🍁 100% CANADIAN OWNED AND OPERATED

Visit us in REGINA and SASKATOON

STORE HOURS: Mon-Fri 8-4:30

Nonwoven Geotextile Fabric Under Patios: When Pros Use It and Why

Nonwoven Geotextile Fabric Under Patios: When Pros Use It and Why

Tuds |

Nonwoven geotextile fabric is a workhorse material for professional patio builders, but it is often misunderstood by homeowners and even some DIYers. When installed correctly and in the right location, nonwoven geotextile fabric safeguards the longevity, drainage, and structural stability of patios, walkways, and hardscape projects. At The Ultimate Deck Shop, our experts specify and supply nonwoven geotextile—like Mirafi Landscape Fabric—across Regina, Saskatoon, and Western Canada, ensuring your backyard build stands up to our challenging soils and freeze–thaw cycles.

If you are planning a paver patio, walkway, or slab in areas with clay soil, fluctuating moisture, or risk of frost heave, nonwoven geotextile is not just a luxury upgrade. It is a best-practice layer for separation, filtration, and long-term support that seasoned pros include for both residential and commercial projects. Below, we break down exactly when, why, and how professionals use nonwoven geotextile fabric under patios—plus field-tested steps, pitfalls to avoid, and tips for lasting performance in Canadian climates.


What Is Nonwoven Geotextile Fabric?

Nonwoven geotextile is a thick, felt-like fabric made from polypropylene fibers fused together in a dense, random pattern. Unlike everyday weed barrier fabric sold at garden centers, true nonwoven geotextiles are engineered for heavy-duty drainage, filtration, and soil separation. They provide vital functions for hardscapes exposed to traffic, poor soils, or water movement.

  • Material: Polypropylene fibers, creating a dense mat that is tough yet permeable
  • Permeability: Allows water to drain freely, but traps sediment and soil particles below
  • Designed for: Separation, filtration, and drainage between subgrade soil and compacted patio base
  • Strength: Sufficient for patios, walkways, and light vehicular surfaces, typically with grab tensile in the 80–90 lb range or higher

Nonwoven vs Woven Geotextile: Key Differences and Applications

Nonwoven Geotextile Fabric

  • Optimum for filtration, drainage, and separation (not reinforcement)
  • Water moves through quickly while keeping soil fines at bay
  • Commonly chosen for patio bases, behind retaining walls, above French drains, and under permeable pavers

Woven Geotextile Fabric

  • Tighter weave, with higher tensile strength for reinforcement
  • Used on roadways, high-traffic driveways, or soft, unstable bases where load-spreading is paramount
  • Lower permeability compared to nonwoven, so less ideal where drainage is the key concern

Patio and path construction typically relies on nonwoven geotextile because these areas prioritize drainage and ongoing separation, not just soil reinforcement.


Core Benefits of Nonwoven Fabric Under Patios

On every premium build, professional installers roll out nonwoven geotextile at the base of the excavation for clear, proven reasons:

1. Separation: Stops Soil from Mixing with Base

  • Prevents downward migration of gravel into soft, clay-heavy, or silty subsoils
  • Blocks upward movement of fine particles during freeze–thaw cycles, keeping the base layer stable and uniform
  • Ensures base thickness and compaction quality last over time

2. Filtration and Drainage: Directs Water, Not Soil

  • Allows stormwater to percolate into the soil while keeping fines from muddying the base or clogging weeping tiles and drains
  • Prevents pooling and future frost heave by supporting fast, even drainage

3. Stabilization for Light to Medium Loads

  • Helps spread loads from foot traffic, patio furniture, or small vehicles across weaker points in the subgrade
  • Reduces settling, rutting, and ongoing movement

4. Weed Suppression

  • Cutting off light and physically blocking root growth from beneath the patio base
  • When paired with polymeric sand in joints, weed growth is dramatically reduced (though not eliminated completely—surface seeding is still possible)

When Do Professionals Use Nonwoven Geotextile Under Patios?

Through hundreds of installations in the Regina and Saskatoon areas, our team recommends nonwoven fabric in these specific site and use cases:

Clay or Problematic Soils

  • Essential for any yard in the Prairies with clay, silt, or shifting fill
  • Protects against rapid base contamination and settlement common in heavy clay soils

Wet or Sloped Locations

  • Crucial for patios near downspouts, low areas, or slopes prone to water movement
  • Reduces erosion, mud migration, and future ice/dip problems

Driveways, Approaches, and Heavy-Use Patios

  • Used beneath any patio supporting a hot tub, outdoor kitchen, or vehicle
  • May be supplemented with woven fabric for load-intensive surfaces, but nonwoven remains foundational for drainage

Weed-Prone Yards

  • In locations plagued by aggressive weeds pushing through surfaces, nonwoven fabric blocks root access to the base
  • Most effective when combined with high-quality edge restraint and joint sand

Permeable Paver or Clean Drain Rock Projects

  • Absolutely necessary to maintain drainage in open-graded gravel or specialized patio systems designed for water infiltration

When Fabric May Be Skipped or Woven Is Used Instead

Experienced contractors sometimes opt-out or switch fabric type in the following scenarios:

  • On deep, uniform sand or gravel subgrade where migration risk is negligible (uncommon in most city yards)
  • For vehicle traffic on extremely unstable bases, woven geotextile may be used instead or in tandem
  • Never substitute thin "weed barrier" or fabric not rated for sub-base separation—this can clog, trap water, and lead to patio failure

