| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Made from | Shredded recycled tyres |
| Lifespan | 10+ years (doesn’t decompose) |
| Weed suppression | Excellent |
| Soil improvement | None — adds no nutrients or organic matter |
| Safety concerns | Contains heavy metals and chemicals that leach over time |
| Cost | High upfront (£8–15 per bag), but long-lasting |
| Our recommendation | Avoid in gardens; consider only for playgrounds with proper specification |
What Is Rubber Mulch?
Rubber mulch is made from shredded recycled vehicle tyres. The rubber is processed into nuggets, chips or shreds, sometimes dyed brown, red or black to resemble natural mulch. It’s marketed as a permanent, maintenance-free alternative to bark and wood chips.
The concept is appealing: use a waste product (tyres) to create a mulch that never needs replacing. In reality, the environmental and health trade-offs make rubber mulch a poor choice for most garden situations, despite its undeniable durability.
The Pros of Rubber Mulch
To give a balanced view, rubber mulch does have genuine advantages in specific applications:
- Extremely long-lasting. Rubber doesn’t decompose. A single application lasts 10+ years, compared to 2–3 years for bark mulch. Over a decade, the total cost can be lower than repeatedly buying organic mulch.
- Excellent weed suppression. The dense, heavy material blocks light effectively and creates a hostile surface for weed seeds. It outperforms most organic mulches for pure weed prevention, though even thick rubber layers won’t stop persistent weeds like dandelions that push up through gaps.
- Impact absorption. Rubber mulch is widely used under playground equipment for safety surfacing. It cushions falls better than bark chips or gravel and meets relevant BS EN safety standards when installed at the correct depth.
- Doesn’t float or wash away. Heavier than bark, rubber mulch stays in place during heavy rain and on slopes where organic mulches would migrate.
- No pest harbourage. Unlike organic mulches, rubber doesn’t attract slugs, termites or other pests. There’s nothing for them to eat or nest in.
The Cons: Why We Don’t Recommend It for Gardens
The disadvantages of rubber mulch in garden settings are significant:
Chemical leaching. Recycled tyres contain zinc, cadmium, chromium and other heavy metals, plus polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Research shows these chemicals leach into soil and groundwater over time, particularly in acidic soils and with increased rainfall. In a garden where you’re growing food or encouraging soil biology, this is concerning.
Zero soil benefit. Organic mulches feed your soil as they decompose — improving structure, adding nutrients and supporting earthworms and microorganisms. Rubber does none of this. Soil under rubber mulch becomes increasingly sterile over time, with declining earthworm populations and reduced biological activity. For properly mulching ornamental plants, this soil degradation is particularly damaging.
Heat retention. Rubber absorbs and retains heat far more than organic mulch. On hot summer days, rubber mulch can become significantly hotter than the surrounding air, potentially stressing plant roots and making the garden uncomfortable. This is the opposite of what organic mulch does — natural mulch insulates and moderates soil temperature.
Smell in hot weather. Rubber mulch gives off a noticeable tyre smell in warm weather, especially when new. This isn’t just unpleasant — it indicates volatile chemicals are being released into the air. Like other common mulch problems, odour is a sign something’s wrong — but unlike organic issues, rubber’s chemical smell can’t be fixed.
Fire risk. Contrary to intuition, rubber mulch is more flammable than wood mulch. Once ignited, it burns hotter, faster and produces toxic smoke. Several high-profile playground fires have been linked to rubber mulch ignition.
Impossible to remove completely. Because rubber doesn’t decompose, removing it years later means physically extracting every piece from the soil. Small fragments work their way into the ground and become permanent contaminants.
Not truly “eco-friendly.” While recycling tyres sounds green, turning them into garden mulch simply relocates the pollution problem from landfill to your soil. The chemicals in tyres don’t disappear because they’ve been shredded.
Better Alternatives to Rubber Mulch
For every garden application where rubber mulch is suggested, there’s a better natural alternative like straw mulch as a natural alternative for vegetable gardens or bark for ornamental beds:
| If You Want | Use Instead | Why It’s Better |
|---|---|---|
| Long-lasting weed control | Bark mulch (8–10 cm) | Lasts 2–3 years, feeds soil, looks natural |
| Permanent low-maintenance cover | Gravel or slate chips | Permanent, inert, no chemical leaching |
| Maximum weed suppression | Cardboard + bark mulch | Double barrier, biodegradable, improves soil |
| Play area surfacing | Bark play chips (BS EN 1177) | Natural, safe, widely available, affordable |
| Slope stability | Bark nuggets or cobbles | Heavy enough to stay put, natural appearance |
For maximum weed control without rubber, combine a targeted weed killer to clear existing weeds, then apply 8–10 cm of quality bark mulch. For tough perennial weeds like bindweed, a professional-strength herbicide ensures roots are killed before you mulch. If you want season-long results, a long-lasting residual weed killer underneath your bark layer adds extra protection. This approach matches rubber mulch for weed suppression while actively improving your garden’s soil health. Top up every 2–3 years — check our guide on how often to apply mulch for the right schedule.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is rubber mulch safe for vegetable gardens?
No. The heavy metals and chemicals that leach from recycled tyres can be absorbed by plant roots and enter the food chain. Never use rubber mulch in any area where you grow edible plants. Use organic mulch materials for vegetable gardens, and if you face invasive perennial weeds such as ground elder in edible beds, pelargonic acid is a safe organic weed control option.
Does rubber mulch attract snakes or insects?
Rubber mulch doesn’t attract insects because there’s nothing organic for them to feed on. In the UK, snake attraction isn’t a practical concern. However, rubber mulch retains heat, which could theoretically attract any heat-seeking creatures in warmer climates.
How long does rubber mulch last?
Rubber mulch doesn’t decompose, so it lasts indefinitely in terms of physical presence — 10, 20, even 30+ years. However, it does degrade slowly through UV exposure, becoming brittle and fragmenting into smaller pieces that work into the soil and become impossible to remove.
Is rubber mulch banned in the UK?
Rubber mulch is not banned for garden use in the UK, though the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) has raised concerns about PAH levels in recycled rubber products. Some local authorities have moved away from rubber mulch in public playgrounds in favour of natural alternatives. The regulatory picture is evolving.
Can I put rubber mulch over landscape fabric?
You can, and some installers recommend landscape fabric underneath to prevent rubber fragments working into the soil. However, combining two synthetic, non-biodegradable materials creates an even less natural growing environment. For garden borders, natural bark over cardboard is a far better combination.
What’s the best mulch if I want low maintenance?
If minimal maintenance is your priority, bark nuggets or gravel are the best natural options. Bark nuggets last 2–3 years and only need topping up, not replacing. Gravel is truly permanent and maintenance-free — without any of rubber mulch’s chemical concerns.






