Best Soaker Hoses for Garden Beds
Soaker hoses are the old reliable: a length of porous rubber or punched poly tubing that weeps water along its full length when the tap is on. Less precise than drip, less expensive than smart irrigation, and entirely good enough for shrub borders, hedge plantings and informal vegetable beds. They're our default for any planting we won't change much for the next five years.
Our team’s top picks
Rocky Mountain Goods Soaker Hose 50 ft
- Recycled rubber, even weep rate
- 50 ft length, joinable
- Drinking-water safe
- Best build at the price
Gilmour Flat Weeper/Sprinkler Hose
- Flat tape design — store flat
- Two-mode (sprinkler or soaker)
- Good for narrow border use
- Honest value
Dramm ColorStorm Soaker Hose
- Heavy-duty rubber
- Brass fittings
- Lifetime warranty
- Made in USA
Bionic Coil Soaker Hose
- Spring-coiled storage form
- Less likely to bake-bond when buried
- UV-stable polymer
- Compact storage
Aqua Joe AJSH50 Recycled-Rubber Soaker Hose
- 50 ft, joinable to 200 ft total
- Even seepage along length
- Recycled rubber sustainability story
- Good for hedge irrigation
What to look for in a soaker hose for garden beds
- Recycled-rubber soaker hoses are the long-time standard — the porous wall weeps evenly.
- Flat-tape soaker hoses are cheaper but less even and more prone to clogging.
- Snake the hose, don't coil it — water flows further and more evenly along straight runs.
- Limit run length to 25 m (longer runs starve at the far end).
- Cover with mulch — UV degrades exposed rubber within a season.
Frequently asked questions
How long should I run a soaker hose?
Most beds want 30–60 minutes per session, twice a week in summer. Stick a finger 50 mm deep — if it's damp, that's enough.
Soaker hose or drip irrigation?
Soaker for established shrubs, hedges and informal beds — cheap, simple, even. Drip for vegetables, containers and anything you replant often — more precise per plant.
Why is my soaker hose only weeping at one end?
Pressure is too low for the length, the far end has clogged with sediment, or the upstream end is over-emitting. Add a flow restrictor at the tap (or just a half-open ball valve) and consider a Y-filter.
Can I bury a soaker hose under mulch?
Absolutely — and you should. Mulch protects the rubber from UV degradation. Don't bury it in soil though; roots grow into it and clog the pores.
Bottom line
If you only take one thing from this guide, it is that quality matters more than spec on paper. The picks above have been chosen because our team uses them or trusts them — not because they are the most expensive or have the flashiest marketing. Buy once, garden often.



