What you put in a raised garden bed matters more than almost any other gardening decision. The soil is the entire growing environment — get this right and your beds will be productive for years. Get it wrong and you'll fight compaction, poor drainage, and nutrient deficiencies every season.
Here's the definitive guide to the best raised garden bed soil mix, with specific recommendations for Pacific Northwest gardens.
Why Raised Bed Soil Is Different
Raised beds don't connect to native soil the way in-ground gardens do. There's no ongoing exchange of minerals, no deep root zone, no natural water table interaction. This means:
- Drainage can be excellent or terrible depending entirely on what you put in
- Nutrient management is entirely in your hands
- Compaction can become a serious problem if you use heavy soils in small beds
- The initial fill choice determines years of growing success or struggle
The Classic Recipe: Mel's Mix
The gold standard for raised bed soil (from the "Square Foot Gardening" method):
- 1/3 vermiculite — drainage and aeration
- 1/3 peat moss or coconut coir — moisture retention
- 1/3 compost — nutrients and biology
This works exceptionally well for small beds (1-2 cubic yards). For larger volumes, it's cost-prohibitive. The bulk alternative below delivers similar results at fraction of the cost.
The Bulk Delivery Alternative: 3-Way Mix
For large raised beds, a bulk-delivered blend of screened topsoil, compost, and coarse sand is the most practical solution:
- 50-60% screened topsoil — provides structure and mineral content
- 30-40% compost — nutrients, biology, drainage improvement
- 10-20% coarse sand or perlite — improves drainage in wet climates
Harbor Soils' 3-Way Topsoil Mix is engineered for exactly this application — one delivery, ready to fill your beds directly.
Pacific Northwest–Specific Considerations
Drainage First
In our wet climate, too-heavy soil in raised beds is a worse problem than too-light soil. A mix that holds moisture in an Iowa summer is waterlogged in a Kitsap County spring. Prioritize drainage:
- Never use straight topsoil in raised beds
- Never use native clay soil even as part of the mix
- Ensure the bed frame has drainage holes or gaps at the base
- In very wet spots, consider raising the bed on legs or adding a coarse gravel base layer beneath the soil
The pH Factor
Western Washington soils tend to be acidic (pH 5.5-6.0). Most vegetables prefer 6.0-7.0. Our rainfall leaches calcium and magnesium from soil over time. Specific recommendations:
- Test your raised bed soil pH after first season
- Add dolomite lime if pH is below 6.0 (common for beds filled with compost-heavy mixes)
- Blueberries and rhododendrons are exceptions — they love our naturally acidic conditions
The Weed Seed Problem
Low-quality bulk topsoil can contain weed seeds. When ordering from Harbor Soils, ask about our screening process. Our screened topsoil minimizes weed seed content. Compost that hasn't been hot-composted can also contain seeds — another reason to buy from a reputable source.
How Much Soil Do You Need?
Raised beds are filled to the top minus 2 inches (leave room for mulch and to prevent overflow when watering).
| Bed Size | 12" Deep | 18" Deep | 24" Deep |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4×4 ft | 0.59 yds | 0.89 yds | 1.19 yds |
| 4×8 ft | 1.19 yds | 1.78 yds | 2.37 yds |
| 4×12 ft | 1.78 yds | 2.67 yds | 3.56 yds |
| 3 beds: 4×8 ft each | 3.56 yds | 5.33 yds | 7.11 yds |
| 6 beds: 4×8 ft each | 7.11 yds | 10.67 yds | 14.22 yds |
Use our topsoil calculator for custom bed dimensions.
Year-Two: Replenishment and Feeding
Raised bed soil settles and depletes over time. Each spring:
- Top-dress with 1-2 inches of compost. Most important annual maintenance. Rebuilds organic matter and nutrients.
- Check soil level. Beds typically drop 1-3 inches per year from settling and plant uptake. Top-dress with 3-Way Mix to restore level.
- Add amendments as needed: Lime for pH, balanced organic fertilizer for heavy feeders, extra compost for vegetable beds.
What NOT to Use in Raised Beds
- ❌ Native clay soil (heavy, waterlogging, poor aeration)
- ❌ Straight topsoil without compost (compacts, lacks nutrients)
- ❌ Fresh (hot) manure (nitrogen burn, pathogen risk)
- ❌ Potting mix alone for large beds (expensive, too light for tall beds)
- ❌ Mushroom compost as the sole amendment (high in salt)
Fill your raised beds right. Harbor Soils delivers 3-Way Topsoil Mix, screened topsoil, and compost throughout Gig Harbor, Port Orchard, and Kitsap County. Same-day delivery, no minimum. Order soil mix →
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I fill the bottom of a deep raised bed with cheaper material?
Yes. For beds 18 inches deep or more, the bottom 6 to 8 inches can be filled with rough organic matter (logs, branches, leaves) or with less-expensive Screened Fill Dirt. Cap with at least 12 inches of quality soil mix where roots will actually grow. This works because most vegetables don't root that deep, and the cheaper filler still provides drainage and slow nutrient release.
Should I add fertilizer when first filling a raised bed?
If the mix is heavy on compost (30 percent or more), you typically don't need added fertilizer the first season. Heavy nitrogen feeders like corn, brassicas, and tomatoes may benefit from a balanced organic fertilizer worked into the top 6 inches at planting. Skip synthetic salt fertilizers; they can shock the microbiome you just built.
Is bagged "raised bed mix" worth it vs. bulk delivery?
For a single 4×4 bed, bagged is fine and quick. For two 4×8 beds or more, you're saving 50 to 70 percent by going bulk. A 4×8 bed at 12 inches deep needs about 1.2 yards, which is roughly $80 to $120 of Harbor Soils 3-Way Topsoil Mix delivered, versus $200+ in bagged products from a big-box store.
How do I know when to top up my raised bed soil?
Check soil level each spring. Most beds drop 1 to 3 inches per year from settling, plant uptake, and decomposition of organic matter. When the level is more than 4 inches below the top edge of the frame, top up with a 50/50 mix of new topsoil and compost.
Can I use 5-Way Topsoil Mix instead of 3-Way for raised beds?
Yes, and many gardeners prefer it. The 5-Way Topsoil Mix has more organic matter built in, so beds are planting-ready immediately without a separate compost amendment. The 3-Way Mix is the cost-conscious choice if you're separately adding compost; the 5-Way is the one-truck-and-done option.
What about hügelkultur, can I put logs at the bottom of my raised bed?
Yes, for deep beds (18 inches or more). The hügelkultur method buries woody material at the base; as it decomposes over years, it releases nutrients and holds moisture. Use untreated wood only, avoid black walnut (allelopathic), and put 12+ inches of soil mix on top. Expect the bed to settle more than usual in years one and two as the wood compresses.