₁r₂ + r₂²). Rectangular: V = L × W × H. Bags needed = Total volume / Bag size. Mel's Mix: ⅓ compost + ⅓ peat moss + ⅓ vermiculite by volume.

Example Calculation

Result: 8.0 cubic feet (14 bags of 8-qt potting mix)

A 4ft × 2ft × 1ft raised bed holds 48 × 24 × 12 = 13,824 in³ = 8.0 ft³. At 8 quarts per bag (~0.57 ft³), you need 14 bags to fill completely.

Tips & Best Practices

Mel's Mix — The Square Foot Gardening Standard

The most popular raised bed soil recipe is Mel's Mix, developed by Mel Bartholomew for square foot gardening: equal parts by volume of blended compost (from multiple sources), coarse vermiculite, and peat moss (or coconut coir). This creates a lightweight, nutrient-rich, well-draining growing medium. For a standard 4×4×0.5-foot square foot garden, you need about 8 ft³ total — approximately 2.7 ft³ of each component. Compost provides nutrients, vermiculite retains moisture while maintaining aeration, and peat moss adds organic matter and slight acidity.

Container Size Guide

Understanding container volumes helps with shopping: **6-inch pot** ≈ 1.5 quarts. **8-inch pot** ≈ 3 quarts. **10-inch pot** ≈ 6 quarts. **12-inch pot** ≈ 10-12 quarts. **14-inch pot** ≈ 15-18 quarts. **5-gallon bucket** ≈ 14-17 quarts. **Half whiskey barrel** ≈ 12-15 gallons ≈ 1.6-2 ft³. **Standard window box (24")** ≈ 5-8 quarts. These are approximate because pot shapes vary from shallow and wide to tall and narrow.

Soil Mix Recipes for Different Plants

Not all plants want the same mix. **Succulents and cacti**: 50% standard potting mix + 50% coarse sand or perlite for fast drainage. **African violets**: 50% peat + 25% perlite + 25% vermiculite. **Orchids**: bark chips + perlite + charcoal (no peat). **Seedlings**: fine-textured sowing mix with sphagnum peat, vermiculite, and perlite (no bark). **Acid-loving plants** (blueberries, azaleas): incorporate 30-50% peat moss with sulfur. Matching the mix to the plant promotes healthy root growth and appropriate moisture retention.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much potting soil do I need for a 5-gallon pot?

A standard 5-gallon nursery pot (roughly 12" top diameter × 11" high, tapered) holds approximately 0.5-0.6 cubic feet of soil, or about 14-17 quarts. One 16-qt bag will fill one 5-gallon pot with a little left over.

What's the difference between potting soil and garden soil?

Potting soil is a soilless mix of peat, perlite, and vermiculite designed for containers with excellent drainage and aeration. Garden soil is heavier and denser — never use it in pots because it compacts, drowning roots. Use garden/topsoil blend for raised beds that sit on the ground.

Should I fill my entire raised bed with potting mix?

No. For beds deeper than 12 inches, fill the bottom portion with coarse material (wood chips, leaves, straw) and top with 10-12 inches of quality growing mix. This saves money and actually improves drainage. This is the core of "hügelkultur" and "lasagna gardening" techniques.

How do I convert between quarts and cubic feet?

1 cubic foot = 29.922 dry quarts ≈ 30 quarts. So an 8-qt bag is about 0.27 ft³, a 16-qt bag is about 0.53 ft³, and a 1.5 ft³ bag holds about 45 quarts.

How much does potting soil weigh?

Dry potting mix averages 10-15 lbs per cubic foot. When watered, it's 25-40 lbs/ft³. A 4×8×1 raised bed at 8 ft³ will weigh roughly 100-120 lbs dry or 200-320 lbs when wet — important for balcony gardens.

Does potting soil settle?

Yes. Fresh potting mix can settle 10-15% after the first few watering cycles. Filling containers to the rim and topping off after a week is standard practice.

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