Know how many trays you really need. Choose cells per tray, rates, and buffers easily. See totals instantly, then download a clean report now.
Enter values below, then press Calculate. Your results will appear above the form.
It estimates transplants from bed area and plant spacing.
These formulas help you scale trays while accounting for real-world losses.
These examples show how tray counts shift with rates and tray sizes.
| Scenario | Mode | Target Plants | Cells/Tray | Germ % | Survival % | Buffer % | Estimated Trays |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes (steady) | Target | 240 | 128 | 85 | 92 | 10 | 3 |
| Leafy greens (high success) | Target | 600 | 200 | 92 | 96 | 5 | 4 |
| Peppers (lower germination) | Target | 300 | 128 | 70 | 90 | 15 | 5 |
| Bed plan example | Area | ~320 | 104 | 80 | 90 | 10 | 5 |
Tray choice controls watering frequency, root volume, and bench space. Match tray depth to crop vigor and your available transplant window. Common plug formats include 72, 98, 104, 128, and 200 cells. Larger cells support longer holding times and stronger rootballs, while smaller cells increase throughput. This calculator converts your target transplants into trays by dividing the required sowing cells by the tray’s cell count, then rounding up for full trays.
Seed lots rarely deliver perfect emergence. Germination rate estimates the share of sown cells that sprout, and survival rate estimates the share that remain transplantable after thinning, culling, and disease pressure. Multiplying these rates gives expected viable transplants per cell. Using realistic values (for example 70–95% germination and 85–98% survival) reduces surprises on transplant day.
A planned buffer reduces risk from weather delays, pests, and uneven growth. Many growers add 5–15% for field replacements, late orders, and succession planting. The calculator applies buffer after adjusting for losses, so buffer plants represent real “extras,” not just compensation for poor emergence. Track your historical overage to refine buffer levels by crop and season.
When you start from bed dimensions, the calculator estimates plant count using area per plant (in-row spacing × between-row spacing). This helps align nursery output with field capacity and prevents overcrowding. Conservative rounding can reduce plant count slightly to protect airflow and reduce disease. Planning rounding can be used when exact counts are required for sales bundles or rotation maps.
Nursery bottlenecks often come from staging space. Optional shelf planning estimates trays per shelf by testing both orientations and selecting the best fit. Combine this with your watering and hardening schedule to avoid stacking trays too densely. Recording shelves needed alongside trays and seeds creates a simple checklist for media, labeling, and labor allocation. It improves consistency across sowing batches.
It is the number of tray cells you should seed after adjusting for germination, survival, and your buffer. Multiply it by seeds per cell to estimate total seeds required.
Start with 85% germination, 92% survival, and a 10% buffer. After two production cycles, replace defaults with your measured results for each crop and season.
Use 2–3 seeds for tiny seed, uneven emergence, or critical deadlines. Plan to thin to one strong seedling. If you increase seeds per cell, consider reducing buffer to control cost.
It computes total bed area from length, width, and bed count, then divides by area per plant (in-row spacing × between-row spacing). Conservative rounding reduces crowding; planning rounding supports exact order targets.
Because even a partially filled set of cells needs a physical tray. Rounding up prevents shortages and keeps tray handling, labeling, and watering consistent.
Enter your tray and shelf dimensions, and the calculator tests both tray orientations to maximize fit. Use trays per shelf and shelves needed to plan staging, airflow, and daily watering workflow.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.