Raised beds are an ideal environment for drip irrigation. The limited soil volume dries out quickly, and a drip system delivers water right to the root zone without wetting foliage. This reduces disease risk and saves up to 50% of water compared to hand watering.

Why drip is the best choice for raised beds

  • Efficiency — water goes directly to the root zone with minimal evaporation
  • Plant health — dry foliage means fewer fungal diseases (blight, powdery mildew)
  • Uniformity — every plant receives the same amount of water
  • Automation — a timer or controller runs the watering without you
  • Savings — 2–4 L/h per emitter vs 10–15 L/min from a garden hose

Emitter spacing by crop type

CropEmitter spacingLines per 1.2 m bed
Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant30–45 cm2 lines (30 cm from edge)
Lettuce, spinach, arugula15–20 cm3 lines (evenly spaced)
Herbs (basil, parsley, dill)20–30 cm3 lines
Carrots, beets, radishes15–20 cm3–4 lines
Zucchini, cucumbers40–50 cm2 lines
Strawberries25–30 cm3 lines

Layout example: 1.2 × 2.4 m bed with 3 drip lines

A typical raised bed with 3 runs of 16 mm drip tape:

  1. Main line — 20 mm PE pipe along the short side of the bed
  2. Connectors — 3 barbed fittings (20→16 mm) with shut-off valves per line
  3. Drip lines — 3 parallel tapes, each 2.4 m long, with emitters every 20 cm
  4. End caps — at the end of each tape (or fold and clamp)
  5. Filter — 120–150 mesh screen filter before the main line

For connectors and basic fittings use budget Generic components (PE 20→16 mm, end caps, shut-off valves).

Total flow: ~18 emitters × 2 L/h = 36 L/h per bed. Run time: 20–40 minutes depending on soil and weather. Recommended tape: Netafim UniRam or DripNet PC — pressure-compensating for uniform delivery along the entire bed length.

Pressure regulation

Drip tape operates at 0.7–1.4 bar (10–20 PSI). Typical mains supply is 2–4 bar, so you must install a pressure regulator before the filter. Without it, emitters spray instead of drip, the tape balloons, and fails prematurely.

Timer or controller

For 1–3 beds, a simple hose-end timer (~$10–20) is enough. For 4+ beds, use a multi-zone controller (Hunter, Rain Bird, or OpenSprinkler for IoT integration). Typical schedule: twice daily for 20 minutes in hot weather, once for 30 minutes in cooler conditions.

Mulch over drip lines

After laying the tape, cover it with 5–7 cm of mulch (straw, wood chips, bark). This further reduces evaporation by 25–30%, suppresses weeds, and protects the tape from UV degradation.

How SmartPluvia helps

In our online planner, switch to Drip mode, enter your bed dimensions, and the system will automatically calculate the number of lines, emitter spacing, and total flow rate.