About this soil

Quality topsoil for lawns, gardens, and landscape projects. Nutrient rich and ready to support strong root development and healthy plant establishment.

Had a great experience with Mulch Mound. I was searching for the most affordable soil delivery that could be here for memorial day weekend (this was less than a week before). They were the most affordable and earliest delivery I could find in the area. Booking was easy, delive...

Jackson Soil Delivery

Jackson Soil Delivery

4.7
137 reviews
Regular price $49.00 per yard
Regular price Sale price $49.00
Sale Sold out
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Style
Minimum of 3
1 tree planted for every order

About this soil

Quality topsoil for lawns, gardens, and landscape projects. Nutrient rich and ready to support strong root development and healthy plant establishment.

Had a great experience with Mulch Mound. I was searching for the most affordable soil delivery that could be here for memorial day weekend (this was less than a week before). They were the most affordable and earliest delivery I could find in the area. Booking was easy, delive...

Raised beds in Jackson should be filled to at least 12 inches deep to give roots room to establish before the growing season closes around October 8. For lawn leveling and topdressing, a half-inch to one-inch application is sufficient to correct most settling and improve surface drainage without smothering existing grass.
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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.

A yard is approximately 27 cubic feet. As a general guideline, one yard of material can cover an area of about 10 feet by 10 feet at a few inches deep.

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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 Jackson Customers Like About Our Soil

4.7
out of 5 based on 137 reviews
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Need Help Calculating How Much Soil You Need?

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For raised beds and planting areas, multiply length by width by depth in feet to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 to find cubic yards. For lawn topdressing in Jackson, a half-inch layer over 1,000 square feet requires about 1.5 cubic yards. If you are filling low spots left by a winter of freeze-thaw activity, measure the approximate depth and surface area of each depression and add those volumes together before placing your order.

Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project

Top your freshly placed soil with a layer of mulch to protect moisture in Jackson's fast-draining conditions and reduce surface erosion from spring rains. If you are defining a new bed or lawn edge, a border of decorative stone adds clean structure and helps hold the soil in place during wet-weather runoff.

Map of Jackson, Michigan

Areas We Deliver Soil in Jackson, Michigan

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Frequently Asked Questions

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Answer

What is actually wrong with just using the sandy loam already in my Jackson yard for my garden beds?

Jackson's native sandy loam drains very efficiently, which also means it releases moisture and nutrients quickly. For vegetable gardens and annual flower beds, that lean texture makes it genuinely difficult to maintain consistent soil moisture and fertility throughout the growing season without constant watering and fertilizing. Bringing in a quality garden soil or blended topsoil gives your beds a richer, more moisture-retentive foundation from day one and reduces the ongoing effort required to keep plants fed and hydrated.

Answer

How much soil do I need to fill a raised bed in my Jackson backyard?

Measure the length, width, and planned depth of your raised bed in feet and multiply all three numbers together to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 to convert to cubic yards. A standard 4 by 8 foot bed filled to 12 inches deep needs roughly 1.2 cubic yards of soil. For Jackson gardens targeting the full growing season between May 1 and October 8, filling beds to at least 12 inches deep gives roots the room they need to establish quickly after planting.

Answer

Can I use bulk topsoil to fix the low and uneven spots in my lawn after a Jackson winter?

Yes, screened topsoil is ideal for filling the low spots and shallow ruts that form in Jackson lawns after freeze-thaw cycles work through the ground during winter and early spring. Jackson's first fall frost around October 8 and its last spring frost around May 1 create several months of frost activity that can shift and settle soil noticeably. Spreading a thin layer of topsoil over low areas in early May and then overseeding is a reliable way to level your lawn before the growing season fully gets underway.

Answer

Will imported topsoil drain properly when placed over Jackson's existing sandy loam base?

Quality blended topsoil and garden mixes are designed to drain well without draining too fast, and they transition smoothly on top of or mixed into Jackson's existing sandy loam. The key is avoiding a sharp layering effect where heavy, clay-rich soil sits directly on top of fast-draining sandy loam, which can trap water at the interface. A screened or blended product integrates more naturally and supports healthy root penetration through both layers.

Answer

How do I keep freshly placed soil from washing away in my Jackson yard during the spring rains?

Jackson receives a significant portion of its 36 inches of annual rainfall in spring, so freshly placed soil is vulnerable to surface erosion before plant roots can establish. Seeding or planting immediately after placing soil, then covering with a light straw mulch or erosion blanket, prevents the top layer from washing away during heavy downpours. On any grade, a border of edging material or stone holds the soil in place while ground cover fills in over the first season.

Answer

Is bulk topsoil the right choice for improving my whole lawn, or should I only use it on problem spots?

For broad lawn improvement across a large area, bulk topsoil is cost-effective and works well when spread in thin layers of a half inch to one inch and then overseeded. For isolated low spots or thin patches in Jackson lawns, the same approach works on a smaller, more targeted scale. Either way, late April through early May is the best timing in Zone 6a, giving grass seed the warmth and consistent moisture it needs to germinate before summer heat sets in.

Answer

What kind of soil is actually best for growing vegetables in Jackson, MI?

A blended garden soil with incorporated compost is the best choice for Jackson vegetable gardens. The compost component improves moisture retention in what is naturally a well-draining sandy loam region, and the added nutrients support the heavy feeding that vegetables require during the compressed Zone 6a growing season. Look for a mix with visible organic material and a loamy, workable texture that does not clump or compact tightly when it gets wet.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Time your bulk soil delivery for late April or very early May in Jackson, right before your last frost date of May 1. Soil placed too early can get compacted by late-season rain and lingering cold, but placing it just as the ground fully thaws gives you a loose, workable medium for immediate planting. That timing also aligns perfectly with the best window for grass seed germination in Zone 6a.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

When filling raised beds in Jackson, resist the urge to pack the soil down tightly before planting. Sandy loam in the native ground already compacts fairly easily under foot traffic and rainfall, and filling raised beds loosely allows roots to penetrate deeply and water to drain evenly from top to bottom. A loose fill will settle naturally over the first season and reach an ideal planting density on its own without any additional effort.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

If you are using bulk soil to level a lawn that regularly develops low spots after winter, consider blending a small amount of compost into the topsoil before spreading it. Jackson's freeze-thaw cycles gradually pull organic matter out of the surface soil over time, and adding it back during leveling helps patched areas hold moisture and support stronger, more persistent grass growth compared to filling with plain sandy topsoil alone.

The Unique Landscape of Jackson

Jackson's native sandy loam is workable but lean, draining quickly and releasing nutrients before most plants can fully take advantage of them. Homeowners starting new garden beds, leveling lawns after a wet winter, or building raised vegetable plots often find that native soil alone does not provide the structure and fertility that productive plants need to thrive. The Zone 6a growing season in Jackson runs from roughly May 1 to October 8, a relatively compressed window that makes a nutrient-rich, moisture-retentive starting medium especially important for getting plants established quickly. Importing quality topsoil or a blended garden mix allows homeowners to control drainage, organic content, and texture in ways that working with native sandy loam alone rarely permits. Whether you are filling a raised bed, grading a low spot after frost heave, or creating a brand-new planting area, bringing in the right soil gives your plants the best possible foundation for Jackson's growing conditions.