This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through links on our site, we may earn a commission.
You’re excited to grow a vegetable garden. You’ve built your raised bed in a space that gets at least six to eight hours of sunlight a day, and filled it with soil. How do you figure out how much to grow? I thought I would put together a 4×8 raised bed vegetable garden layout to show how much can be planted in a raised bed. I ended up creating a couple because I had fun planting all those virtual veggies!
Deciding what to plant in a small vegetable garden layout
I like to recommend starting with your grocery list. What items show up week after week? For me, that means lettuce and other greens, like spinach, Swiss chard, kale, and baby bok choy, cucumbers, onions, a variety of herbs, peppers (I usually plant at least one hot pepper to make habanero jelly, and a variety of other sweet peppers), the odd root veggie, like beets and carrots. One thing that doesn’t show up often on my grocery list are tomatoes. But that’s not because I don’t like them. They just can’t compare to the ones you grow yourself (or get at the farmers’ market in the summer). So tomatoes are always on my list to plant. And I often grow way more than I need—any extras get frozen for winter meals.

I also recommend planting at least one new-to-you veggie. It’s fun to watch it grow and then give it a taste test at the end of the season. While it’s easy to get carried away and want to grow all the things, you only have room for so much. I always seem to end up with more seedlings and seeds than I have space for. That’s why my raised bed collection and assortment of pots has increased over the years. What to do with any extra seedlings you have? Don’t let them go to waste! Tuck them into a perennial garden or a pot.
Figuring out spacing in a raised bed
Read your seed packets (or plant tags) carefully. They should provide the height and width of mature plants, as well as spacing recommendations. Keep in mind one of the benefits of raised garden beds is you can plant veggies more closely together (this is called intensive planting or gardening), rather than in rows, like a traditional in-ground garden. This also helps keep the weeds down and can reduce the need to water as often. You do want to keep an eye on your garden and thin plants as they grow to maintain air circulation, which helps prevent diseases.

Many gardeners find Mel Bartholomew’s square foot gardening method helpful. In your raised bed, you divide the space into a grid of 1- x 1-foot squares. Then you follow his plan for how many plants or seeds should be added to each square. The density is based on the plant size. So that might mean one tomato or several carrots. It’s a helpful way for beginners to get organized.
Tips for your vegetable garden plan
*Assess which direction the sun comes from and make sure that you don’t plant tall crops in front of shorter ones. I learned this lesson the hard (funny?) way years ago. A packet of Pastel Dreams zinnias seemed like the perfect flowers to plant them along the front of my one raised bed. For some reason I didn’t read how tall they would get. Well the answer is three to four feet tall! Which means they cast a bit of shade on the veggies behind them at certain points throughout the day. I’m very careful about planting shorter varieties now.
*I always plant columnar basil near some of my tomatoes (I included it in my grocery list plan). It grows to be nice and high, doesn’t get lost in the shade of the tomatoes, and makes a LOT of pesto! Of course there are lots of great varieties of basil to discover.
*Choose compact varieties of plants that sprawl. They may have been bred with containers in mind, but they’re also perfect options for raised beds. If you plant, say a winter squash in your raised bed, it could easily take up the entire garden! However, a compact variety won’t be as much of a hog, and if you strategically plant it, it will cascade over the side. You could also plant your squash in front of the peas… once they’re done, the same trellis can be used to train the squash.
*Use tomato cages around bush varieties of cucumbers that will use the structure to climb.

Sneak in some flowers to attract pollinators and combat plant pests. Some of my faves include alyssum, marigolds, and nasturtiums.
Plan for succession planting
A lot of new green thumbs don’t realize that the veggie planting season doesn’t end when you plant your heat lovers, like tomatoes, cucumbers, and melons. Spaces created in a garden from peas, for example, can be used later in the summer to plant root crops or greens, like Swiss chard and kale, for fall harvests. This is called succession planting.

Also, when you’ve removed, say, your spent pea plants or garlic in the summer, and are getting ready to plant something else, add some compost to the raised bed. This will add some nutrients back into the soil. And now you’re ready to plant more!
I like to plant garlic in one of my raised beds in the fall, but keep in mind you won’t be able to plant in that garlic space until about July, after the garlic is harvested. Thankfully, there are plenty of options you can plant in a new raised bed garden after garlic is pulled, including bush beans, kale, Swiss chard, carrots, and more.
A 4×8 raised bed vegetable garden layout of my grocery list faves
Okay, let’s get to the layout. There are eight rows in this raised bed. For the rows of onions, greens, and root veggies, the photos don’t represent the exact amount planted. They’re just a placeholder to indicate where they go. Based on my grocery list, I would plant two rows of onions; one row with two tomato plants and a columnar basil; one row with three pepper plants (one hot, one snack, one bell—or all the same); a row of kale, spinach or Swiss chard (from seed); a row with two cucumber plants (patio varieties); and a couple of rows of root veggies (from seed). In the diagram, I included beets and carrots, but you could add turnips or radishes. I also snuck in a couple of herbs a curly parsley and a flat-leaf parsley.

