Concrete Calculator
Estimate slab volume, waste-adjusted order, and bag counts.
What this calculator does
This concrete calculator helps you size slab pours quickly, then convert the same estimate into practical order formats: cubic yards, cubic feet, and bag counts.
How it works
Enter slab dimensions, confirm depth units, then compare raw volume against waste-adjusted order recommendations so you can choose a realistic purchase quantity.
- Enter length and width first, then confirm depth in inches or your selected unit mode.
- Review both cubic yards and cubic feet so quantity and supplier language stay aligned.
- Apply a waste factor based on site variability and finishing tolerance.
- Use bag-count outputs as a portability check when ready-mix delivery is not practical.
Example calculation
Sample scenario:
- Length: 19 ft
- Width: 11 ft
- Depth: 5 in
- Volume: 3.23
- Equivalent cubic feet: 87.08
FAQs
Usually no. Field conditions, grade variation, and finishing loss can consume extra volume. Use the waste-adjusted recommendation as your purchasing baseline, then confirm supplier minimum-delivery increments.
Bag estimates are useful for smaller pours, limited access sites, or repair work where truck delivery is impractical. For larger slabs, ready-mix is often faster and more consistent.
Suppliers and plans may use different units. Showing both reduces unit-conversion mistakes and speeds up quote comparisons between bag products and bulk delivery.
Many users start between 5% and 12% depending on site prep quality and tolerance requirements. Uneven subgrade, forms, and over-excavation usually justify the higher end.
Run gravel base and material-adjacent tools next, especially the Gravel Calculator and Flooring Box Calculator, so your project estimate includes surrounding quantity dependencies.
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Advanced details
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Formula
volume_ft3 = length_ft * width_ft * depth_ft; volume_yd3 = volume_ft3 / 27; order = volume_yd3 * (1 + waste_pct)
Modeling assumptions
- Assumes rectangular geometry unless you split irregular areas into multiple runs.
- Bag-yield estimates depend on mix type, compaction, and moisture conditions.
- Waste factors are planning allowances, not guarantees of zero leftover material.
- Local supplier rounding rules (partial-yard minimums) can change final order size.
Planning guidance
This concrete calculator helps you size slab pours quickly, then convert the same estimate into practical order formats: cubic yards, cubic feet, and bag counts. Use it for patio slabs, shed pads, sidewalks, and similar flatwork where depth and waste assumptions control final cost. For adjacent quantity checks, continue with the Gravel Calculator for base prep and the Mulch Calculator for finishing coverage around hardscape edges.
Common mistakes: mixing inches and feet incorrectly, skipping waste factors, and ordering exactly to the computed volume with no margin for grade variation. A safer workflow is baseline volume, then a waste-adjusted order range, then a bag-size sanity check before purchasing.
Enter slab dimensions, confirm depth units, then compare raw volume against waste-adjusted order recommendations so you can choose a realistic purchase quantity.
Extended workflow
- Enter length and width first, then confirm depth in inches or your selected unit mode.
- Review both cubic yards and cubic feet so quantity and supplier language stay aligned.
- Apply a waste factor based on site variability and finishing tolerance.
- Use bag-count outputs as a portability check when ready-mix delivery is not practical.
References
Material outputs are estimates. Verify local code, supplier yields, and jobsite conditions before ordering.