Quality topsoil for lawns, gardens, and landscape projects. Nutrient rich and ready to support strong root development and healthy plant establishment.
The website was intuitive and easy to navigate. The material was delivered the date and time it was scheduled, it was dropped off in the area i had specified on top of my tarp with no issues.
I ordered soil, the Gardening Blend that I received had too many plastic and m...
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How Much Material Do I Need?
For new raised beds in Chillicothe, fill to the full desired depth in a single application since the silt loam beneath the bed often has drainage limitations that make deep, quality fill more effective from the start. Lawn leveling projects typically need no more than a half-inch to one-inch layer per application to allow existing grass to grow through the new soil without being smothered.
Use our free soil calculator
What is a yard?
A yard is approximately 27 cubic feet. As a general guideline, one yard of material can cover an area of about 100-160 square feet at a 2-3 inch depth.
We hand-pick and partner with the best yards in your region, keep only the ones our buyers rate well, and back each load with our guarantee.
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If your soil isn't the quantity or quality you ordered, we'll make it right.
About this soil
Quality topsoil for lawns, gardens, and landscape projects. Nutrient rich and ready to support strong root development and healthy plant establishment.
The website was intuitive and easy to navigate. The material was delivered the date and time it was scheduled, it was dropped off in the area i had specified on top of my tarp with no issues.
I ordered soil, the Gardening Blend that I received had too many plastic and m...
How Much Material Do I Need?
For new raised beds in Chillicothe, fill to the full desired depth in a single application since the silt loam beneath the bed often has drainage limitations that make deep, quality fill more effective from the start. Lawn leveling projects typically need no more than a half-inch to one-inch layer per application to allow existing grass to grow through the new soil without being smothered.
Use our free soil calculator
What is a yard?
A yard is approximately 27 cubic feet. As a general guideline, one yard of material can cover an area of about 100-160 square feet at a 2-3 inch depth.
The website was intuitive and easy to navigate. The material was delivered the date and time it was scheduled, it was dropped off in the area i had...
Read full review
The website was intuitive and easy to navigate. The material was delivered the date and time it was scheduled, it was dropped off in the area i had specified on top of my tarp with no issues.
I ordered soil, the Gardening Blend that I received had too many plastic and metal pieces for my liking thus lowering the score from a perfect 5/5 to a 4/5
Really appreciate the care and follow thru that this company had with our order. A hiccup came up but they were quick to respond and address all co...
Read full review
Really appreciate the care and follow thru that this company had with our order. A hiccup came up but they were quick to respond and address all concerns, which made our garden day a success! Thank you for your prompt care.
Measure the length, width, and desired fill depth of each area you are improving and enter those numbers into our soil calculator to get an accurate cubic yard estimate before ordering. For lawn leveling projects around Chillicothe, a half-inch topdress across a large area adds up in volume faster than most homeowners expect, so precise measurements help avoid over-ordering heavy material that is difficult to move by hand. Always add about five percent to your estimate to account for slight settling, especially over Chillicothe's silt loam base where the existing ground can compress under the new weight.
Soil Types We Deliver in Chillicothe
Mulch Mound delivers bulk soil by the cubic yard to homes and properties throughout Chillicothe, making large lawn and garden projects straightforward and affordable. Our soils are chosen to perform well alongside the heavy clay ground common across this part of Ohio, giving your plants a strong foundation from the start.
Screened Top Soil
Available in a screened style, this topsoil is ideal for leveling lawns, filling low spots, and establishing new planting areas across Ohio yards. The fine, consistent texture blends well over existing ground, supports strong root development, and gives fresh sod or seed a nutrient rich base to take hold.
Gardening Blend
This blend combines topsoil with organic amendments to create a balanced growing environment for raised beds, flower gardens, and new planting areas. It drains well and delivers solid nutrients, making it a practical choice for Chillicothe gardeners working with compacted or dense native soil.
Leaf Compost
Rich in organic matter, this standard leaf compost revives tired or depleted garden soil by improving structure and boosting water retention. It feeds the beneficial microorganisms that keep beds productive through the warm Ohio growing season, and works well tilled into garden plots ahead of spring planting.
Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project
After your soil work is complete, top your new beds with a layer of hardwood mulch to lock in moisture and protect the fresh soil surface from Chillicothe's spring rainfall erosion throughout the season. Adding decorative stone edging along bed perimeters keeps soil in place and creates a clean boundary that reduces maintenance during the long growing season from mid-April through early October.
How do I know if my Chillicothe yard needs added topsoil or if the native silt loam is enough to work with?
Native silt loam in the Chillicothe area can be productive, but years of lawn mowing, foot traffic, and seasonal planting gradually deplete its organic content and compact its fine particles. If water pools in your yard after Chillicothe's frequent spring rains, grass grows thin in patches, or your garden beds produce smaller harvests each year, adding quality topsoil to raise and amend those areas will make a noticeable and lasting difference.
