About this soil

Dark, nutrient dense black topsoil with rich organic content. The deep color signals high fertility. Your plants will notice the difference immediately.

My experience with Mulch Mound was great and super easy. I ordered two yards of screened topsoil and was able to get it delivered within 2 days. They came in my requested time frame (afternoon) and dropped it off where I asked on my driveway. The topsoil was exactly what was a...

Roswell Soil Delivery

Roswell Soil Delivery

4.7
120 reviews
Regular price $37.00 per yard
Regular price Sale price $37.00
Sale Sold out
Type
Style
Minimum of 4
1 tree planted for every order

About this soil

Dark, nutrient dense black topsoil with rich organic content. The deep color signals high fertility. Your plants will notice the difference immediately.

My experience with Mulch Mound was great and super easy. I ordered two yards of screened topsoil and was able to get it delivered within 2 days. They came in my requested time frame (afternoon) and dropped it off where I asked on my driveway. The topsoil was exactly what was a...

For lawn topdressing over Roswell's red clay, a 1-inch layer is the standard starting depth, and for new garden beds built over clay a minimum of 6 to 8 inches of quality soil gives roots enough room to establish before hitting the native clay below. Deeper fills of 10 to 12 inches are worth the investment for vegetable beds where you want maximum productivity through Roswell's long Zone 8a growing season.
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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.

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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 Roswell Customers Like About Our Soil

4.7
out of 5 based on 120 reviews
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Need Help Calculating How Much Soil You Need?

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For soil projects in Roswell, start by measuring the length, width, and desired depth of your fill area in feet, then multiply all three numbers together and divide by 27 to get cubic yards. When leveling a lawn over red clay, add 10 to 15 percent extra to your estimate to account for settling that naturally occurs after Roswell's first few heavy rain events. For raised beds, measuring twice before ordering saves a second delivery trip.

Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project

Pair your bulk soil order with a delivery of shredded hardwood mulch to top off your finished beds and lock in the moisture your new soil needs to stay productive through Roswell's hot summers. If you are also doing any grading or drainage work, our bulk landscape stone makes an excellent base material for French drains and dry creek beds that help redirect Roswell's annual 53 inches of rainfall.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

Can I just till bulk soil into my red clay instead of replacing it entirely?

Yes, and in many cases that is the most practical approach for Roswell homeowners. Tilling 3 to 4 inches of quality topsoil or garden soil into the top 6 inches of red clay creates a blended layer that drains and roots much better than pure clay alone. This method works especially well for lawn areas and garden beds where you are not doing deep planting, and it avoids the labor of full soil replacement.

Answer

How much soil do I need to level my lawn in Roswell?

For lawn leveling in Roswell, most projects need between a half-inch and 2 inches of topdressing material spread across low or uneven areas. Calculate your square footage and divide by 324 to find cubic yards needed for a 1-inch layer. Keep in mind that Roswell's red clay tends to settle after heavy rain, so leveling after a wet period gives you a more accurate picture of where your true low spots are.

Answer

What type of soil is best for raised vegetable beds in Roswell?

For raised vegetable beds in Roswell, a blend of topsoil, compost, and a small amount of perlite or coarse sand gives you the drainage and nutrient content that clay-based native soil cannot provide. Roswell's Zone 8a growing season runs from late April through October for warm-season crops and extends even longer for cool-season greens, so building a raised bed with premium blended soil pays off in multiple harvests per year.

Answer

Will fresh topsoil wash away on my sloped yard during Roswell's heavy rains?

Freshly placed soil on a slope is vulnerable to erosion until it settles and is covered with seed, sod, or mulch. In Roswell, where summer thunderstorms can dump significant rainfall in a short period, it is important to seed or sod sloped areas within a few days of spreading topsoil. Adding a layer of straw or erosion control netting over seeded slopes gives the soil time to establish before the next downpour arrives.

Answer

My yard has terrible drainage near the foundation. Can bulk soil help fix that?

Grading with bulk soil around your foundation is one of the most effective ways to redirect water away from your home in Roswell. The goal is to establish a slope that drops at least 6 inches over the first 10 feet away from the foundation. Roswell's red clay does not absorb water quickly, so proper grading ensures that the 53 inches of annual rainfall moves away from your structure rather than pooling against it.

Answer

When is the best time to work with bulk soil in Roswell's climate?

Spring and fall are the best windows for soil work in Roswell. In spring, targeting the window after the last frost around April 15 gives you time to prep beds and grade areas before the heat of summer sets in. Fall soil work, completed before the first frost around November 5, allows time for seeded areas to establish and for disturbed soil to settle before winter. Avoid working red clay soil when it is saturated, as it compacts significantly under foot traffic and equipment.

Answer

Is there a difference between topsoil and garden soil for my Roswell project?

Yes, the difference matters depending on your project. Topsoil is a general-purpose material used for grading, filling, and lawn leveling, and it works well for establishing grass over Roswell's clay. Garden soil is a more refined blend that typically includes compost and other amendments designed to support plant growth, making it the better choice for flower beds, vegetable gardens, and areas where you want nutrient-rich growing conditions from day one.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Before placing bulk soil over Roswell's red clay, use a garden fork or tiller to break up the top 2 to 3 inches of the existing clay surface. This creates a mechanical bond between your new soil and the native clay below, preventing the two layers from separating over time. Without this step, water can pool at the interface between the layers, which is especially problematic during Roswell's wetter months from March through July.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

If you are building raised garden beds in Roswell, orient them to run east to west if possible to maximize sun exposure through the Zone 8a growing season. Fill them with a well-draining soil blend and plan for the beds to shrink slightly in volume over the first year as organic material decomposes. Topping off with a few inches of fresh soil or compost each spring before the April 15 last frost date keeps your beds productive year after year.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Roswell's elevation of roughly 1,060 feet means temperatures can drop a few degrees cooler than lower-elevation Atlanta suburbs, which occasionally matters for frost-sensitive plants in early spring. When prepping soil in new beds close to the April 15 last frost date, avoid planting tender annuals until the soil temperature at 2 inches deep reads consistently above 60 degrees. A simple soil thermometer takes the guesswork out of timing your planting after all your bed prep work is complete.

The Unique Landscape of Roswell

Roswell sits at roughly 1,060 feet of elevation on a landscape dominated by red clay, and that clay creates real challenges for homeowners trying to establish healthy lawns, gardens, and raised beds. Red clay in the Roswell area drains poorly, compacts under foot traffic and heavy rain, and tends to be acidic, which limits nutrient availability to most common landscape plants. Importing quality topsoil or garden soil allows you to build growing environments above or within that clay layer where roots can thrive without fighting compaction. Whether you are leveling a bumpy lawn, filling a raised bed, or grading a slope to redirect the water that Roswell's 53-inch annual rainfall delivers, good bulk soil gives you the foundation your project needs. Zone 8a's long growing season rewards the effort of proper soil prep because plants have more time to establish, and the payoff in growth and color is substantial.