A 4×8 raised bed vegetable garden layout for a family
Here’s another layout idea for a family plot. Sow a double row/band of peas or beans with a trellis on the north end. Then, add two rows of onions, a row with two tomato plants (maybe a cherry variety and an slicing tomato), a row with two pepper plants (one hot and one snack), and one snack cucumber (all three in tomato cages), a row with one winter squash (dwarf to go over the edge) and summer squash (plants or seeds)—I loved Burpee’s Lemon Drop squash—and a double row of carrots (from seed).

More raised bed articles:



Hi Tara,
I am confused as the soil we will need for our 4X8 bed. Our local store offers a reasonable professional potting mix soil. Would that work?
Hi Liz, I would look for a bag that says vegetable garden soil rather than potting mix for such a big raised bed. Potting mix is a more lightweight mix that’s formulated for containers.
This is very helpful, especially the grocery store idea. 🙂 My husband just recently built me an elevated planter box (about 2 feet tall 8x4ish). My biggest concern: deer & nighttime critters. Deer regularly hang out on our property (without any vegetables). Where exactly on your diagram would you plant the deer deterrent flowers (around entire perimeter)? Would lavender and/or other herbs around the ends work to deter them as well? We have also purchased wire mesh to go around the sides, however still concerned. thank you!
Hi Jen, I’m not sure the plants would act as a deterrent, the deer just wouldn’t eat them and maybe not find the veggies on the other side. But I think you may want to rely on wire mesh that they can’t leap over.
I used to work at a local hardware store/garden center. The garden experts there always suggested Morganite to deter deer from coming into a space.
We are just now building our raised veg. beds. (ours are 26 inches tall). My question is– I want to attach a watering system to each bed and I’m not sure if I want the sprinkler heads to be just above the soil or way above the bed to water everything. My bed set up has 5ft tall post at the corners and in the middle so putting water up high will be easy. Which will be best for my plants?
Hi Karen,
Watering low, around the base of the plant is preferable, as watering from up high can cause the water to splash in the soil, spreading potential disease to the leaves.
Raised beds are the bomb! As a nurse, I advocate raised beds and containers. Raised beds and containers can mean less bending and stooping, particularly for those of us with back and joint issues.
Great information! 🙂
I have a raised bed that I’ll be using for the first time. If I were to transfer planters in the bed (instead of sowing seeds), how many planters do I need for each vegetable? For example, from the picture I can tell, I need to plant two tomatoes (with one basil in between). Does it mean, I’m planting 22 onions in the first two rows?
Thank you! ❤️
Thanks, Jan. Yes to the tomatoes and basil. For onions, it can be trickier depending on size – green onion vs a big red onion, for example. The plant tags should provide spacing information so you know how much distance you should measure between each plant. 🙂
I’m in north idaho and planting my first raised garden beds. This might be impossible to answer but how often should I water in the dry months? Is it like everyday or just a couple times a week? It will all be done with a hose
Hi Harriet, I find I’m typically watering every day in the dry months. Unless I get a nice big rainfall. But you can also tell by feel. If you put your finger in the soil and it’s totally dry, you know you should water.
Is it ok to have a weed barrier underneath?
I just bought a 3 tiered garden bed, 4×4 on bottom tier, 3×4 on middle tier, then 2×4 on top. Leaves approx 1×4 of space for bottom and middle tier, and about 2×4 on the top. Which vegetables would be best for each tier? Was thinking of carrots, onions, strawberries, peppers, kale, cucumbers. Thank you for any help
Keeping in mind the strawberries are perennial, I would maybe plant those in the top, so they can cascade over the sides. Maybe the cucumbers in the second tier, so they can also cascade, peppers in the front, and then the carrots, onions, and kale, in the spaces that are left on the bottom two…
Question, do the raised beds have bottoms or is it just the garden dirt?
Thanks for the advice. Just finished watching a show on pbs about your gardening.
Hi Kathryn, they are bottomless, it’s just dirt underneath. 🙂
I love the visuals…thanks! I just got your book Gardening Your Front Yard. If you saw my front yard, you’d know why!
Thanks, Valerie! Best of luck with your front yard garden plans. 🙂
Thank you for detailing all these great planting ideas! How do you water your beds? If you use irrigation lines, do you plant around these?
Hi Laura, Believe it or not, I cart around watering cans. I don’t have an irrigation system, but yes, you would plant around the lines. 🙂