Potting Soil Calculator
Use this potting soil calculator to estimate how much soil you need for trays, round pots, or tapered flowerpots and to convert the result into bag count and budget.
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Run the calculator.
What This Potting Soil Calculator Helps You Do
This page turns container dimensions into a practical potting mix shopping list, which is more useful than working from nominal pot labels alone.
It also helps you compare bagged mix costs across different units so you can budget a planting project before opening the first bag.
How to Calculate Potting Soil Calculator
- Choose the container shape: Pick rectangular, round, or tapered depending on the pot geometry.
- Enter dimensions and pot count: The result scales linearly with the number of identical containers.
- Convert to bag units: Compare total volume with your bag size so you know how many bags to buy.
- Round up when buying: Potting mix settles, spills, and can vary by fill level, so buy slightly more than the exact calculated volume.
Potting Soil Calculator Formula
| Variable | Meaning | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| L, W, D | Rectangular pot dimensions | cm or in |
| r | Radius of a round pot base | cm or in |
| R and r | Top and bottom radii for a tapered pot | cm or in |
| Bag size | Potting mix volume per bag | L or ft3 |
Use the worked examples below to check how the formula behaves with real values. If the result looks unexpected, verify the unit assumptions and the meaning of each variable before interpreting the answer.
Worked Examples
- Tray size: 24 cm x 18 cm x 10 cm
- Count: 5 trays
Result: Total volume is 21.6 liters.
This matches the straightforward rectangular example highlighted in the Omni reference material.
- Round pots: 10 pots
- Diameter: 12 in
- Soil depth: 10 in
- Bag size: 1.5 ft3
Result: The setup needs about 6.5 ft3, or 5 bags.
Bag estimates should be rounded up so you do not run short while filling containers.
How to Interpret Your Results
| Range | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Exact bag count below 1 | One bag is still required. | You may have material left for top-ups. |
| Bag count close to a whole number | A small top-up margin is still sensible. | Buy the next full bag if pots are not filled identically. |
| Large total volume | Transport and storage become part of the plan. | Check whether bulk mix delivery is cheaper than multiple small bags. |
Frequently Asked Questions
References
Last reviewed: March 2026