Square Foot Gardening in Canada — Complete Beginner's Guide
Get more food from less space — with spacing charts, bed plans, and Canadian succession timing to maximize your short growing season.
Square foot gardening lets you grow more food in less space by dividing your raised bed into a grid of 1-foot squares and planting a set number of plants per square based on their size. A single 4×4 raised bed (16 square feet) can produce enough vegetables for one person through an Ontario or BC growing season — tomatoes, lettuce, carrots, beans, herbs, and more, all in a space smaller than a kitchen table.
For Canadian gardeners, this method has particular appeal. Our growing seasons are 4–6 months in most regions — every square foot of raised bed space needs to work hard from the moment the soil is workable in spring to the first hard frost in fall. Square foot gardening, combined with succession planting and season extension, makes that possible. A 1.2m × 1.2m (4×4 ft) raised bed, managed well, can produce enough vegetables to substantially reduce one person's grocery spending on fresh produce.
Square foot gardening at a glance: Divide your raised bed into a 1-foot grid. Plant 1, 4, 9, or 16 plants per square depending on size — tomatoes get 1 square, lettuce gets 4, carrots get 16. A 4×4 bed (16 squares) produces a season of vegetables for one person. No rows, no thinning, minimal weeding.
Why Square Foot Gardening Works
Same yield as traditional row gardening in a fraction of the footprint
Dense planting shades soil, reducing evaporation — critical in dry Prairie summers
Dense canopy leaves no bare soil for weeds to germinate
Narrow beds mean all squares are reachable from the sides — no soil compaction
How Many Plants Per Square Foot?
The number of plants per square is determined by the plant's mature width. Mel Bartholomew's original system grouped plants into four categories based on their recommended spacing — a simple rule that eliminates guesswork for most vegetables:
1 per square foot
Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, large basil
4 per square foot
Lettuce, Swiss chard, kale, spinach, parsley, marigolds
9 per square foot
Bush beans, beets, onions, garlic, spinach, turnips
16 per square foot
Carrots, radishes, green onions, thin herbs like thyme
Calculate Your Exact Plant Count
Enter your bed dimensions to see exactly how many plants fit
🥕 Plant Spacing Calculator →Complete Square Foot Gardening Spacing Chart — 30+ Vegetables
This chart covers all the vegetables commonly grown in Canadian gardens, including plants suitable for vertical growing — an important strategy for making the most of limited raised bed space.
| Vegetable | Plants / sq ft | Spacing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🍅 Tomatoes | 1 | 30 cm | Train vertically to save space |
| 🌶️ Peppers | 1 | 30 cm | Good in corners of beds |
| 🥦 Broccoli | 1 | 45 cm | Takes 1 full sq ft; large plant |
| 🥬 Cabbage | 1 | 30–45 cm | Mini varieties fit closer |
| 🥒 Cucumbers | 2 | 15 cm | Grow vertically on trellis |
| 🫘 Pole beans | 8 | 8–10 cm | Grow vertically; great use of space |
| 🫘 Bush beans | 9 | 10 cm | Plant 3 rounds 3 weeks apart |
| 🫛 Peas | 8 | 8 cm | Plant against trellis or fence |
| 🥬 Lettuce | 4 | 15 cm | Succession sow every 2 weeks |
| 🥬 Kale | 1–2 | 30–45 cm | Harvest outer leaves; long season |
| 🥬 Spinach | 9 | 10 cm | Spring and fall crop; bolts in heat |
| 🥬 Swiss chard | 4 | 15 cm | Very productive; tolerates light frost |
| 🥕 Carrots | 16 | 8 cm | Need 30+ cm deep bed |
| 🔴 Radishes | 16 | 8 cm | Ready in 25 days; excellent gap filler |
| 🧅 Onions | 9 | 10 cm | Start sets early; plant before last frost |
| 🧄 Garlic | 9 | 10 cm | Plant in fall for summer harvest |
| 🔴 Beets | 9 | 10 cm | Eat both roots and greens |
| 🌿 Basil | 1 | 30 cm | Plant near tomatoes; harvest regularly |
| 🌿 Parsley | 3–4 | 15 cm | Biennial; overwinters in mild areas |
| 🌿 Dill | 4 | 15 cm | Succession sow; attracts beneficial insects |
| 🌸 Marigolds | 1–4 | 15–30 cm | Pest deterrent; plant at bed corners |
Example: Complete 4×4 Canadian Raised Bed Plan
A 4×4 ft (1.2m × 1.2m) raised bed is 16 square feet — the ideal starter size. It's large enough to be productive, small enough to maintain comfortably, and every square is reachable without stepping into the bed. Here's a complete planting plan designed for Canadian growing seasons:
94 plants in 16 square feet (1.5m²). North side = tall plants (trellis for cucumbers); south side = short crops to avoid shading.
Layout tip: In Canada, place tall plants (tomatoes, cucumbers on trellises, beans on poles) on the north side of the bed. This prevents them from shading the shorter plants on the south side during our lower-angle summer sun. Place cold-tolerant crops (lettuce, spinach, kale) where they'll get some afternoon shade in July to extend their harvest season.
