Seed Quantity Calculator
Tell it your row length and spacing and it works out how many seeds to sow, buffer included.
๐ How it works & FAQHow many seeds do you actually need?
Seed packets never tell you how many seeds to sow for your specific bed. This calculator does the arithmetic for you: it takes the length of your row and the spacing between plants, works out how many plants fit, and then adds an over-seeding buffer so patchy germination doesn't leave you with gaps. The result is a straight, honest count you can take to the store or the seed drawer.
Why the germination buffer matters
Almost no seed lot germinates at 100%. Lettuce and tomatoes might hit 85-95%, while older seed, carrots, or parsley can dip well below that. Sowing exactly one seed per spot means every dud leaves a hole in your row. The over-seed percentage pads your count so you can thin down to the strongest seedlings and still fill the bed. A common starting point is 10-20% for fresh seed and 30%+ for anything old or slow.
How to use it
- Enter your row length and pick the unit (feet, inches, meters, or centimeters).
- Enter the seed spacing your crop wants, in inches or centimeters.
- Set an over-seed % to cover germination losses.
- If you're planting several identical rows, bump up the number of rows. Totals update instantly.
These figures are planning estimates, not a guarantee of yield — real germination depends on your seed, soil, and weather.
FAQ
- What spacing should I use?
- Check the seed packet's in-row spacing. Radishes want about 1 inch, bush beans 3-4 inches, and corn 8-12 inches. Use the final spacing you'll thin to.
- How is the seed count calculated?
- It divides row length by spacing to get plant slots, multiplies by (1 + your buffer), and rounds up to a whole seed: seeds = ceil(length / spacing × (1 + extra)).
- Does this account for row spacing?
- No — it counts seeds within a row. The "number of rows" field just multiplies identical rows. Distance between rows doesn't change the seed count.
- Should I always over-seed?
- For direct sowing, yes. For expensive or pelleted seed you may prefer 0% and simply reseed gaps later. Set the buffer to match your seed quality.