Plant individual garlic cloves so the top of each clove sits about 2 inches (5 cm) below the soil surface in most home gardens.

Quick Scoop

  • A good general rule is to plant garlic 1–3 inches deep from clove tip to soil surface, with 2 inches as a reliable sweet spot.
  • In colder climates or if you use little to no mulch, go a bit deeper (around 3 inches from top of clove to soil surface) for extra winter protection.
  • In milder climates or raised beds that drain well, you can stay toward the shallow end (about 1–2 inches deep) so shoots emerge easily in spring.

Why Depth Matters

  • Planting too shallow can leave cloves exposed to freezing, heaving, or drying out, which can stunt bulbs or kill them.
  • Planting too deep can delay emergence and slightly reduce vigor, though many gardeners still get usable bulbs even at 4 inches or more.

Simple Rule Of Thumb

  • Use the classic bulb rule: plant at a depth about 2–3 times the height of the clove, measured from the top of the clove to the soil surface.
  • After planting, cover the bed with 2–6 inches of mulch (leaves, straw, etc.), going heavier in very cold or exposed spots.

Quick Step‑By‑Step

  1. Separate the bulb into individual cloves, keeping the papery skin on each clove.
  1. Make holes so that, once covered, the clove tip will be about 2 inches below the soil surface.
  1. Set each clove pointy side up, 4–8 inches apart, then backfill and gently firm the soil.
  1. Water once to settle the soil, then mulch for winter protection and weed suppression.

Tiny Forum‑Style Take

Most backyard growers end up happiest in the middle ground: not barely under the surface, not buried in a grave—just a solid 2 inches of soil over the clove, plus a cozy mulch blanket for winter.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.