Concrete Calculator
Estimate how much concrete you need for slabs, footings, columns, walls, and stairs. Get results in cubic yards, cubic feet, and number of pre-mixed bags with material cost estimates.
Quick rule of thumb: One cubic yard of concrete covers 81 square feet at 4 inches thick, or 54 square feet at 6 inches thick. Always order 5–10% extra for waste, spillage, and uneven subgrade. Under-ordering causes cold joints — a structural weakness that's impossible to fix after pour.
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Bag Comparison
| Bag Size | Yield per Bag | Bags Needed | Total Weight | Approx. Cost |
|---|
How to Calculate Concrete: The Complete Guide
Concrete is sold by the cubic yard (27 cubic feet). To calculate how much you need, multiply the area in square feet by the thickness in feet, then divide by 27 to convert to cubic yards. This calculator handles the math for slabs, footings, columns, and stairs — including waste factor and bag estimates.
Concrete Volume Formula
Slab: Volume (ft³) = Length (ft) × Width (ft) × Thickness (ft)
Column: Volume (ft³) = π × Radius² (ft) × Height (ft)
Cubic Yards = Volume (ft³) ÷ 27
Worked Example: 20 ft × 10 ft patio, 4 inches thick
Volume = 20 × 10 × (4/12) = 66.67 ft³
Cubic Yards = 66.67 ÷ 27 = 2.47 yd³
With 10% waste = 2.72 yd³ (order 3 yards)
Ready-Mix vs Bags: When to Use Each
For projects requiring less than 1 cubic yard (about 27 cubic feet or a 4-inch slab smaller than 80 sq ft), pre-mixed bags from a hardware store are practical. For anything larger, ready-mix delivery is dramatically cheaper, faster, and produces a more consistent pour. A ready-mix truck delivers a minimum of 1 yard ($140-160) and can pour up to 10 yards per truck. Ordering bags for 3+ cubic yards means mixing 60-80 individual bags by hand — exhausting, slow, and likely to produce inconsistent results with cold joints between batches.
According to the Portland Cement Association, the US pours approximately 420 million cubic yards of concrete annually — enough to build a 5-foot-wide sidewalk to the moon and back. The residential market accounts for about 15% of this volume, with driveways, patios, sidewalks, and foundations being the most common DIY and contractor projects.
Pre-Mixed Concrete Bag Coverage
| Bag Size | Yield (ft³) | Coverage at 4" Thick | Coverage at 6" Thick | Bags per Cubic Yard | Retail Price (avg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40 lb | 0.30 ft³ | 0.9 sq ft | 0.6 sq ft | 90 bags | $3.50 – $4.50 |
| 60 lb | 0.45 ft³ | 1.35 sq ft | 0.9 sq ft | 60 bags | $4.50 – $5.50 |
| 80 lb | 0.60 ft³ | 1.8 sq ft | 1.2 sq ft | 45 bags | $5.50 – $7.00 |
Yields based on Quikrete standard concrete mix. Prices vary by region and retailer. Home Depot/Lowe's typically offer volume discounts on 42+ bags.
Concrete Strength Guide (PSI Ratings)
PSI (pounds per square inch) measures concrete's compressive strength after 28 days of curing. Higher PSI means stronger concrete. Choosing the right PSI for your project prevents cracking, settling, and premature failure.
| PSI Rating | Use Cases | Thickness Required | Ready-Mix Cost/yd³ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2,500 PSI | Non-structural: sidewalks, patios, landscape edging | 4 inches | $130 – $150 |
| 3,000 PSI | Standard residential: driveways, garage floors, footings | 4–6 inches | $140 – $160 |
| 3,500 PSI | Heavy residential: high-traffic driveways, pool decks | 4–6 inches | $150 – $175 |
| 4,000 PSI | Commercial: parking structures, warehouse floors | 5–8 inches | $160 – $190 |
| 4,500+ PSI | Industrial: bridge decks, heavy equipment pads | 6–12 inches | $170 – $220 |
Sources: ACI (American Concrete Institute) 318 Building Code, Portland Cement Association residential construction guidelines. Standard pre-mixed bags (Quikrete, Sakrete) are typically 4,000 PSI.
Concrete Cost Breakdown (National Averages 2025)
| Project Type | Size (sq ft) | Concrete Yards | Material Only | Installed (contractor) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patio (4") | 200 | 2.5 | $375 – $500 | $1,600 – $3,000 |
| Sidewalk (4") | 100 | 1.25 | $190 – $250 | $800 – $1,500 |
| Driveway (6") | 450 | 8.3 | $1,250 – $1,700 | $4,000 – $8,500 |
| Garage Slab (6") | 400 | 7.4 | $1,100 – $1,500 | $3,500 – $7,000 |
| Foundation Wall | Varies | 5 – 15 | $750 – $2,400 | $5,000 – $15,000 |
| Sonotube (12"×4' each) | N/A | 0.12 each | $18 – $25 each | $75 – $150 each |
Sources: HomeAdvisor 2025 national averages, Angi verified contractor data. Installed prices include labor, forms, finishing, and site prep. Regional variation of ±30% is common.
Concrete Curing: What the Science Says
Concrete doesn't "dry" — it cures through a chemical reaction called hydration, where water reacts with portland cement to form calcium silicate hydrate crystals. This process is temperature-dependent and continues for weeks. According to the American Concrete Institute (ACI 308), concrete reaches 50% of its rated strength after 3 days, 75% after 7 days, and full rated strength after 28 days under ideal conditions (60-80°F, kept moist).
The single most important factor in concrete durability is water-to-cement ratio. The Portland Cement Association recommends a maximum w/c ratio of 0.50 for exterior slabs exposed to freeze-thaw cycles. Adding too much water to make mixing easier is the most common DIY mistake — it increases workability but reduces final strength by up to 40% and dramatically increases cracking risk.
Rebar and Wire Mesh: When You Need Reinforcement
Plain concrete handles compression well but is weak in tension. Reinforcement prevents cracks from becoming structural failures. The general guidelines from ACI 318:
Wire mesh (6×6 W2.9×W2.9) is adequate for most residential slabs — patios, sidewalks, and standard driveways. It prevents small cracks from widening. Cost: $0.15–0.25 per square foot.
Rebar (#4 bar, 1/2" diameter) is required for driveways over 6 inches thick, any load-bearing structure, footings, and foundation walls. Typical spacing is 12-18 inches on center in both directions. Rebar adds $0.50–1.00 per square foot but increases tensile strength by 3-5×.
For calculating the area you're working with, use our Square Footage Calculator. For material cost comparisons and discounts, see the Discount Calculator. Convert between measurement systems with our Feet to Meters Converter.
Temperature and Timing Considerations
Concrete should not be poured when temperatures are below 40°F or above 90°F. In cold weather, hydration slows dramatically — concrete poured at 30°F takes 3× longer to reach design strength and may never fully cure if it freezes before reaching 500 PSI (typically 24-48 hours). In hot weather, rapid evaporation causes plastic shrinkage cracking. The National Ready Mixed Concrete Association recommends scheduling pours between 50°F and 77°F for optimal results.
A 2021 study in the journal Cement and Concrete Research found that concrete poured and cured at 73°F developed 15-20% higher 28-day compressive strength compared to concrete cured at 40°F or 95°F. For DIY projects, early morning pours in warm months (before 10 AM) or mid-day pours in cool months provide the best temperature window.
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