Step-By-Step: How Pros Install Nonwoven Geotextile Under a Patio

1. Site Excavation and Subgrade Prep

  • Excavate patio area to finished height, factoring in base thickness and paver/sand layers
  • Shape subgrade with a 2 percent (minimum) slope away from structures for drainage
  • Compact the subgrade thoroughly with a plate compactor—weak or soft spots should be removed and replaced with granular material

2. Rolling Out the Fabric

  • Select a fabric roll width that minimizes seams (for small installations, 3 ft width; for large, use 6 ft rolls)
  • Lay fabric flat, avoiding wrinkles and folds
  • Overlap seams by at least 12–18 inches; in soft soils, extend to 24 inches for stability
  • Pin in place with landscape staples or weigh edges down with a light gravel spread

3. Placing and Compacting the Base

  • Add compactable gravel in 2–3 inch lifts, compacting after each layer
  • Maintain slope as you build up the base layer to ensure water continues to shed
  • For patios, 6–8 inches of compacted base is typical; heavier-use surfaces may require up to 12 inches

4. Final Bedding and Surface Install

  • Lay 1 inch of screeded bedding sand or chip over the base
  • Install pavers or concrete slabs per manufacturer specs
  • Compact surface, sweep in joint (preferably polymeric) sand

5. Edge Restraint & Clean Up

  • Install edge restraint spiked into the base material, not just the bedding sand
  • Ensure all fabric edges remain buried and shielded from sunlight and tripping hazards

Professional Tips: Mistakes to Avoid With Patio Geotextile

  • Do not use thin weed barrier—only true nonwoven geotextile has the needed filtration and strength
  • Mind your overlaps: Overlap seams by a foot or more to prevent fine migration
  • Eliminate wrinkles and folds, which create soft spots and localized failures in the base
  • Verify your drainage plan: Fabric is not a substitute for proper surface or subdrainage—it only supports it

Product Recommendations from The Ultimate Deck Shop

Mirafi Landscape Fabric Nonwoven Geotextile 3'x100'
Mirafi Landscape Fabric Nonwoven Geotextile 6'x360'

Do You Actually Need Nonwoven Geotextile? Simple Checklist

  • Is the soil beneath your patio clay or silt?
  • Does your patio site retain moisture or take longer to dry after rain?
  • Are you building a patio that will regularly support a hot tub, outdoor kitchen, or occasional car/truck?
  • Are weed problems from below a chronic issue in your yard?
  • Are you building any system with permeable pavers or clean, open-graded stone?

If your answer is yes to any of these, nonwoven fabric is a smart investment for separation and longevity.


Best Practices for Use and Sourcing

  • Do not cut corners with inferior weed cloth—choose engineered nonwoven geotextile sized for patios
  • For less common conditions where reinforcement is needed, supplement with professional woven geotextile, but never skip the drainage function
  • Have a clear drainage design before starting—fabric supports but does not replace grading and base prep
  • Confirm quantity, width, and installation sequence with your supplier before ordering

The Ultimate Deck Shop team offers 1:1 consults to map your project, validate soil and drainage needs, and ensure you get the right width and quantity for an install with minimum waste and maximum reliability.


Summary and Further Learning

While nonwoven geotextile fabric rarely makes the highlight reel of a new patio, it delivers outsized value. For just a small portion of your overall budget, adding Mirafi nonwoven fabric protects your investment from early failure, messy maintenance, and frost damage. Our team at The Ultimate Deck Shop is here to help you choose, size, and install these structural materials—whether you build yourself or rely on our pro contractor network for managed installs.

If you want to dive even deeper into hardscape base systems, you may enjoy our internal guides:

Our Regina and Saskatoon locations both offer product pickup, shipping across Canada, and dedicated customer support for your project.


FAQ: Nonwoven Geotextile Under Patios

What exactly does nonwoven geotextile do under my patio?

It separates your compacted gravel base from the subsoil, blocks upward migration of clay or silt, allows water to pass through, and supports ongoing base stability. This works together to minimize settlement, rutting, and water issues over time.

Should I use nonwoven or woven geotextile for my patio?

For pedestrian patios and most walkways, nonwoven is preferred due to superior filtration and drainage. For full driveways or very heavy loads over soft soils, woven fabric may be supplemented—but most residential patios benefit from nonwoven’s permeability.

Can I use ordinary weed barrier or landscape fabric under a paver patio?

No. Ordinary weed barriers are not engineered for load-bearing base separation. They often clog, tear, or impede drainage, leading to failures in the base or surface. Always use a construction-grade nonwoven geotextile.

How much overlap do seams require?

12 to 18 inches minimum for most projects (up to 24 inches in soft soils). Insufficient overlap allows soil migration at seams, compromising the fabric’s function.

How do I ensure good drainage below my patio?

Always combine nonwoven fabric with proper subgrade grading (2 percent slope away from buildings), adequate base compaction, and (if needed) French drains or weeping tile below the surface.

Does geotextile fabric make patios completely weed-proof?

No, but it dramatically reduces root-based weed intrusion from below. Some surface-seeded weeds may still appear in joints, but the burden of ongoing maintenance is far lower.


For truly pro-level results, turn to proven advice. The Ultimate Deck Shop is your partner for expert design, material supply, and all-weather solutions—whether you are installing yourself or want a project managed from start to finish. See us in Regina or Saskatoon, or connect online for advice, quotes, and shipping across Canada.

Leave a comment

Please note: comments must be approved before they are published.