V-ditches and swales both convey stormwater, but they are different structures designed for different conditions. A swale is a shallow, wide, vegetated channel. A V-ditch is a narrow, pointed channel, typically lined with concrete or riprap. Picking the wrong one leads to erosion failures, maintenance headaches, or wasted space. This article explains when each is the right choice and why.

Definitions

Swale

A swale (also called a vegetated swale, grass swale, or bioswale) is a broad, shallow channel with gentle side slopes (typically 3:1 or flatter). It can have a trapezoidal or parabolic cross-section with a flat or curved bottom. Swales are lined with vegetation (grass, groundcover, or native plantings) and designed for relatively low flow velocities, typically under 4 ft/s. They provide stormwater quality treatment by filtering runoff through vegetation and allowing some infiltration into the underlying soil.

V-Ditch

A V-ditch (also called a V-channel or V-gutter) is a narrow channel with a pointed bottom and steep side slopes. Most V-ditches are lined with concrete, grouted riprap, or asphalt. They are designed to move water quickly and efficiently through a small cross-section. V-ditches handle higher velocities (up to 15-20 ft/s in concrete) and are used where space is limited, slopes are steep, or the goal is simply to get water from one point to another without infiltration or treatment.

Side-by-Side Comparison

CharacteristicSwaleV-Ditch
Typical width6 - 20 feet1 - 4 feet
Side slopes3:1 to 6:1 (gentle)1:1 to 2:1 (steep)
LiningGrass, vegetation, TRMConcrete, riprap, asphalt
Max velocity4 - 6 ft/s10 - 20 ft/s
Stormwater treatmentYes (filtration, infiltration)No
LID/BMP creditTypically yesNo
MaintenanceMowing, sediment removalDebris clearing, joint repair
Longitudinal slope range0.5% - 4%0.5% - 15%+
Construction cost (per LF)$15 - $40$25 - $80

When to Use a Swale

Swales are the right choice in these situations:

  • Stormwater quality is required. Most post-construction stormwater regulations (C.3 in the San Francisco Bay Area, DEQ requirements in Oregon, local MS4 permits nationally) require source control and treatment measures. Vegetated swales qualify as BMPs and can earn stormwater treatment credit.
  • Slopes are gentle. On longitudinal slopes under 4%, grass swales handle flows without erosion. Below 2%, they work well for both conveyance and water quality treatment.
  • Space is available. Swales need room. A trapezoidal swale with 3:1 side slopes, a 4-foot bottom, and 1 foot of depth is 10 feet wide at the top. If the site has landscape corridors, setback areas, or open space, swales fit naturally.
  • Aesthetics matter. In residential subdivisions, parks, campuses, and commercial frontages, a grassed swale looks like a natural landscape feature. A concrete V-ditch does not.
  • Low-impact development (LID) is a project goal or requirement. Swales slow runoff, promote infiltration, and reduce peak flows downstream. They fit the LID philosophy of managing stormwater as close to the source as possible.

When to Use a V-Ditch

V-ditches are the right choice in these situations:

  • Slopes are steep. On longitudinal slopes above 5-6%, grass swales erode. Concrete V-ditches handle slopes up to 15% or more. Hillside developments, terraced pads, and retaining wall drainage all favor V-ditches.
  • Space is tight. A concrete V-ditch can carry 5 cfs in a 2-foot-wide section. A grass swale carrying the same flow needs 8-10 feet of width. At property lines, between buildings, or along narrow access roads, V-ditches fit where swales cannot.
  • Concentrated flow must be intercepted. At the base of slopes, along the top of retaining walls, and at grade breaks, V-ditches intercept sheet flow and direct it to a discharge point before it causes erosion.
  • The conveyance is temporary. During construction, temporary V-ditches (often asphalt-lined) divert runoff around active grading areas. After construction, they are removed and replaced with permanent drainage.
  • No treatment credit is needed. If the project has separate stormwater treatment facilities (bioretention basins, media filters, underground vaults), the conveyance channels do not need to provide treatment. V-ditches simply move water to the treatment facility.

Design Criteria

Swale Sizing

Size swales using Manning's Equation for open channel flow: Q = (1.486/n) x A x R^(2/3) x S^(1/2). For a grass-lined swale, use Manning's n between 0.030 and 0.050 depending on vegetation height and density. Design for the 10-year storm (or the storm frequency required by the local jurisdiction) with at least 6 inches of freeboard above the design water surface.

