No Dig Landscape Edging vs Traditional Edging | What Actually Keeps Grass Out

No-dig landscape edging creates a clean border on the surface but cannot block grass roots, while traditional in-ground edging uses a subsurface barrier to stop root invasion and hold a straight line for years.

A crisp garden border takes a yard from ragged to manicured in an afternoon. But the wrong edging choice means grass marching into your beds by midsummer — or a line of plastic popping loose after the first mower pass. The tradeoff between no-dig and traditional in-ground edging comes down to one thing: whether you need to keep grass out or just make things look tidy. Here is the real difference, what each can and cannot do, and how to pick the right one for your yard.

No-Dig Landscape Edging: What It Is and What It Does

No-dig edging sits on the surface of the soil. It is typically a flat strip of flexible plastic, rubber, or composite material that stakes into the ground, standing about 1.5 inches tall. Kits like the Dimex NODIG-100 (100 ft with 40 stakes) or the EasyFlex 1001518722 (60 ft roll) install without a shovel — you clear the soil, unroll the strip, and drive stakes through molded slots.

It works best as an aesthetic border: holding mulch in place, separating garden beds from lawn, and creating a clean line around flower beds and walkways. Because it stays above grade, no-dig edging is fast to install and easy to reposition when you redesign a bed.

What no-dig edging cannot do: block grass roots. The strip sits too shallow. Stolon-type grasses — Bermuda, zoysia, St. Augustine — push runners right underneath it and into your beds within weeks. Edge Right’s testing confirms that no-dig edging is simply not designed to stop root invasion.

Traditional In-Ground Edging: The Root Barrier That Works

Traditional edging goes into a trench. Whether you choose plastic, metal, concrete, or stone, the installation calls for a channel 1–2 inches deep, which creates a subsurface wall. Grass roots hit that barrier and turn back — shallow-rooted grasses never cross into the bed.

The depth does more than block roots. It also locks the edging in place against frost heave, mower bumps, and foot traffic. A properly installed metal or rigid plastic border holds its line for years without shifting. For straight runs along driveways or walkways, this matters most. The trench-and-set method is more work upfront, but it delivers the kind of durability no-dig edges cannot match.

Comparing No-Dig vs Traditional Edging: The Key Differences

The table below lays out how each type performs on the factors that matter in a yard.

Factor No-Dig Edging Traditional In-Ground Edging
Installation depth Surface-level (1.5 in height, no subsurface) Subsurface barrier (1–2 in deep)
Blocks grass roots? No — stolon grasses cross underneath Yes — roots hit the barrier and turn
Durability Low — can pop loose from mowers or weather High — locked in place
Install time (300 ft) 1–1.5 hours Half to full day depending on material
Material cost (per linear ft) $1 – $3.50 (plastic/rubber) $1 – $21.50+ depending on material
Best use Mulch borders, decorative beds, curves Straight runs, root-prone zones, hardscape edges
Can be repositioned? Yes — pull stakes and move it Difficult — requires re-trenching

When No-Dig Edging Works (And When It Doesn’t)

No-dig edging is a good choice for raised garden beds, mulched islands, and beds bordered by a walkway where no grass is creeping in from the lawn. It keeps bark and rock mulch contained through rain and wind, and it makes a clean visual break between zones.

It is the wrong choice for any bed where invasive Bermuda or zoysia grows nearby. Those grasses send rhizomes and stolons horizontally across the soil surface — exactly where no-dig edging lives. Within a single season you will be pulling grass out of the bed that crossed right under the strip. The same applies to beds that border a dense lawn: traditional in-ground edging is the only defense.

Strictly surface-level installation works only in low-traffic beds with no invasive grass present.

Cost Comparison: No-Dig vs Traditional Edging Materials

Material cost varies wildly by type, especially on the traditional side. This breakdown covers the 2026 price ranges for each option (materials only, no labor).

Edging Type Material Cost (per linear ft) Best For
No-dig plastic/rubber $1.00 – $4.00 Quick borders, decorative beds, curves
In-ground plastic $1.00 – $3.50 Lawn-to-bed separation, budget projects
In-ground rubber $1.50 – $4.00 Flexible root barrier, playground borders
Aluminum/steel $5.00 – $11.00 Straight runs, driveways, high-traffic zones
Brick $2.50 – $6.50 Garden borders, traditional looks
Concrete (poured) $3.00 – $8.00 Permanent barriers, structural edges
Stone (flagstone) $3.00 – $21.50 Premium decorative borders

How To Install No-Dig Edging the Right Way (So It Doesn’t Pop Loose)

Even a no-dig kit benefits from a few minutes of prep. Here is the sequence that keeps the strip from shifting:

  1. Clear the path. Remove all grass, weeds, mulch, and debris until you reach bare soil. Any organic layer left under the strip will settle and let the edging wobble.
  2. Compact the soil. Walk the path or use a hand tamper to flatten and firm the base. A soft bed leads to shifting.
  3. Cut a shallow channel. Frame It All recommends a 1–2 inch deep trench for stability. This is the single step that turns “no-dig” into “actually stays put.”
  4. Bend the strip for curves. Flex the edging in your hands before setting it down so it takes the curve shape naturally.
  5. Stake at every slot. Drive a stake into every molded hole. On straight runs, that works out to every 2–3 feet. On curves, place a stake every foot to hold the shape.
  6. Use connectors on joints. Every kit includes connectors — use them at every seam. Without connectors, the ends separate during the first rain or mow.

When it is done right, the edging sits flush with the soil surface and the grass line is clean. If you want an edging that is both easier to install and tall enough to stop more aggressive growth, check our picks for 4-inch no-dig edging — the extra height gives stronger resistance against Bermuda and other spreading grasses.

Which Edging Should You Choose?

Match the edging to what you are really fighting. If the goal is a clean mulched border with no invasive grass nearby, no-dig edging is the fast, cheap, easy route. If Bermuda, zoysia, or St. Augustine grows next to the bed — or if you want an edging that stays straight for years — traditional in-ground edging is the only option that delivers. The extra hour of digging a shallow trench beats a weekend every year pulling grass out of the bed.

FAQs

Does no-dig edging stop creeping grass?

No. No-dig edging sits on the surface and has no subsurface barrier. Grasses like Bermuda and zoysia send runners under the strip and into the bed. Traditional in-ground edging in a 1–2 inch trench is required to stop root invasion.

Can I install no-dig edging on a slope?

It is risky. No-dig edging on a slope tends to wash out during heavy rain because the strip has no anchor below the soil line. For slopes, use in-ground metal or rigid plastic edging installed in a deeper trench, or skip edging entirely and use a retaining block system.

How long does no-dig landscape edging last?

Plastic and rubber no-dig edging generally lasts 3–5 years under normal conditions before UV damage and freeze-thaw cycles cause brittleness or warping. Direct sunlight and frequent mower contact shorten that lifespan. Quality materials like recycled polypropylene (used in EasyFlex and Dimex models) last longer than standard PVC blends.

Is no-dig edging cheaper than traditional edging?

Yes on materials — $1 to $3.50 per linear foot versus widely varying traditional costs — and you skip all labor cost with a DIY install. But if you live in a region with invasive grasses and have to replace no-dig edging after its functional 1-2 year lifespan, the upfront savings disappear fast. Traditional edging costs more once but lasts indefinitely.

What happens if I use landscape edging for a paver project?

It fails. Landscape edging is designed for soft garden beds and has minimal structural load capacity. Paver edging (also called hardscape edging) is a thicker, stronger product built to hold pavers in place. The two types are not interchangeable — using landscape edging for a patio or driveway edge leads to shifting pavers and a failed project.

References & Sources

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