Mulch vs Compost: What’s the Difference?

Mulch and compost are both incredibly useful for gardening—but they serve very different purposes.

Many gardeners accidentally use one when they really need the other.

In simple terms:

  • Mulch protects the soil
  • Compost improves the soil

The best gardens often use both together.

If you need exact material estimates, use our Mulch Calculator – Imperial & Metric Units or Compost Calculator – Imperial & Metric Units.

What Is Mulch?

Mulch is a material placed on top of the soil surface.

Its main job is protection.

Common mulch types include:

  • bark mulch
  • shredded hardwood
  • wood chips
  • straw
  • pine needles
  • leaves

Mulch helps:

  • suppress weeds
  • retain moisture
  • regulate soil temperature
  • reduce erosion
  • improve appearance

Most mulch breaks down slowly over time.

What Is Compost?

Compost is decomposed organic material added into or onto soil.

Its main job is soil improvement.

Compost is made from:

  • food scraps
  • leaves
  • grass clippings
  • manure
  • organic waste

Compost helps:

  • improve soil structure
  • increase nutrients
  • boost microbial life
  • improve drainage
  • retain moisture

Healthy compost feeds the soil.

The Biggest Difference

Mulch protects soil

Compost feeds soil

That’s the simplest way to think about it.

Mulch acts like a protective blanket.

Compost acts like a soil conditioner and nutrient source.

Should Compost Be Mixed Into Soil?

Usually, yes.

Compost is often:

  • mixed into raised beds
  • blended into garden soil
  • worked into planting areas

Typical compost amounts:

20%–40% of total soil volume

Compost can also be top dressed.

Should Mulch Be Mixed Into Soil?

Usually, no.

Most mulch is designed to stay on top of the soil surface.

Mixing wood mulch into soil can:

  • temporarily reduce nitrogen
  • slow plant growth
  • affect soil balance

Exception:

Very fine organic mulches sometimes break down naturally into soil over time.

Best Uses for Mulch

Mulch works best for:

  • flower beds
  • landscaping
  • around trees
  • vegetable garden pathways
  • moisture retention
  • weed suppression

Recommended mulch depth:

2–4 inches

Best Uses for Compost

Compost works best for:

  • raised beds
  • vegetable gardens
  • soil rebuilding
  • poor soil improvement
  • boosting plant growth

Typical compost application:

1–3 inches worked into soil

Can You Use Mulch and Compost Together?

Absolutely.

In fact, many gardeners get the best results by using both.

Example setup:

Step 1:

Add compost into soil to improve nutrients and structure.

Step 2:

Apply mulch on top to protect that improved soil.

This combination improves:

  • moisture retention
  • plant growth
  • soil health
  • weed control

Mulch vs Compost for Raised Beds

For raised beds:

Compost is essential

Mulch is optional but helpful

Compost builds fertile growing soil.

Mulch helps:

  • reduce watering
  • suppress weeds
  • stabilize soil temperatures

Straw mulch is especially popular in vegetable gardens.

Which Lasts Longer?

Mulch

Usually lasts:

  • several months
  • up to multiple years depending on type

Compost

Breaks down faster because it actively feeds soil life.

Often replenished:

  • every season
  • annually

Common Gardening Mistakes

Using mulch instead of compost

Mulch does not replace healthy soil nutrients.

Using compost as thick mulch

Too much compost on the surface can:

  • retain excess moisture
  • create nutrient imbalances

Applying mulch too deeply

More than 4–5 inches can harm plants and roots.

Use Calculators to Estimate Materials

Manual math works—but calculators prevent overbuying.

Our calculators help estimate:

Mulch Calculator

  • cubic feet
  • cubic yards
  • bag counts
  • bulk mulch needs

Compost Calculator

  • compost volume
  • bag counts
  • raised bed needs
  • bulk compost estimates

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