Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Garden area | Intensity | Composting | Bins | Season | Suggested frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 300 sq ft | Low | 60% | 1 × 240L | Normal | Every two weeks |
| 900 sq ft | Medium | 35% | 1 × 240L | Wet | Weekly |
| 1500 sq ft | High | 10% | 2 × 240L | Peak | Twice per week |
These examples are illustrative. Local rules and waste density vary.
Formula Used
The calculator estimates weekly waste volume, then divides by usable bin capacity per pickup. It uses simple multipliers so you can adjust inputs and see the impact.
- Yard waste (L/week) = Area(m²) × BaseIntensity(L/m²/week) × SeasonMultiplier
- Yard after composting = Yard waste × (1 − Composting%)
- Extra leaf volume = LeafBags × BagVolume
- Total weekly waste = (Yard after composting + Household + Extra) × (1 + Penalty%)
- Capacity per pickup = BinSize × BinCount × TargetFill%
- Pickups per week = Total weekly waste ÷ Capacity per pickup
Household volume is estimated using household size, and also cross-checked against your yard-share setting to stay conservative.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your garden area and choose the correct unit.
- Select care intensity and the current season level.
- Set your bin size, number of bins, and target fill level.
- Add composting diversion and any extra leaf bags.
- Click Calculate to see your recommended pickup frequency.
- Use CSV or PDF to save results for planning.
Matching pickups to garden cycles
Garden waste is not steady throughout the year. Pruning, mowing, harvest cleanup, and leaf fall can double your weekly volume for short periods. This calculator helps you treat pickup frequency as a seasonal setting, not a fixed habit. When growth speeds up, plan extra pickups or increase diversion so bins stay manageable and curb presentation remains consistent. If your hauler limits weekly service, shift volume by composting, bundling branches, or staging cleanup across days.
Translating area and intensity into volume
Area alone does not predict curbside load. A small garden with heavy trimming can produce more clippings than a larger space with light maintenance. The model converts your area to square meters, applies an intensity rate, then multiplies by a seasonal factor. This creates a transparent weekly yard volume you can adjust when your routine changes.
Composting and mulching as demand reducers
On-site composting and mulching reduce what you need to set out, especially when most of your waste is green material. Enter a diversion percentage that reflects what you keep at home. Even modest diversion can shift a weekly pickup recommendation to a biweekly plan. For best results, keep compost piles aerated and return shredded leaves to beds.
Bin capacity, target fill, and overflow risk
Pickup planning should consider usable capacity, not the printed bin size. Wet clippings settle, while bulky debris traps air and wastes space. The target fill level adds a safety margin so lids close comfortably and carts roll easily. Capacity per pickup equals bin size times bin count times target fill. Dividing weekly volume by this capacity yields pickups needed.
Improving reliability with buffers and audits
Real-world waste density varies by moisture, bagging, and how tightly material packs. The penalty factor lets you add a buffer for contamination or bulky items. Recheck your inputs after major yard projects, storms, or seasonal cleanup. Saving results as CSV or PDF makes it easy to track changes over time and justify service adjustments.
FAQs
What if my pickup schedule is fixed by the city?
Use the calculator to see whether your current service is likely to overflow. Then adjust controllable inputs like composting, extra bins, lower target fill, or spreading pruning tasks across weeks.
How do I choose the yard waste share percentage?
Estimate how much of your weekly trash volume comes from garden work versus indoor living. In peak growth or leaf season, raise the share. In dry periods, lower it to reflect more household-driven waste.
Why does the tool use a target fill level?
Bins rarely perform well at 100% fill. A target fill level adds headroom for packing variation, wet clippings, and lid closure. It also reduces missed collections caused by overfilled or unstable carts.
Does bagging leaves change the result?
Yes. Bagging can increase usable density but also adds bulky volume when bags are underfilled. Enter leaf bags per week and typical bag volume to reflect what you set out during cleanup weeks.
How accurate are the household waste assumptions?
Household volume varies by habits, recycling, and packaging. The estimate is conservative and cross-checks against your yard-share setting. If your real bins fill slower or faster, adjust the household size or penalty factor.
What can I do if pickups needed exceed availability?
Increase composting, add bins, reduce bulky items, or split yard projects into smaller sessions. You can also raise target fill slightly if safe, but avoid lid lift and weight limits set by local rules.