Build a Simple Raised Garden Bed from Pallets

I wanted raised garden beds. The cedar ones at the garden center were two hundred dollars each. I needed three. That was six hundred dollars before I had planted a single seed. I almost gave up on the whole idea.

Then I noticed the stack of pallets behind the grocery store with a “Free” sign on them. Three weekends later, I had three raised beds. Total cost: about thirty dollars for screws and soil amendments.

Find the Right Pallets

Not all pallets are safe for garden use. Look for the HT stamp — that means heat-treated, not chemically treated. Avoid pallets stamped MB (methyl bromide — toxic) or pallets that have clearly held chemicals or petroleum products. Grocery stores, hardware stores, and furniture stores are good sources for clean HT pallets. Always ask before taking them, even from a stack marked free.

raised garden bed, pallet garden, DIY planter, free wood pallets
raised garden bed, pallet garden, DIY planter, free wood pallets

Break Them Down Without Destroying the Wood

Prying pallets apart with a crowbar usually splits the boards. The better method: use a reciprocating saw to cut through the nails between the deck boards and the stringers. The boards come off clean and intact. If you do not own a recip saw, a hammer and a pry bar work — just go slow and accept that you will lose some boards. Get extra pallets to compensate.

Simple Construction

You do not need joinery skills. Cut four corner posts from a 2×4 — about 12 inches tall for a standard bed. Screw the pallet boards horizontally across the posts to form the walls. Two boards high gives you about a 10-inch bed, which is plenty deep for most vegetables. Line the inside with landscape fabric to keep soil from washing out through the gaps, fill with a mix of topsoil and compost, and start planting.

📋 Quick Summary: Use HT-stamped pallets from grocery or hardware stores. Cut boards with a recip saw, screw them to 2×4 corner posts, line with landscape fabric, and fill with soil and compost.