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St. Louis Soil Delivery
St. Louis Soil Delivery
St. Louis Soil Delivery

St. Louis Soil Delivery

St. Louis Soil Delivery

Regular price $43.00 per yard
Regular price Sale price $43.00
Sale Sold out
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Soil quantity comes down to coverage area and depth. St. Louis projects range from thin top-dressing to deep fills for vegetable beds.
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 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 St. Louis 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

Try Our Calculator
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Soil estimates depend on what you're doing: lawn leveling needs less depth, raised beds need more. Trace your project area to get yardage numbers. For St. Louis yards dealing with loess clay slopes, good soil makes a real difference.

Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project

Your new soil needs a cover. Mulch reduces evaporation and temperature swings in St. Louis beds on silty clay loam ground. Stone creates clean borders.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

When is the best time to add soil?

Best in spring or fall when conditions cooperate. For St. Louis, that's post-Apr 10 or pre-Oct 25. Avoid working wet ground.

Answer

How do I fix sandy soil?

Incorporate compost and organic amendments regularly. Sandy soil drains too fast. Annual additions gradually build water retention.

Answer

How do I level soil for a lawn?

Layer on topsoil, rake it flat, and tamp down. In St. Louis, 4–6 inches over the existing silty clay loam creates good lawn conditions.

Answer

What soil for containers?

Potting mix specifically. Garden soil clogs and compacts in containers. Potted plants require the lighter, airier structure of potting mix.

Answer

Do I need landscape fabric under soil?

For raised beds on grass, cardboard works better—smothers weeds, then decomposes. Skip fabric under planting areas; use it under paths.

Answer

Is new soil safe for pets?

Standard soil and compost won't harm pets. Paw cleaning after play is good practice. Skip chemically fertilized soil for dirt-eaters.

Answer

Topsoil vs garden mix—which should I use?

Different jobs: topsoil for fill and grade, garden mix for growing. St. Louis's silty clay loam responds better to amended garden mix.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Do not order topsoil without asking about its source and composition. Soil from construction sites often contains concrete chunks, buried trash, wire, and herbicide residue that damages plants.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Do not mix topsoil and mulch together thinking it creates better planting mix for beds. It does not work that way. Mulch belongs on top of soil as a surface layer, not mixed in.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Never assume all topsoil is the same quality regardless of price. Sources vary wildly in composition, fertility, drainage, and potential contaminants. Ask detailed questions before ordering.

The Unique Landscape of St. Louis

If you’re rebuilding beds in St Louis, Missouri, quality soil gives roots a better start. It’s normal for beds to settle; topping off soil restores a clean finish. Use it to top-dress, rebuild worn bed edges, and smooth low areas before seed. Feather edges into existing grade so mowing and edging stay clean. Delivered soil makes it easier to do the job once and move on to planting.