Concrete Calculator
Live preview — full tool on dedicated page
Estimate concrete, gravel, asphalt, roofing materials, drywall, soil, and construction costs instantly using accurate contractor-friendly calculators designed for builders, landscapers, contractors, and homeowners.
Live preview — full tool on dedicated page
Professional-grade tools for the materials you order most often on job sites and home projects.
Calculate cubic yards for slabs, footings, and pads. Our slab concrete calculator converts length, width, and depth to ready-mix volume and bag counts—ideal before you call the plant.
Calculate concrete →Estimate CMU/cinder block quantity, pallet counts, and block cost for retaining walls, partitions, and masonry projects.
Estimate blocks →Estimate cement, sand, and aggregate quantities for 1:2:4, 1:1.5:3, and custom concrete mix ratios.
Estimate mix →Estimate ready-mix cubic yards, truck loads, waste factor, and cost for supplier-ready orders.
Estimate ready-mix →Calculate 40, 60, and 80 lb bag counts for small pours, patches, and DIY concrete jobs.
Estimate bags →Estimate slab project pricing with concrete, labor, and reinforcement costs in one quote-ready view.
Estimate floor cost →Estimate tons and cubic yards for driveways, French drains, and base layers. Enter area and depth to avoid short loads or costly over-ordering on aggregate.
Calculate gravel →Find cubic yards and bags for landscape beds. Proper mulch depth protects roots, retains moisture, and keeps coverage consistent across large planting areas.
Calculate mulch →Estimate asphalt tons for parking areas and driveways. Thickness and area drive tonnage—use this asphalt calculator before paving season scheduling.
Calculate asphalt →Convert rise and run to pitch, angle, and rafter length. Essential for shingle orders, metal panels, and code-compliant roof pitch on remodels.
Calculate roof pitch →Count 4×8 or 4×12 sheets, joint compound, and screws for rooms and whole houses. Reduce waste while stocking enough board for ceilings and walls.
Calculate drywall →Estimate cubic yards for lawn leveling, garden beds, and new sod. Order the right soil volume without short loads.
Calculate topsoil →Calculate sand volume for paver bases, volleyball courts, and masonry beds. Convert area and depth to yards and tons.
Calculate sand →Estimate fill dirt for grading, building pads, and low spots. Know cubic yards before the dump truck arrives.
Calculate fill dirt →Organized calculator collections for every phase of construction and exterior work.
Slabs, footings, and volume-to-bag conversions for residential and commercial pours.
Gravel, mulch, topsoil, sand, and fill dirt tools for beds, paths, and grading.
Roof pitch, slope, and rafter length for accurate takeoffs above the plate line.
Sheet counts, tape, mud, and fastener estimates for rooms and whole-house rehabs.
Tonnage and thickness planning for driveways, lots, and patch repairs.
Practical guides written for crews and DIYers who need reliable numbers before materials hit the truck.
Step-by-step volume math for a standard patio slab, including waste factor and pump truck considerations.
Read GuideBase course vs. surface stone depths, compaction, and when to add geotextile for soft subgrade.
Read GuideWhether you are pouring a backyard patio or bidding a commercial slab, material estimation is where profit and schedule are won or lost. Ordering too little concrete stops the pour; ordering too much ties up cash and creates disposal headaches. YardsCalculator exists to give builders, landscapers, and homeowners the same quick math that estimators use in the field—without spreadsheets, guesswork, or outdated rules of thumb.
Construction materials are sold in industry-standard units: ready-mix by the cubic yard, gravel by the ton, asphalt by the ton per lift, and drywall by the sheet. Translating your plan dimensions into those units is not optional—it is how you compare supplier quotes, check deliveries, and keep crews productive. A reliable concrete calculator turns length, width, and depth into cubic yards in seconds, so you can confirm the batch plant ticket before the truck arrives.
Accurate takeoffs also reduce environmental waste. When volumes are calculated correctly the first time, you avoid partial loads, rejected pours, and duplicate deliveries. That matters for LEED-minded projects, municipal permits, and simply running a tight operation on residential work.
Experienced contractors rarely pour or pave without a quick volume check. On site, supers verify form dimensions against the estimate. A concrete slab material calculator (or slab-specific preset) accounts for thickened edges, steps, and monolithic footings that simple L×W×D sketches miss. Landscapers run a gravel calculator and mulch calculator while walking the property, adjusting depth for driveways versus decorative beds. Roofers lean on a roof pitch calculator to convert rise and run into slope so shingle bundles and metal panel lengths match the actual roof plane—not the flat plan dimensions.
Drywall hangers use a drywall calculator to split walls and ceilings into sheet counts, then add a controlled waste percentage for cuts around openings. Paving crews pair an asphalt calculator with core thickness specs so tonnage quotes align with the engineer’s section. The pattern is the same: measure in the field, calculate in standard units, order with confidence.
In the United States, ready-mix concrete is quoted in cubic yards. One cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet. The universal field formula is:
Volume (cu. ft.) = Length × Width × Depth (all in feet), then ÷ 27 = Cubic Yards.