How to Build Your First Square Foot Raised Bed
A 4×4 ft (1.2m × 1.2m) bed is the standard starting size — every square is reachable without stepping in. Use untreated cedar (rot-resistant, widely available at Canadian Tire and Home Depot) or pine for lumber. Minimum depth: 20 cm (8 inches) for most vegetables; 30 cm (12 inches) for root crops. No bottom is needed — place directly on grass or existing soil.
Mel Bartholomew's recommended mix for square foot gardens: ⅓ finished compost, ⅓ peat moss (or coco coir — more sustainable), ⅓ coarse vermiculite. This creates perfectly draining, nutrient-rich, lightweight soil that never compacts. Don't use garden soil or topsoil — it's too heavy and compacts in raised beds. Calculate how much mix you need with our Soil Calculator before purchasing.
Divide your bed into 30 cm (1-foot) squares using string, wood lath, or vinyl mini-blinds laid flat. The grid is what makes the system work — it provides a clear visual reference for planting, helps you avoid overcrowding, and makes succession planting easy (when one square is harvested, you can immediately see exactly where to replant).
Not all vegetables go in at the same time. In a Canadian garden, cold-tolerant crops (lettuce, spinach, peas, radishes, onions) can go in 2–4 weeks before your last frost. Warm-season crops (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, beans, basil) go in after your last frost. Plan which squares will be planted first, which will replace early crops mid-season, and which will be kept for fall succession plantings.
Succession Planting — Maximize Canada's Short Season
The biggest mistake Canadian square foot gardeners make is treating the bed as static — planting everything in May and leaving it until fall. Succession planting means replanting squares as crops finish, extending your harvest and preventing the mid-summer gap that many gardens experience.
5 Common Square Foot Gardening Mistakes
The spacing recommendations exist because that's how much space each plant needs to reach its mature size. Squeezing plants closer causes competition for nutrients and water, reduces airflow (increasing disease), and typically produces lower total yield than proper spacing would. Trust the numbers.
Regular soil compacts in raised beds within one season, cutting off oxygen to roots and creating standing water. Mel's Mix never compacts because its structure is maintained by vermiculite and organic matter. Yes, it costs more upfront — but you only fill the bed once, and you add compost annually to maintain it.
In Canada, the sun travels a southern arc across the sky. Tall plants (tomatoes, staked cucumbers, pole beans) placed on the south side of the bed will cast shadows over everything behind them. Always put your tallest plants on the north side so they cast shade behind them rather than over their neighbours.
In a 4×4 bed, your most productive squares will be the ones with vertical crops: cucumbers, pole beans, and peas on a trellis produce far more food per square foot than any horizontal crop. A trellis along the north side of your bed doubles its effective production capacity.
When peas finish in July, radishes mature in 25 days — that square sits empty while there's 3 months of growing season left. Have a succession planting plan ready: know what's going into each square after the current crop is pulled. Radishes, quick greens, and beans can all fill gaps between longer-season crops.
Frequently Asked Questions
How deep should a square foot garden raised bed be?
Most vegetables do well in 20–25 cm (8–10 inches) of depth. For root vegetables — carrots, parsnips, and large beets — you need at least 30 cm (12 inches), ideally 35–40 cm. A deeper bed also retains more moisture and stays warmer, which is an advantage in Canadian springs. If you're building on a hard surface (concrete, gravel, decking), go deeper — 30 cm minimum — because roots can't penetrate into the subsoil below.
Can I do square foot gardening without a raised bed?
Yes — the spacing principles work in any well-prepared garden bed, in-ground or raised. However, raised beds offer significant advantages in Canada: they drain better in our often-wet springs, warm up faster in May, and give you complete control over soil quality regardless of what's underneath. If starting from scratch, a raised bed filled with quality mix is easier than amending in-ground soil. If you have good existing garden soil, simply apply the square foot spacing approach to your existing beds by dividing them into squares with string or markers.
What size raised bed should I start with in Canada?
The 4×4 ft (1.2×1.2m) bed is the classic starting size — it's manageable, productive, and all squares are reachable without stepping in. If you have a bit more space and energy, a 4×8 ft (1.2×2.4m) bed is even more productive and the same easy management. Resist the urge to start with a very large bed — experienced gardeners routinely advise beginners to start small. A well-managed 4×4 bed will teach you more and produce more than a neglected 8×12 bed.
How do I deal with Canadian frost in a square foot garden?
The narrow raised bed format makes season extension easy. A simple PVC hoop tunnel (flexible piping pushed into the soil along the bed edges) draped with frost cloth or clear plastic extends your season by 3–4 weeks on each end. In most Canadian cities, this means you can have lettuce and greens in April instead of May, and keep harvesting kale and Swiss chard until November instead of September. Cold frames over your raised bed function similarly. Find your exact frost dates with our Frost Date Calculator.
Plan Your Square Foot Garden
Free tools to calculate spacing, soil volume, frost dates, and more