Answer
What is the best way to use bulk topsoil for leveling uneven spots in a Chillicothe lawn?
Start by identifying the low spots where rainwater collects after storms, which is common in Chillicothe yards given the 44 inches of annual precipitation and the varied terrain throughout Ross County. Topdress those areas with a half-inch to one-inch layer of topsoil and work it into the existing grass with a rake before overseeding. Avoid adding more than an inch at a time so the existing grass can grow through the new soil without being smothered by the added depth.
Answer
How much topsoil do I need to fill a raised vegetable bed in my Chillicothe backyard?
A standard raised bed that is four feet wide, eight feet long, and twelve inches deep requires roughly 0.33 cubic yards of soil to fill completely. For most Chillicothe vegetable gardens, a blend of topsoil and compost works best because it provides the drainage structure that prevents waterlogging during wet spring months while holding enough nutrients to support crops through the growing season from late April to early October.
Answer
Can bulk topsoil fix the drainage problems in my Chillicothe yard without regrading the whole lot?
Topsoil alone works well for minor drainage issues where water is pooling in isolated low spots after rain. For more significant problems, especially in Chillicothe yards where silt loam has a high fine-particle content that slows percolation, a combination of topsoil regrading and added organic matter gives the best long-term results. In severe cases, pairing topsoil with a stone drainage layer beneath it helps move water away from the root zone more efficiently.
Answer
When is the right time of year to do a major soil or grading project in Chillicothe?
Late summer and early fall, from August through late September, is the ideal window for large soil projects in Chillicothe. The ground is firm enough to work without compacting under equipment weight, and completing grading before the first frost around October 12 gives new grass seed enough time to germinate and establish before cold sets in. Spring is also workable, but the wet conditions from April through May can make soil delivery and spreading more challenging on saturated silt loam.
Answer
Is the topsoil you deliver different from the silt loam already in my Chillicothe yard?
Yes, our bulk topsoil is a blended product that contains a higher organic matter content than native silt loam in its current state after years of surface use. While Chillicothe's native soil has good natural fertility when healthy, decades of mowing and seasonal planting deplete that organic layer steadily. Our topsoil helps restore the nutrient-rich upper profile so new plantings and grass have the resources they need to establish quickly during Chillicothe's Zone 6b growing season.
Answer
How do I keep newly delivered topsoil from washing away on a sloped section of my Chillicothe property?
Slope stabilization needs to begin immediately after spreading by seeding, mulching, or installing sod within a day or two of delivery. Given Chillicothe's 44 inches of annual rainfall, a bare soil surface on any slope is vulnerable to erosion from the first significant rainstorm. A two-inch layer of straw mulch or a hydroseed application over new topsoil holds it in place while grass or ground cover gets established enough to anchor the surface on its own.
Mulch Mound Pro Tip
Before spreading bulk topsoil in your Chillicothe yard, use a garden fork or tiller to loosen the top three inches of the existing silt loam surface. This creates a transition zone that encourages roots to move easily between the native soil and the new topsoil layer above it. Without this step, the two soil types can stay visually and structurally separate, causing water to sit at the interface rather than draining uniformly downward through the full soil profile.
Mulch Mound Pro Tip
Chillicothe's growing season ends with a hard frost around October 12, which means any soil work intended to support new plantings needs to be completed at least six weeks before that date. Grass seed needs soil temperatures above 50 degrees to germinate reliably, and those temperatures begin dropping quickly in September across the Ross County area. Target a mid-August completion date for major lawn soil projects so new grass has time to develop a root system before cold weather shuts down growth.
Mulch Mound Pro Tip
When filling raised vegetable beds in Chillicothe, consider blending bulk topsoil with compost at roughly a 70 to 30 ratio by volume. Chillicothe's 44 inches of annual rainfall means raised beds get flushed with water regularly throughout spring, which leaches nutrients from plain topsoil faster than most gardeners expect after just a few heavy rain events. The added compost retains those nutrients closer to the root zone so your vegetable crops stay productive through the full season.
The Unique Landscape of Chillicothe
Chillicothe homeowners working with native silt loam have a soil that is fertile at its best but struggles with compaction, poor drainage in low-lying spots, and organic matter depletion after years of lawn and garden use. At 633 feet of elevation and with 44 inches of annual rainfall, poorly graded yards develop persistent wet areas that suffocate grass roots and limit what plants can survive in those zones. Establishing raised vegetable beds or rebuilding depleted garden borders with quality bulk topsoil gives Chillicothe gardeners direct control over drainage and nutrition that native silt loam alone cannot always provide. The growing season running from April 15 to October 12 offers a solid window to establish new beds, fill low lawn areas, and complete grading projects before the ground hardens in late fall. Investing in quality bulk soil means your beds and lawn areas start each season on a strong foundation rather than struggling against compacted or nutrient-depleted native ground.