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Compost Bin Size Calculator
Recommendation: 4x4x4 ft pile/bin (~64 cu ft) or dual-chamber tumbler (~10 cu ft).
Tumbler vs pile: an open pile or large bin handles higher yard-waste volume better; a tumbler can still help finish batches in 4–8 weeks.
Kitchen scraps contribute 3.5 lb/wk; yard waste adds 2.5 lb/wk. Material compresses roughly 4:1 as it breaks down.
Composting at home processes about 30% of household waste by weight (food scraps, yard debris, paper towels) into nutrient-rich soil amendment instead of landfill methane. The right bin size depends on your weekly input volume, which scales with household size, cooking habits, and yard size. Common mistake: undersizing (bin fills in 6 weeks, stops being usable, you give up) or oversizing (bin is half-empty for a year, decomposition stalls because not enough critical mass for heat). The sweet spot for most households is a 3-6 cubic foot active bin with a second batch curing alongside.
The calculator takes household size, cooking frequency (eat-out only / cook-some / cook- most-meals), and yard size (apartment / small / medium / large / acreage), then estimates weekly waste volume and recommends bin dimensions plus type. Tumbler bins (compact, rodent-proof, easy turning, faster composting at 4-8 weeks): right for small households (1-3 people), apartments, and urban yards where rodent concerns or visual aesthetics matter. Open pile / 3-bin system (larger capacity, requires manual turning, slower at 6-12 months): right for households with significant yard waste, suburban / rural settings, and gardeners who want bulk compost output. Worm bins (vermicomposting): right for indoor / apartment composting of food scraps only.
Composting fundamentals the calculator accounts for: (1) Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio target 25:1 to 30:1 — “browns” (dry leaves, straw, paper) provide carbon; “greens” (food scraps, fresh grass, coffee grounds) provide nitrogen. (2) Critical-mass requirement: piles under 27 cubic feet (3x3x3 ft) often don't generate enough heat to compost efficiently — they decompose, but slowly and at lower temperatures, not killing weed seeds or pathogens. (3) Active vs curing: a working bin is processing fresh inputs; a curing bin is finishing decomposition. Two-bin or tumbler-with-pile setups solve this. Don't add fresh material to nearly-finished compost — restarts the clock.
Nasıl Kullanılır
- Enter household size (number of people producing food waste).
- Pick cooking frequency: eat out mostly / cook sometimes / cook most meals.
- Set yard size: apartment / small (under 0.1 acre) / medium / large (0.5+ acre) / acreage.
- Read recommended bin size (cubic feet) and bin type (tumbler / open pile / 3-bin / worm).
- Plan for two-stage processing: active bin + curing batch alongside.
Ne Zaman Kullanılır
- Starting backyard composting and need to size the right system.
- Upgrading from a too-small bin that fills constantly.
- Switching from indoor worm bin to outdoor system as scale grows.
- Multi-household composting (small farm, community garden) needing capacity planning.
- Comparing compost system options before purchase.
Ne Zaman Kullanılmaz
- Industrial / commercial composting — different scale entirely; consult a composting engineer.
- Apartment-only composting with no outdoor space — use vermicomposting (worm bin) tools instead.
- Vermicomposting-specific sizing (red wiggler population per square foot of bin surface) — different math.
- Bokashi anaerobic systems — those use airtight containers and have different sizing rules.
Yaygın Kullanım Senaryoları
- Onboarding a colleague who needs the same calculation/conversion
- Verifying a number or output before passing it on
- Quick calculation during a typical workday
- Pre-decision sanity-check on inputs and outputs
Sık Sorulan Sorular
Tumbler vs open pile — which should I choose?
Tumbler advantages: rodent-proof (sealed), aesthetically clean, faster (4-8 weeks vs 6-12 months), easy turning. Disadvantages: limited capacity (typical tumbler 5-9 cubic feet), more expensive ($100-300), can't add new material once near-full. Open pile advantages: unlimited capacity, free / cheap (build with pallets), accepts continuous additions. Disadvantages: rodents, slow, requires manual turning. Tumbler for urban / small households; pile for suburban gardeners with significant yard waste.
What can't I compost?
Avoid: meat, fish, dairy, oils (smell, attract rodents, slow decomposition); diseased plants (spreads pathogens); pet waste from carnivores (zoonotic disease risk); glossy paper / chemically-treated wood (chemicals); persistent weeds with seedheads (small home piles don't reach hot enough to kill seeds). Yes: vegetable scraps, fruit peels, coffee grounds, eggshells, tea bags, dry leaves, grass clippings, straw, plant trimmings, shredded newspaper, cardboard.
How long does compost take?
Hot composting (turning frequently, optimal C:N ratio, critical mass): 4-8 weeks. Warm composting (occasional turning, decent C:N): 3-6 months. Cold composting (no turning, just pile and wait): 6-18 months. Tumbler typically gives hot composting due to forced aeration and contained heat. Open pile depends on management — diligent suburban gardener can get hot composting; lazy pile gets cold composting eventually.
Why isn't my pile heating up?
Common causes: (1) Too small — under 3x3x3 ft (27 cu ft) doesn't retain heat. (2) Too dry — should be moist like a wrung-out sponge. (3) Too wet — anaerobic, smells like ammonia. (4) Wrong C:N ratio — too much brown (slow), too much green (smelly, anaerobic). (5) Not turned — outer material doesn't reach the hot center. Fix: build to critical mass, balance browns/greens 2-3:1 by volume, water if dry, turn weekly.
How much compost will I produce?
Roughly 30-40% of input volume comes out as finished compost (the rest evaporates as water and CO2 during decomposition). So a 6-cubic-foot bin processed twice per year yields roughly 4-5 cubic feet of finished compost annually — enough to top-dress a 100-200 sq ft garden bed. Larger systems / multiple turns yield proportionally more.
Can I compost in winter?
Yes, but slower. Cold weather slows microbial activity dramatically — what takes 6 weeks in summer takes 4-6 months in winter. Insulated tumblers and large piles (which retain their own heat) work better in winter than small open bins. Some composters keep two bins: one outdoor for warm-weather composting, one indoor (kitchen worm bin) for winter food scraps. Either way, don't expect winter additions to break down until spring.