Common Uses for Sand
From paver setting beds to volleyball courts, golf bunkers, and masonry mixes, see where the right grade of sand earns its place on a project.
Paver & Flagstone Setting Beds
A screeded layer of sand gives pavers and flagstone a level base to seat into. Spread it over a compacted aggregate base, screed it flat, then set your stone. Concrete and masonry sand are the usual picks because they level cleanly and lock the surface in place.
Volleyball & Beach Courts
Recreation and volleyball sand is washed and graded so it plays soft and clean without packing hard. Build the court over a drainage base and keep a consistent depth so players land safely. It rakes back into shape after a weekend of use.
Golf & Sport Bunkers
Bunker sand is graded for play, holding a ball without crusting over and draining fast after rain. Use it to build or top up a practice bunker or a course hazard. Keep the depth even across the face so the surface stays consistent shot to shot.
Sandboxes & Play Areas
Clean recreation sand is soft for kids and easy to mold. Fill a sandbox or a backyard play area and keep a consistent depth for a comfortable surface. Buy it by the bag for a single box or by the supersack for a larger play space.
Arena & Footing
Graded sand builds the footing layer in a riding arena or work area, cushioning each step without packing hard. Spread it over a stable base and keep the depth even across the ring. Top it up as it settles to hold the cushion you want.
Sand Buying Guide
Pick the right grade for the job, learn placement and mixing tips, and find the sand that works for your project.
Sand spans a wide range of grades, from coarse concrete and masonry sand for mixes and setting beds to washed recreation, bunker, and industrial sands graded for play, filtration, and traction. The right grade depends entirely on the job, so it pays to match the sand to the use.
Browse the full sand collection across every grade. Sand is sold by the bag for small jobs, by the supersack for mid-size projects, and in bulk by the ton for large surfaces.
Sand Grades vs Use Cases
| Material | Best For | Compaction | Drainage | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete / Masonry Sand | Concrete mixes, mortar, paver setting beds | Varies | Good | $ |
| Industrial #12–#30 | Filtration, blasting, traction sanding | Varies | Excellent | $$ |
| Recreation / Volleyball | Courts, sandboxes, play areas | Varies | Excellent | $$ |
| Bunker / Plaster | Golf bunkers, pool plaster mixes | Varies | Excellent | $$$ |
What Contractors Know
- Use a screeded sand bed under pavers. Spread sand over a compacted base, screed it flat to a consistent depth, then set your stone so each piece seats evenly and the surface stays level.
- Bunker and volleyball sands are graded for play, not mixing. They are washed and screened to drain fast and stay soft. Use a concrete or masonry sand when you need sand for mortar or a concrete mix instead.
- Sand is sold by the ton, bag, or supersack. Bags suit small jobs and single sandboxes, supersacks fit a court or play area, and bulk by the ton is the cheapest way to cover a large surface.
- Industrial sands are numbered by grit. A lower number is coarser and a higher number is finer. Match the grit to the job, whether that is filtration, blasting, or traction, so the sand performs the way the spec calls for.
- Keep a consistent depth for paver beds. An even setting bed means every paver sits at the same height. Screed to a fixed depth across the whole area so the finished surface reads flat and stays put.
- Buy by the right unit and use the calculator. Sand comes in bags, supersacks, and bulk by the ton. Use the calculator at the top of this page to size your order, then pick the unit that matches the job.
FAQ
Find the Right Sand for Your Project
Industrial, masonry, and recreation sands in every grade, by the bag, supersack, or ton. Project consultation available.
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