
Best Mulch for Vegetables: 2026 Picks
A direct pick of the right material for your project, with three sensible alternates and what each one costs delivered.
Our top pick: Hardwood Mulch
For planting bed gravel projects, Hardwood Mulch is the material we ship most often. The settles 30-50% per season behavior and holds moisture drainage profile are what most crews are after on this job. Delivered pricing lands at $35-$65/yard on full-truck orders across our service area.
Why Hardwood Mulch fits planting bed gravel
Hardwood Mulch sits in the sweet spot for planting bed gravel. Crews like it because it is widely stocked at quarries, the price is predictable, and you can get a tandem-load delivered same day in most metros. Spec it at the depth your local code or contractor recommends, and plan a thin re-dressing every couple of years.
Worth considering: Premium Screened Topsoil, Hardwood Mulch, and Garden Soil
Each of these is a sensible alternative when budget, drainage, or aesthetics push you off the main pick. Premium Screened Topsoil lands at $30-$60/yard with slow (holds water) drainage and a dark brown, loamy look. Hardwood Mulch lands at $35-$65/yard with holds moisture drainage and a natural shredded hardwood look. Garden Soil lands at $40-$75/yard with slow (holds water) drainage and a dark brown, loamy look.
How much to order
A typical residential planting bed gravel project runs 4 to 12 yards of Hardwood Mulch. Use the calculator on the site to plug in your dimensions, then pad the order 10 percent for waste and edges. Full-truck delivery (16+ yards) is the cheapest route on a per-yard basis, with 15 to 20 percent savings over partial loads.
Top picks side by side
| Material | Spec | Fit & price |
|---|---|---|
| Hardwood Mulch (our pick) | Size n/a · Natural shredded hardwood | Best for planting bed gravel and weed barrier gravel · $35-$65/yard |
| Premium Screened Topsoil | Size screened" · dark brown, loamy | Best for planting bed gravel and erosion control · $30-$60/yard |
| Hardwood Mulch | Size n/a · Natural shredded hardwood | Best for planting bed gravel and weed barrier gravel · $35-$65/yard |
| Garden Soil | Size n/a · dark brown, loamy | Best for this job · $40-$75/yard |
Verdict
For planting bed gravel projects, the answer is Hardwood Mulch. It is the material we move the most of, the price is sensible, and every quarry in our network keeps it in stock.
Plan with a calculator
Related guides
GUIDEHow Deep Should a Gravel Driveway Be? Layer GuidePractical, field-tested guide: how deep should gravel driveway be. Pulled from real US installer notes and 2026 supplier price data.Read guide →
GUIDEWhat Is #57 Stone? Uses, Size, and Cost ExplainedPractical, field-tested guide: what is 57 stone. Pulled from real US installer notes and 2026 supplier price data.Read guide →
GUIDEHow Much Gravel Do I Need? Quick Sizing GuidePractical, field-tested guide: how much gravel do i need. Pulled from real US installer notes and 2026 supplier price data.Read guide →
GUIDEDoes Gravel Stop Weeds? Honest Answer + What WorksPractical, field-tested guide: does gravel stop weeds. Pulled from real US installer notes and 2026 supplier price data.Read guide →Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Hardwood Mulch the best for this project?
Hardwood mulch (not dyed) feeds vegetable beds as it breaks down. Top up annually to keep weeds out.
Are there cheaper alternatives?
Yes - but the cost difference is usually $1-5 per ton, while the wrong material can double your install time. Pick Hardwood Mulch unless your local quarry doesn't carry it.
How much do I need?
Depends on area and depth. A typical residential project needs 2-6 tons. Use the linked calculator for exact tonnage.
Can I install it myself?
Yes - most homeowners spread Hardwood Mulch with a wheelbarrow, rake, and plate compactor over a weekend.
How long does it last?
Properly installed, 10+ years before any top-up is needed. UV doesn't break down rock.
Where do I buy it?
Order from us - bulk delivery same-day in most metros. Or buy bagged at home centers for small jobs.