Our tools convert inches, yards, meters, and centimeters to feet internally so you can measure the way your tape reads. After you have net volume, add waste: 5–10% is common for slabs with cuts and uneven subgrade; complex forms may need more. A cement estimator for bag mixes divides total yards by the yield per 80 lb bag (typically about 0.022 cubic yards per bag) so DIY pours and small patches stock correctly.
Understanding truck capacity matters too. Short-load fees hurt small jobs; knowing you need 1.8 yards versus 2.4 yards changes scheduling. Many suppliers treat roughly 10 cubic yards as a full truck load—our preview calculator surfaces truck loads alongside bag counts and estimated cost at an average $150/yard (adjust locally when you quote).
For a typical floating slab, measure the inside of the forms. Depth is the thickness of the slab—often 4 inches (0.33 feet) for sidewalks, 4–6 inches for patios, and 5–6+ inches for driveways or garage floors subject to vehicle loads. A slab concrete calculator should let you mix units (feet for length, inches for depth) because that is how most crews measure.
Footings and walls add height and width dimensions separately; stem walls multiply run length by thickness by height. Columns are π×r²×h. When in doubt, break irregular shapes into rectangles, calculate each, and sum the volumes. The goal is one number in cubic yards that matches what the plant will batch.
Landscape materials are often sold by the cubic yard or ton. Gravel density varies by stone type; calculators apply typical weights per yard so you can cross-check truck tickets. Driveway base might be 4–6 inches of crushed stone compacted in lifts; decorative gravel on a path might be 2–3 inches. A gravel calculator multiplies area × depth (converted to yards) so you do not confuse square feet with cubic yards—a common ordering mistake.
Mulch is usually sold by the cubic yard or bag (often 2 cu. ft. per bag). Coverage depends on depth: 2 inches for maintenance top-dressing, 3 inches for new beds. Spread depth evenly; thin spots invite weeds and dry out faster. Use the mulch calculator to total beds in one pass, then round up slightly for settling.
Roof area on plans is flat projection; actual surface area is larger because of slope. Pitch is rise over a 12-inch run (e.g., 6/12). A roof pitch calculator converts between pitch, angle, and rafter length so you order the correct shingle squares or standing-seam panels. Steeper roofs increase surface area and may require additional safety and labor time—another reason accurate slope math belongs in your pre-pour/pre-order checklist, not just concrete and gravel.
Drywall estimation starts with net wall and ceiling area, minus large openings (doors and windows), plus waste for cuts. Standard sheets are 4×8 or 4×12; fewer joints with 12-foot boards can save finishing time on long halls. Joint compound, tape, and screw counts scale with sheet count and finish level (Level 4 vs. 5). A thorough drywall calculator helps small contractors quote labor and materials together and avoids mid-job board runs.
YardsCalculator is designed to load fast on shared hosting, work on phones in bright sun, and present clear results without clutter. Every tool uses transparent formulas you can verify against your own spreadsheet. We prioritize educational content—guides, FAQs, and long-form explanations—so you understand the why behind the number, not just the output. That is the standard Google and readers expect from quality construction resources: real value, accurate math, and language written for people who build for a living.
Explore our concrete calculator, gravel calculator, mulch calculator, topsoil calculator, asphalt calculator, roof pitch calculator, and drywall calculator. Browse by category—concrete, landscaping, roofing, drywall, or asphalt—to find the right tool for your job.
Clear answers to common material estimation questions from homeowners and pros.
Multiply the length, width, and depth of your form to get volume in cubic feet, then divide by 27 to convert to cubic yards—the unit ready-mix suppliers use. If dimensions are in inches, divide each inch value by 12 to get feet first, or use our concrete calculator to convert feet, inches, yards, meters, and centimeters automatically. For irregular shapes, break the pour into rectangles, sum each volume, then add 5–10% waste for spillage and subgrade variation.
Find your total cubic yards, then divide by the yield per bag. An 80 lb bag of ready-mix typically yields about 0.022 cubic yards. Example: 1 cubic yard ÷ 0.022 ≈ 46 bags. Always round up and buy a few extra bags for patches. Bag mix is best for small slabs, fence posts, and repairs; larger pours are more economical with ready-mix trucks.
A cubic yard is a volume measuring 3 feet × 3 feet × 3 feet (27 cubic feet). Ready-mix concrete in the U.S. is sold by the cubic yard. Knowing your pour volume in cubic yards lets you compare quotes, plan pump line setup, and verify the ticket on delivery.
Most residential driveways use 4–6 inches of compacted crushed stone in the base layer, sometimes more on soft soil. The surface course may be an additional 2–3 inches of smaller stone or gravel. Depth depends on traffic, drainage, and local code. Use a gravel calculator with your driveway length and width to convert depth to cubic yards or tons before ordering.
Measure bed length and width to get square footage, decide depth (often 2–3 inches), and convert to cubic yards: (Area × Depth in feet) ÷ 27. One cubic yard of mulch roughly covers 108 square feet at 3 inches deep. Bags are usually 2 cubic feet; there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard. Fluff and spread evenly—mulch settles after rain.