Raised Bed Depth for Tomatoes
Tomatoes are heavy feeders with extensive root systems. While they can survive in 12 inches of soil, they truly thrive with 18–24 inches of rich, well-draining growing medium. Deeper soil allows roots to access more water and nutrients during hot weather, leading to better fruit set and fewer blossom-end rot issues. Use the calculator above with 18 or 24 inches as your depth to see your soil requirements.
How to Use This Calculator
Select your bed shape (Rectangle, Square, or Circle), choose your unit of measurement, then enter your dimensions. For rectangular and square beds, enter length, width, and depth. For circular beds, enter the diameter and depth. Click Calculate Soil Needed to see your results instantly in cubic feet, cubic yards, liters, and gallons — plus bag counts for all four standard bag sizes.
Understanding Your Results
Cubic feet is the unit printed on most bagged soil at garden centers. Use this number to count bags. Cubic yards is the unit used by landscape bulk suppliers — divide cubic feet by 27 to get cubic yards. Liters is the metric equivalent (1 cu ft = 28.32 liters). Gallons is helpful for smaller container calculations (1 cu ft = 7.48 gallons).
Soil Mix Recommendation
The best all-purpose raised bed mix is 60% quality topsoil, 30% compost, and 10% perlite or coarse sand. This blend drains well, retains moisture, and provides the nutrients plants need. Avoid filling raised beds with pure topsoil — it compacts and restricts root growth. Always include at least 25–30% organic matter.