Getting the right number of plants in the ground is one of the highest-leverage planting decisions. This tool turns your row spacing and in-row seed spacing into a precise plants-per-acre figure and compares it to your target so you can calibrate the planter before the field is committed.
How it works
Every plant occupies a rectangle of soil. Dividing the area of one acre by that rectangle gives the population:
area per plant (sq in) = row spacing × in-row spacing
plants per acre = 6,272,640 / area per plant
where 6,272,640 is the number of square inches in one acre (43,560 sq ft × 144). If you enter seeds per foot instead of spacing, the tool converts it as in-row spacing = 12 / seeds per foot before applying the same formula.
Example and tips
Corn in 30-inch rows with a seed every 6.5 inches gives an area per plant of 30 × 6.5 = 195 sq in, so 6,272,640 / 195 ≈ 32,167 plants per acre. To hit a 34,000 target you would tighten in-row spacing slightly. Always run a few stand counts after emergence and multiply your seeding population by expected emergence to judge the real harvestable stand.