If you’ve been putting off starting a food garden because you don’t want to dig up your lawn, pull out tree roots, or hire a bobcat — no-dig gardening is the answer.
No-dig garden beds are the most beginner-friendly, lowest-cost, and most effective way to start growing food in Australia. You don’t need to remove existing grass or weeds. You don’t need special equipment. And the results are often better than conventionally dug beds within a single season.
This guide walks you through exactly how to build a no-dig garden bed in Australia — what materials you need, what they cost at Bunnings, and how to do it this weekend.
What Is a No-Dig Garden Bed?
A no-dig garden bed — sometimes called a lasagne garden or sheet mulch bed — works by layering organic materials directly on top of existing ground. The layers smother existing grass and weeds, break down over time into rich compost, and create a deep, fertile growing medium without any digging.
The method was popularised in Australia by Esther Deans in the 1970s and has been refined by gardeners across every Australian climate zone since. It works on lawn, on compacted soil, on clay, and even on gravel.
The principle is simple: feed the soil from the top down, the way nature does it.
Why No-Dig Works So Well in Australia
Australian soils are notoriously challenging. Many suburban soils are compacted, nutrient-depleted, and low in organic matter after years of lawn maintenance and chemical use.
Digging these soils — especially clay soils common in Melbourne, Adelaide, and parts of Brisbane — often makes things worse. It destroys soil structure, brings weed seeds to the surface, and disrupts the soil biology that makes healthy growing possible.
No-dig avoids all of this. Instead of fighting your soil, you build on top of it. The cardboard layer kills existing weeds without chemicals. The compost layers introduce the organic matter and biology your soil needs. The mulch layer retains moisture — critical in Australia’s dry summers.
Within one season, the cardboard breaks down completely, earthworms move in from below, and you’re left with genuinely good growing soil.
What You Need — Materials and Costs
Here’s everything you need to build a standard no-dig bed of 1.2 metres wide by 2.4 metres long. All prices are approximate Bunnings estimates.
Cardboard — free Collect from any supermarket, hardware store, or appliance retailer. Large flat boxes are ideal. Remove all tape and staples. You need enough to cover your bed area with a double layer, overlapping edges by at least 20cm.
Compost — $25 to $40 Two to three bags of quality compost. Scotts Osmocote or Yates Dynamic Lifter compost from Bunnings work well. You want a layer 15 to 20cm deep across the whole bed.
Straw or sugarcane mulch — $15 to $20 One bale of pea straw or sugarcane mulch. This goes on top as the final layer. Sugarcane mulch is widely available across Australia and breaks down quickly into the soil.
Optional — garden soil or potting mix — $15 to $25 One bag of quality garden mix on top of the compost gives your seedlings an even better start. Not essential but helpful if you want to plant immediately.
Total cost: $40 to $85 depending on what you already have and whether you add the optional soil layer.
For a larger bed or multiple beds, buy compost in bulk from a local landscape supplier — it’s significantly cheaper than bags and better quality.
How to Build Your No-Dig Garden Bed — Step by Step
Step 1 — Choose your location
Pick a spot that gets at least six hours of direct sunlight per day. Most vegetables need full sun to produce well. Avoid areas under large trees — the roots will compete with your plants and the shade will limit growth.
Mark out your bed size. A width of 1.2 metres is ideal — you can reach the centre from both sides without stepping on the bed. Length can be whatever suits your space.
Step 2 — Mow or slash existing vegetation
If you have long grass or weeds, mow or cut them down as low as possible. You don’t need to remove them — the cardboard will do that job. But shorter vegetation breaks down faster under the layers.
Step 3 — Lay the cardboard
Lay your cardboard directly on the ground, covering the entire bed area. Overlap each piece by at least 20cm — any gap is an opportunity for weeds to push through.
Make sure the cardboard butts right up against any edging or borders. Weeds are opportunistic — close every gap.
Wet the cardboard thoroughly with a hose. Soggy cardboard breaks down faster and sits flatter.
Step 4 — Add your compost layer
Pour your compost directly on top of the wet cardboard. Spread it evenly to a depth of 15 to 20cm across the whole bed.
If you have access to aged manure — cow, horse, or chicken — this is the time to add it. Mix it through the compost layer or add it as a separate layer beneath the compost.
Step 5 — Add your mulch layer
Spread your straw or sugarcane mulch on top of the compost to a depth of 5 to 8cm. This is your finishing layer — it retains moisture, regulates soil temperature, and continues breaking down into the soil over time.
Step 6 — Water thoroughly
Give the whole bed a deep, thorough watering. You want everything saturated — the cardboard, the compost, and the mulch.
Step 7 — Wait if you can, or plant immediately
If you can wait two to four weeks before planting, do so. This gives the bed time to settle, the cardboard time to start breaking down, and the soil biology time to establish.
If you want to plant immediately — add a layer of quality potting mix or garden soil on top of the mulch, 5 to 8cm deep, and plant your seedlings directly into that. This works well for most vegetables and herbs.
What to Plant in Your New No-Dig Bed
The best crops for a new no-dig bed are ones with shallow to medium root systems that don’t need to push through compacted subsoil — because in your first season, the roots will mostly be living in your compost layer while the cardboard breaks down below.
Good choices for your first no-dig bed include:
- Silverbeet and rainbow chard
- Lettuce and salad greens
- Herbs — basil, parsley, chives, coriander
- Kale and Asian greens
- Cherry tomatoes
- Beans and peas
- Zucchini
Avoid deep-rooted crops like carrots and parsnips in your first season — they need deeper, looser soil than a brand new bed can provide.
Common No-Dig Mistakes to Avoid
Not overlapping the cardboard enough. Weeds will find any gap. Overlap generously — 20cm minimum on every join.
Using glossy or printed cardboard. Plain brown cardboard only. Glossy or heavily printed cardboard breaks down slowly and may contain inks you don’t want in your food garden.
Not watering enough. A dry no-dig bed won’t break down properly. Keep it moist, especially in the first four weeks.
Making the bed too wide. If you can’t reach the centre without stepping on it, you’ll compact the soil every time you garden. Maximum 1.2 metres wide, or 60cm if accessed from one side only.
Planting too soon in very shallow beds. If your compost layer is less than 15cm deep, wait a few weeks before planting or add more material first.
The Real Cost of a No-Dig Garden vs a Raised Bed
Many Australians default to timber raised beds — and they look great. But the cost adds up fast. A basic 1.2m x 2.4m timber raised bed kit from Bunnings costs $80 to $150 before you add soil to fill it. Filling a raised bed properly costs another $60 to $120 in quality soil mix.
A no-dig bed on flat ground costs $40 to $85 all in and produces comparable results within one season.
If you want the look of a raised bed, you can build a simple timber border around your no-dig bed for $20 to $40 in sleepers or treated pine — getting you the aesthetic at a fraction of the cost.
Want a Plan Built for Your Specific Garden?
This guide gives you the method. But the best no-dig garden for your property depends on your specific space, your climate zone, your soil type, and what you want to grow.
If you want a personalised plan that tells you exactly how many beds to build, where to position them, what to plant in each one, and what to buy locally — that’s exactly what a Guildr guide delivers.
Specific to your suburb. Built from your details. From $29, delivered within 24 to 48 hours.