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How It Works
Getting started is easy — just follow these simple steps
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.
Select your delivery date
Select a delivery date you'd like for the product to be dropped off at your home
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.
So smooth. Placed the order online, it showed up. Easy!
Easy to order online and easy to pick when I wanted it delivered
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
Try Our CalculatorMeasure each area you're filling or building in length and width in feet, multiply by your target depth in inches, and divide by 324 to get cubic yards directly. In Kannapolis, red clay beneath your soil can slow drainage at the transition point, so filling to the full recommended depth rather than going shallow helps prevent water from pooling above the clay layer. Use our calculator to total up multiple project areas — a raised bed, a lawn low spot, and a new border — and consolidate into one accurate delivery order.
Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project
After grading and filling with soil, top your new beds with 3 inches of shredded mulch to lock in moisture and protect your investment through Kannapolis's summer heat, and browse our stone options if you need edging, drainage channels, or a gravel pathway that won't turn to mud when the red clay underneath gets saturated after a heavy rain.
When building raised beds in Kannapolis directly over red clay, consider adding a 2-inch layer of coarse gravel or drainage stone at the base of the bed before filling with soil. Red clay's slow drainage can waterlog raised bed roots from below during wet springs, and that gravel buffer creates a zone where excess water can move away from the root area before it causes damage. It's a small step that pays off every spring when the heavy rains that Kannapolis sees in March and April are working their way through your garden.
For lawn leveling projects in Kannapolis, match your topdressing soil to your existing turf type. Bermuda and tall fescue — the two grasses that dominate Zone 7b lawns here — respond differently to fills: Bermuda handles an inch or more of topdressing and will aggressively grow through it, while tall fescue can thin out if buried too deeply in one application. Apply soil in passes of no more than half an inch, watering in each layer, to keep your existing turf intact while gradually correcting those low, water-holding areas that make mowing frustrating after every rain.
The best window for major soil work in Kannapolis is mid-March through the first week of April — after the heaviest winter rains have passed but before summer heat dries and hardens the clay. Work your soil when it's moist but not saturated; a handful should form a loose ball that crumbles when tapped, not one that holds a wet impression. Working red clay when it's too wet compresses the structure you're trying to improve, setting back drainage and aeration gains for the entire growing season ahead.
The Unique Landscape of Kannapolis
If you've ever tried to dig a planting hole in a Kannapolis yard after a dry August, you know exactly what red clay is capable of — it sets up nearly as hard as fired brick, cracks along fault lines, and resists even a steel spade. Quality topsoil and garden soil aren't optional extras in this part of the Carolina Piedmont; they're the foundation of any planting project that has a realistic chance of thriving through the Zone 7b growing season. With a full seven months between the last frost around April 7 and the first frost near November 1, the demands on any planted bed are significant — and clay soil without amendment will compact, drain poorly, and limit root development no matter how carefully you tend your plants. Kannapolis also receives around 44 inches of rain annually, and poorly structured soil turns those rains into a liability: water sits on the surface, runs off graded areas, and creates anaerobic conditions in beds where roots need oxygen to function. Brought-in soil with proper structure improves drainage, supports healthy soil biology, and gives roots the loose, nutrient-available environment they need to establish during the first critical growing season. Whether you're leveling a lawn, building raised vegetable beds, or establishing a new ornamental border, starting with the right soil is the single most important investment you can make in a Kannapolis landscape.
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