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Frederick Soil Delivery
Frederick Soil Delivery
Frederick Soil Delivery

Frederick Soil Delivery

Frederick Soil Delivery

Regular price $32.00 per yards
Regular price Sale price $32.00
Sale Sold out
Type
Style
Minimum of 4

Area times depth equals cubic feet. Divide by 27 for yards. Frederick leveling projects run shallow, garden beds run deep.
Use our free soil calculator

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.

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How It Works

Getting started is easy — just follow these simple steps

1

Choose your soil

Make sure you adjust the quantity to your home's needs. You can use our calculator to estimate how much you'll need.

2

Select your delivery date

Select a delivery date you'd like for the product to be dropped off at your home

3

Sit back and wait

Sit back, wait, and let us work our magic to make sure the highest quality product is delivered to your driveway.

What Frederick Customers Like About Our Soil

4.9
out of 5 based on 99 reviews
Google Reviews

Need Help Calculating How Much Soil You Need?

Use our NEW Trace from Satellite tool to get an estimate for your project based on an aerial view of your property

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1

Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project

Build your Frederick beds from the ground up. Soil creates the growing layer, mulch shields it, and stone provides structure for paths and borders.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

Do I need landscape fabric under soil?

Under raised beds, cardboard beats fabric. It kills grass and decomposes. Fabric impedes roots and drainage in planting areas.

Answer

What's the difference between compost and topsoil?

Different roles—topsoil gives bulk and structure, compost provides nutrients and organic matter. Combining them works best.

Answer

Why is my soil compacting?

Traffic, rain, and insufficient organics compact ground. Frederick's silt loam compacts readily. Annual compost and avoiding wet-soil walking help.

Answer

Is new soil safe for pets?

Plain soil and compost are pet-safe. Wash paws after digging. Avoid soil with added fertilizers if your dog eats dirt.

Answer

What soil for containers?

Use potting mix for containers—never garden soil. Pots need better drainage and aeration than ground soil can provide in a container.

Answer

What soil is best for raised beds?

Get a raised bed blend with topsoil, compost, and perlite or similar. Frederick's native silt loam doesn't perform as well in frames.

Answer

Where will you drop the soil?

Wherever you specify—driveway, backyard, curbside. Mark the spot at checkout and include any helpful notes.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

For raised vegetable beds, use approximately a 60/40 mix of quality topsoil and compost. Pure topsoil drains too slowly for vegetables, and pure compost dries out too fast between watering.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Add organic matter to new topsoil beds annually for continuous improvement. Even good quality topsoil benefits from compost, leaf mold, or aged manure worked into the surface each fall or spring.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Screened topsoil passes through a half inch mesh to remove rocks, roots, and debris. Unscreened fill soil is significantly cheaper but requires much more prep work before use in planting areas.

The Unique Landscape of Frederick

In Frederick, adding fresh soil can make seeding and new beds take more consistently. In Frederick, Foot traffic and weather over time can tighten soil and make planting harder. It’s great for raised beds, topping off landscape beds, and filling around new shrubs and flowers. On slopes, shape a gentle contour so water moves through without cutting channels. Delivery keeps the work moving without the loading and unloading.