🧱 Garden Wall Foundation Depth Calculator
Calculate concrete volume, bag count & material weight for your garden wall footing
| Wall Height | Min Foundation Depth | Recommended Footing Width | Approx. Vol per Linear Foot | Approx. Vol (m³/m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Up to 1 ft (0.3 m) | 6 in (150 mm) | 8 in (200 mm) | 0.028 ft³ | 0.0008 m³ |
| 1–2 ft (0.3–0.6 m) | 9 in (225 mm) | 10 in (250 mm) | 0.052 ft³ | 0.0015 m³ |
| 2–3 ft (0.6–0.9 m) | 12 in (300 mm) | 12 in (300 mm) | 0.083 ft³ | 0.0023 m³ |
| 3–4 ft (0.9–1.2 m) | 18 in (450 mm) | 16 in (400 mm) | 0.167 ft³ | 0.0047 m³ |
| 4–5 ft (1.2–1.5 m) | 24 in (600 mm) | 20 in (500 mm) | 0.278 ft³ | 0.0079 m³ |
| Over 5 ft (1.5 m+) | 30 in+ (760 mm+) | 24 in+ (600 mm+) | 0.417 ft³+ | 0.0118 m³+ |
| Bag Size | Volume per Bag | Bags per Cubic Yard | Bags per Cubic Metre | Weight per Bag |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40 lb bag | 0.30 cu ft | ~90 bags | ~118 bags | 40 lbs (18.1 kg) |
| 50 lb bag | 0.38 cu ft | ~71 bags | ~93 bags | 50 lbs (22.7 kg) |
| 60 lb bag | 0.45 cu ft | ~60 bags | ~79 bags | 60 lbs (27.2 kg) |
| 80 lb bag | 0.60 cu ft | ~45 bags | ~59 bags | 80 lbs (36.3 kg) |
| 90 lb bag | 0.68 cu ft | ~40 bags | ~52 bags | 90 lbs (40.8 kg) |
| Project | Length | Depth x Width | Cu Ft | Cu Yd | 80lb Bags |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small Garden Border | 10 ft | 6 in x 8 in | 3.3 ft³ | 0.12 yd³ | ~6 bags |
| Standard Garden Wall | 20 ft | 12 in x 12 in | 20 ft³ | 0.74 yd³ | ~34 bags |
| Low Retaining Wall | 30 ft | 12 in x 12 in | 30 ft³ | 1.11 yd³ | ~50 bags |
| Medium Retaining Wall | 40 ft | 18 in x 16 in | 80 ft³ | 2.96 yd³ | ~134 bags |
| Feature Garden Wall | 15 ft | 24 in x 20 in | 50 ft³ | 1.85 yd³ | ~84 bags |
| Raised Bed Surround | 16 ft | 9 in x 10 in | 10 ft³ | 0.37 yd³ | ~17 bags |
| Patio Edge Wall | 25 ft | 12 in x 12 in | 25 ft³ | 0.93 yd³ | ~42 bags |
Build the basic garden wall foundation depth between the most important stages of the whole project. It ensures the stability and support of the wall so it needs to be set correctly from the first step.
For lightweight garden wall foundation depth in around 30 cm depth, when the soil is firm and drains well. In weak soil on the other hand, one should deepen it to 46 cm. After the trench is done, one can place a peg in the bottom at one edge, so that the upper part of it lines up with the planned concrete deposit.
How Deep and Wide to Dig a Garden Wall Foundation
Practical general advice consists in at least 450 mm covering of the ground level down to the base of the foundation. That matches around two courses of blocks. Moreover the foundation must rest on solid material, so on natural soil under any garden stone.
In low garden walls no more than 500 mm high, strip concrete base works well. The process implies to dig a trench in 400 mm wide and deep, later fill it with medium strength concrete.
The kind of soil plays a big role here. When it is firm and drains well, around 300 mm depth is enough for a sample interlocking retaining wall. If the soil is not this solid, one requires bigger depth.
There is no strict standard depth, because it depends on the quality of the subsoil. The trench must reach level with solid base, free of roots or loose soil.
In higher walls the demand grows a lot. For a wall in around 7 feet high you need at least 450 mm by 450 mm concrete, plus around four courses of bricks. That raises the minimum depth to about 750 mm.
For week soil one must deepen the concrete.
The width also matters. The base must extend at least 100 mm on every side of the wall. So if the wall measures 200 mm thick, the total width of the base must be around 400 mm.
In free standing walls on bad soil one requires at least 600 mm and double wall width for the foundation.
The frost line forms another key element. The base must extend under it to escape damages because of frost heave. A minimum of 150 mm can work for some very small garden walls, but reaching under the frost line stays the main cause.
In mild maritime climates, the demand for frost protection can reach 600 mm or more.
The depth and width of the trench must match the height and thickness of theplanned wall. Steel is not required in any garden wall foundation depth, which simplifies things. If the foundations are stepped, they must overlap in the depth of the step.
