How to Calculate Concrete: The Complete Beginner's Guide
Whether you are pouring a slab, filling post holes, or building a block wall, every concrete project starts with the same question: how much do I need? This guide walks through the core formulas, unit conversions, and practical tips that answer every variation of that question.
The Core Formula: Length x Width x Depth
Every concrete calculation starts with volume. For rectangular shapes like slabs, footings, and walls, the formula is simple: multiply length by width by depth, all in the same unit (usually feet).
This gives you cubic feet. From there, divide by 27 to get cubic yards, which is the standard ordering unit for ready mix concrete delivery.
- 1 kubikgård = 27 kubikfot
- 1 cubic meter = 35.31 cubic feet
- Always convert inches to feet before multiplying (divide inches by 12)
How to Calculate Cubic Yards of Concrete
The most common question in concrete estimation is how to convert dimensions into cubic yards. The process is straightforward: calculate volume in cubic feet, then divide by 27.
For a 20 x 20 foot slab at 4 inches thick: 20 x 20 x 0.333 = 133.2 cubic feet, divided by 27 = 4.93 cubic yards. Add waste and you would order approximately 5.5 yards.
Converting Square Feet to Concrete Volume
If you know the area in square feet and the thickness, multiply the area by the thickness in feet to get cubic feet. This is often how contractors quickly estimate from architectural plans.
Searches like "concrete calculator by square feet" and "concrete calculator square footage" are really asking for this area-to-volume conversion with a thickness assumption.
Bag Estimates: 40 lb, 60 lb, and 80 lb
For smaller projects, bagged concrete is more practical than ordering a truck. Each bag size has a different yield: 80 lb bags yield about 0.6 cubic feet, 60 lb bags about 0.45, and 40 lb bags about 0.3.
To convert volume to bags, divide your total cubic feet by the per-bag yield. Always round up and add waste. This is exactly what a concrete bag calculator automates.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
The most frequent errors are mixing units (feet and inches), forgetting waste, and not accounting for subgrade variation. Always double-check your unit conversions and add at least 5 to 10 percent waste for flatwork.
Another common mistake is confusing square feet with cubic feet. Square feet is area; you need to multiply by depth to get volume before you can estimate materials.
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