XTRAW Tools
Free calculators, converters, generators, and simple apps for everyday decisions.
Garden Water Calculator helps you calculate water needed for a vegetable or flower garden. Use this free browser-based calculator from XTRAW Tools to compare inputs, estimate results, and plan your next step.
Calculate water needed for a vegetable or flower garden. It is designed for homeowners, renters, sustainability users, gardeners, students, science learners, energy planners, households, and environmental planning users who want a fast browser-based estimate before relying on official calculators, utility bills, weather stations, climate data, professional reports, supplier guidance, or regulatory sources.
People use this calculator when they need a quick way to estimate weekly and seasonal garden watering needs.
gal/week = length × width × inches/week × 0.623
Example inputs: Garden Length: 20 ft; Garden Width: 10 ft; Water per Week: 1.5 inches; Watering Days per Week: 3; Growing Season: 16 weeks
Example result: Using the default inputs, garden water need is about 187 gallons/week, 62 gallons per watering day, and 2,990 gallons for the growing season.
Yes. This calculator is free to use on XTRAW Tools.
No. XTRAW tools are designed for browser-based use without requiring an account.
Results may be estimates depending on the inputs, formula, rounding, assumptions, local conditions, factor sources, measurement method, and purpose of the calculator. Always verify important results before relying on them.
Disclaimer: This calculator is provided for general informational, educational, and convenience purposes only. It is not environmental consulting, regulatory, legal, tax, carbon accounting, engineering, water-rights, safety, energy-audit, sustainability certification, investment, or professional advice. Emission factors, water factors, solar assumptions, weather assumptions, local climate, utility rates, and environmental methods can vary by region and source. Always verify important results with qualified professionals, official calculators, utility data, local authorities, regulatory guidance, and authoritative sources before relying on them.