Key dimensional constraints for swales:

  • Minimum bottom width: 2 feet (for trapezoidal sections)
  • Maximum side slopes: 3:1 (4:1 preferred for mowability)
  • Minimum longitudinal slope: 0.5% (1.0% preferred to prevent ponding)
  • Maximum longitudinal slope: 4% for grass lining without erosion protection
  • Maximum flow depth: 1.5 feet for 10-year storm
  • Maximum velocity: 4 ft/s for grass, 6 ft/s for established sod in erosion-resistant soils

V-Ditch Sizing

V-ditches are also sized with Manning's Equation, but with lower n values (0.013-0.015 for concrete, 0.035-0.045 for riprap). Standard precast concrete V-ditches come in common sizes:

V-Ditch Size (Width x Depth)Approximate Capacity at 1% Slope
12" x 6"0.8 cfs
18" x 9"2.5 cfs
24" x 12"5.5 cfs
36" x 18"15 cfs
Combining both on one site is common. A typical approach is to use concrete V-ditches on steep slopes and at grade breaks to intercept and concentrate flow, then discharge into a vegetated swale on flatter ground where the swale provides stormwater treatment. The V-ditch handles the conveyance where swales would fail; the swale provides the treatment credit where V-ditches cannot.

Erosion at the Transition

The most common failure point is where a V-ditch discharges into a swale (or vice versa). The change in cross-section, slope, and lining creates a turbulence zone where erosion starts. To prevent this:

  • Provide an energy dissipater (riprap apron, concrete pad, or stilling basin) at the transition point.
  • Extend the hard lining at least 3-5 feet into the swale beyond the transition.
  • Reduce the velocity before the transition. A small check dam or widening section upstream of the discharge point helps.
  • Compact and stabilize the subgrade at the transition. Undermining of the concrete lining at the end of a V-ditch is a frequent failure mode.

Maintenance Differences

Swales require biological maintenance: mowing (typically monthly during the growing season), weed control, reseeding bare patches, and periodic sediment removal from the flow line. If a swale is on a slope steep enough to erode, the maintenance burden escalates quickly because each repair exposes soil that erodes in the next storm.

V-ditches require structural maintenance: clearing debris from the channel, repairing cracked or displaced concrete sections, repointing joints, and clearing sediment from the bottom. Concrete V-ditches in freeze-thaw climates require more frequent joint repair as freeze-thaw cycles crack and shift the sections.

Permit and Regulatory Implications

Stormwater regulations increasingly favor vegetated conveyances over hardened channels. Under many MS4 permits (municipal separate storm sewer system permits), new impervious area must be treated before discharge. A concrete V-ditch is itself an impervious surface and provides no treatment. A vegetated swale provides treatment and may count toward pervious area depending on the jurisdiction.

Some jurisdictions specifically require swales in certain situations. The San Francisco Bay Area's Provision C.3 (MRP 3.0) encourages vegetated swales as part of site design measures. Oregon DEQ stormwater management manuals list vegetated swales as an approved treatment BMP. When the jurisdiction has these requirements, V-ditches can still be used for conveyance, but the stormwater plan must include separate treatment facilities for flows conveyed through V-ditches.

Cost Comparison

Installed cost per linear foot varies by region, soil conditions, and project scale:

ItemSwale (per LF)V-Ditch (per LF)
Excavation$5 - $12$3 - $8
Lining/finish$8 - $20 (sod/seed + soil prep)$15 - $50 (concrete or riprap)
Subgrade prep$2 - $8$5 - $15
Total installed$15 - $40$25 - $80
Annual maintenance$2 - $5/LF$0.50 - $2/LF

Swales cost less to build but more to maintain. V-ditches cost more to build but less to maintain over time. On a 20-year lifecycle basis, the total cost is often comparable. The deciding factor is rarely cost; it is usually site constraints (slope, space, treatment requirements) that determine the right choice.

Common Mistakes

  • Using a grass swale on a 6% slope. The grass will erode within the first few storm seasons. Either use a V-ditch, install erosion matting with a higher velocity tolerance, or add check dams to reduce the effective slope.
  • Using a V-ditch where stormwater treatment is required. The plan review comment will say "provide a source control or treatment measure for this drainage area." If the V-ditch is the only conveyance, there is no treatment happening.
  • Designing a swale without a maintenance plan. Swales that are not mowed, not reseeded, or not cleared of sediment become eroded gullies within 2-3 years.
  • Ignoring the transition between systems. The point where a V-ditch discharges into a swale or where a swale enters a storm drain inlet is the most common failure point. Energy dissipation at every transition is essential.