Tulip Bulb Spacing Calculator: How Far Apart to Plant

🌷 Tulip Bulb Spacing Calculator

Find how much space between tulip bulbs – total bulbs needed by type, bed shape & arrangement

Quick Presets
Calculator Inputs
Spacing Quick Stats
3 in
Closest Spacing
8 in
Widest Spacing
4 in
Min Planting Depth
8 in
Max Planting Depth
Tulip Bulb Spacing by Type
Tulip TypeSpacing (in)Depth (in)Bulbs per sq ftBest Use
Species/Botanical3–44–59–16Naturalizing, rock gardens
Single Early4–664–9Borders, cottage gardens
Double Early4–664–9Container rows, formal beds
Triumph5–66–84–6Mixed displays, borders
Parrot5–664–6Feature beds, cutting
Lily-Flowered5–66–84–6Elegant mixed plantings
Darwin Hybrid6–882–4Formal beds, large displays
Fosteriana/Emperor6–882–4Early season, large beds
Bed Size vs Bulbs Needed
Bed SizeGrid CountStaggered CountDarwin HybridSpecies
2 × 4 ft (8 sq ft)~18~21~8–12~36–64
3 × 6 ft (18 sq ft)~40~46~18–28~72–144
4 × 8 ft (32 sq ft)~72~83~32–50~128–256
6 × 6 ft (36 sq ft)~81~93~36–56~144–288
8 × 12 ft (96 sq ft)~216~248~96–150~384–768
Planting Arrangement Comparison
ArrangementSpacing UsedDensityBest ForVisual Look
Grid (Standard)Full spacingBaselineFormal beds, easy countingStructured, uniform rows
Staggered (Triangular)Full spacing, offset rows+10–15%Naturalistic, cottage styleFuller, more informal
Single RowFull spacing in-lineRow onlyBorders, pathwaysClean linear edge
Drift (Odd Groups)Full spacing, grouped–10–15%Natural garden feelCasual, flowing drifts
Planting Tips
Depth Rule: Plant tulip bulbs at a depth equal to 2–3 times the bulb diameter. Most tulips need 6–8 inches deep to protect from freeze-thaw cycles and to anchor them firmly in loose soil.
Staggered Planting: Offset every other row by half the spacing interval (triangular pattern) to fit 10–15% more bulbs in the same bed and create a fuller, more natural appearance compared to rigid grid rows.

 

The space between tulips depends mainly on your plan for the final look. Want a dense and rich garden bed? Then plant them around 3 to 4 inches from one another.

Like this you get about 5 or 6 tulip bulbs for one square foot so 100 tulip bulbs will be enough for 20 square feet. Math is simple, right?

How to Space and Plant Tulip Bulbs

Standard advice says to plant tulip bulbs 4 to 6 inches apart and put them 6 to 8 inches deep. Even so, different tulips have different needs. Types like Tulipa turkestanica or T. Sylvestris, that are small and wild, can be placed only 2 to 3 inches apart.

For medium and big hybrids it is good to give more space, around 5 to 6 inchs work best.

Darwin tulips form a separate category. Plant those tulip bulbs 8 to 10 inches apart, and they stay in the ground longer without needing division. In the first year maybe it will look poor and scarce, but do not worry because of that.

By the second year everything will fill and please the site.

Growers of cut flowers work in a totally other world. Here the gap becomes extreme, tulip bulbs go in the soil only a quarter to half an inch apart, like eggs in cardboard. The secret is they lay evenly, but without touching between them.

That dense layout helps tulips grow with long and straight stems, which perfectly works for flower arranging.

A five-bulb group gives another fun idea. Dig one hole a foot apart and lay five tulip bulbs in it. In the end you will have a denser crop than the package label says, but it gives a more natural look.

Combine groups of different sizes through the whole bed to add nice visual impact.

Planting 2 to 4 inches apart is a safe choice, although too narrow space can cause problems. Really, a dense bunch of tulip bulbs gives great flowers, but too close placing helps tulip blight… A harmful fungus disease that destroys the flower.

Good air flow between tulip bulbs helps to avoid such problems.

The depth is just as important as the gap. Special tulips want around 4 to 5 inches underground. For medium types like Tulipa greigii 6 to 8 inches are ideal.

Handy tip: put the bulb so that its bottom part sits at three times the height of the bulb.

One final note, most tulips stop flowering by the end of May. That freely leaves the bed for summer plants and seeds. In small gardens, using the same ground twice is a clear prize.

And hear advice for design: avoid straight rows. Natural andscattered planting always looks better.

 

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