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Putting Together Kid's Swing Set - Grass or Rubber Mulch?

Posted on 1/8/25 at 10:40 am
Posted by Mikes My Tiger
Youngsville
Member since Oct 2007
2680 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 10:40 am
I'm about to put together a Backyard Discovery swing set for my little girl. I am considering whether I want to leave it on grass or if I should add a rubber mulch pit. She's only 3 right now so she would mainly just be using the slide and swing with one of us standing right by her. Considering how much we're going to need, it would add about $750-$1000 in costs. I do like the extra padding to protect from a fall and I wouldn't have to worry about maintaining the grass around the swing or it turning into a mud pit eventually. But my wife thinks it's unnecessary and doesn't want the mulch getting everywhere. Does anyone have any experience with this who can offer advice one way or the other? Thanks.

Something like this for reference:

Posted by ChEgrad
Member since Nov 2012
3581 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:01 am to
It has been a long time since I had something like that in my backyard, but I wouldn’t use rubber mulch. It will cause more trouble than it is worth. I don’t remember huge mud problems with ours, but mud is better for kids than rubber anyway. And in a few years when the play set doesn’t get used much anymore, you won’t have to remove the rubber.
Posted by ItzMe1972
Member since Dec 2013
11503 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:05 am to
I vote grass.

Suggestion: Put some treated lumber under the set where it touches the ground. This will help with future rotting and make it easier to weedeat.
Posted by tigerfoot
Alexandria
Member since Sep 2006
59132 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:09 am to
Grass. If it is like my kids, I had big plans for the use of this fancy swing I bought. They rarely used it. Much more use of the swings I hung from the tree. So I doubt you see a mud hole, and cleaning up the big swing is bad enough without having to shovel out mulch.
Posted by Tiger_n_Texas
Member since Aug 2014
1261 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:19 am to
We had one very similar (may have been same brand), that I assembled. Kids played on it a little while, but the one time I didn't check it for wasps is when my oldest got stung (3 or 4 times). They never played on it again.

As far as grass vs turf/mulch, we just kept grass and mud wasn't an issue at all (with the exception of under the 'house' portion where there was no sun). I will say, I was very underwhelmed with the quality of the 'cedar'. If I had to do it over again, I'd get one made of metal or build it myself using treated lumber and real stainless hardware. The wood and fasteners in these kits are hot garbage.
Posted by BilbeauTBaggins
probably stuck in traffic
Member since May 2021
7280 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:32 am to
Grass

We have a swing set and neighbors have an entire swing/gym set in their yard. Only thing I've noticed is that there's a slight dip where the swings go for them. Baby BTB isn't big enough but theirs are in middle school so they've gotten some use out of their set. It's dead grass too but that's fine. I don't think rubber will do anything but create more waste for you to eventually toss into a roll off dumpster when you get rid of the whole thing.
Posted by BMoney
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2005
16659 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:43 am to
I vote for the rubber mulch. I'd pay $1,000 right now to never how to mow or weedeat under my swingset.
Posted by Major Dutch Schaefer
Location: Classified
Member since Nov 2011
35621 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 12:32 pm to
Grass
Posted by LemmyLives
Texas
Member since Mar 2019
10399 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 12:52 pm to
I never had to weedeat except around the corners, there just wasn't enough sun with the slide, climbing wall, above head cover, etc.

And OP, you'll eventually be getting rid of it. People will probably come disassemble it for free (like they did for ours) and haul it off, but you'd probably have to pay or haul out the rubber on your own. And think about how much of that crap is going to end up in the grass, even if you put a ridiculous border around it.

And if she falls in the grass, it's grass. What happens when she goes down the slide, loses her balance and she falls back into the slide, grass or rubber? Count how many times she's done the toddler thing of face planting into your carpet as a baby learning to walk, or reached back for a toy while sitting and ended up bouncing her head off the floor... My bet is that number is not zero.
Posted by calcotron
Member since Nov 2007
9458 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 1:49 pm to
quote:

Put some treated lumber under the set where it touches the ground


I put concrete stepping stones under mine, we had dozens in the yard when we moved in that I put to better use. Easy to mow, trim around, and use for leveling.
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
87334 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 2:00 pm to
another vote for grass the way God intended it for kids to play and fall.
Posted by KRS
Member since Jun 2022
486 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 4:49 pm to
NO. Don't do it. rubber mulch if in the sunlight will get so damm hot.
This post was edited on 1/8/25 at 4:50 pm
Posted by Drop4Loss
Birds Eye Of Deaf Valley
Member since Oct 2007
3967 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 8:33 pm to
Rubber mulch is a pain in the arse
It will be all over your yard, and lawn mowers hate it
Posted by CalcuttaTigah
Member since Jul 2009
907 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 9:09 pm to
I did the real playground mulch within a bender board border. Takes up a giant area and altered my drainage to half my yard too because of poor planning on my part.
Posted by Pezzo
Member since Aug 2020
2601 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 9:10 pm to
I put ours straight on the grass and wish I had a mat under it. It’s just a PITA to mow around and the bottom of the playhouse doesn’t get sun so it’s dirt/mud without grass.

Have fun putting it together. Goes a lot smoother with a second person.

ETA: we have a neighbor who put did something similar as the pic in the OP but instead of rubber mulch they used pea gravel. Not sure what the process difference is.
This post was edited on 1/8/25 at 9:15 pm
Posted by TBoy
Kalamazoo
Member since Dec 2007
26224 posts
Posted on 1/8/25 at 11:05 pm to
If you are in the south, rubber mulch gets too hot. Grass all day
Posted by Art Vandelay
LOUISIANA
Member since Sep 2005
11186 posts
Posted on 1/9/25 at 7:12 am to
Next year when you realize you wasted your time on that playset and are ready to tear it down you will have to remove that rubber mulch. Keep it on the grass.
Posted by Bayou
Boudin, LA
Member since Feb 2005
39241 posts
Posted on 1/9/25 at 7:25 am to
You will regret rubber mulch
Posted by 2geaux
Georgia
Member since Feb 2008
2697 posts
Posted on 1/9/25 at 7:59 am to
Grass! rubber mulch floats! It will not stay where you put it.
The kids won't play on the swing set nearly enough to justify the work involved to put it together.
Posted by Weekend Warrior79
Member since Aug 2014
19248 posts
Posted on 1/9/25 at 10:07 am to
I did grass, but if I had to do it all over again would do the mulch or the rubber pads.

It started off level, but over time and use needs to be adjusted.

As others said, weed eating is a pain in the arse, and I have 2 boards that need to get replaced in the spring.

Grass growth around the area had not been an issue until the drought 2 years ago. But it's growing back (more weeds than grass right now, but that is my fault)

If you have an area under the playset, it is a pain in the arse to weed eat, bugs love it, this area survived the drought. If you decide to go with grass, I would highly suggest mulching/padding this area. This is my next move when I go to replace those boards in the spring
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