Paver Calculator

Use this free paver calculator to find out exactly how many pavers you need for your patio, walkway, driveway, or garden path. Enter your project dimensions and select your paver size to instantly get the total paver count with a built-in 10% waste allowance for cuts and breakage. Choose from 5 paver types — concrete, brick, natural stone, porcelain, and rubber — to get a full material and installation cost estimate. Perfect for homeowners planning a DIY paver project or contractors preparing accurate material quotes.

By ConstructlyTools · Published: February 3, 2026 · Updated: April 3, 2026
Paver Calculator
📐 Formula Used
Pavers Needed = CEILING(Area (sq ft) ÷ Paver Size (sq ft) × 1.10)
10% waste included for cuts, breakage & future repairs
Pavers Needed
0 pavers
Enter measurements above to get your estimate
Project Area
0 sq ft
Pavers (no waste)
0
Est. Material Cost
Est. Install Cost

Includes 10% waste for cuts & breakage · Concrete $10–$20/sq ft · Brick $10–$18/sq ft · Natural Stone $15–$30/sq ft · Porcelain $12–$25/sq ft

Estimates based on 2026 US average pricing. Always order 10% extra. Get 3 quotes before starting.

Understanding the Calculator Inputs

This calculator tells you exactly how many pavers to order for any rectangular project area, with a 10% waste allowance already built in. It covers patios, walkways, driveways, pool surrounds, and garden paths. Here's what each input means and when to adjust the defaults.

Area Dimensions

Enter the outside dimensions of the finished paved area. For L-shaped or irregular areas, break into rectangles, run the calculator separately for each section, and add the paver counts together. The 10% waste factor is applied to each section — don't reduce it on the theory that offcuts from one section can fill another. In practice, cut pieces from different sections rarely fit, and you need identical pavers from the same production batch for repairs years later.

Paver Size

Select the size of the individual paver unit — not the joint-to-joint dimension. Paver sizes are nominal (the stated size); actual manufactured dimensions are typically ⅛–¼" smaller to allow for joints. The calculator uses the nominal dimensions to determine coverage area per piece, which is how paver coverage is universally quoted by manufacturers and suppliers.

Paver Type

Paver type affects material cost per square foot, which drives the install cost estimate. The type does not change the paver count — only size and area do. Selecting the correct type gives you a realistic combined material-plus-labor cost estimate for budgeting before you call a contractor or head to the supplier.

The 10% Waste Factor

10% is the standard industry waste allowance for straight-pattern paver installations (running bond, stack bond, basket weave) on rectangular areas. For diagonal or herringbone patterns at 45°, waste increases to 15%. For circular or fan patterns, waste is 20–25%. The calculator uses 10% as the default — adjust your order quantity upward if you're using a diagonal pattern. See the laying patterns section below for the complete guide.

💡 Always Order From the Same Production Batch

Concrete pavers are manufactured in production batches and color consistency varies between batches — even for the same product from the same supplier. Order all pavers for your project at once from the same batch. Ordering extra later to fill gaps or make repairs almost always produces a visible color mismatch. If your supplier can't guarantee same-batch stock on a reorder, buy 15% extra on the first order instead of 10%.

3 Real-World Paver Examples

Complete material lists for three common paver projects — not just paver counts, but every component you need to order before starting.

Example 1 — Small Walkway (4×20 ft, 4×8 Brick Pavers)

A front entry walkway from the driveway to the front door. Standard running bond pattern, brick pavers, 36" wide × 20 ft long.

ItemQtyUnit CostTotal
4×8 brick pavers (running bond)Exact: 360 · Order: 396 (10% waste)$0.65–$1.20 each$257–$475
Compacted gravel base (4")~0.5 ton of ¾" crushed stone$30–$50/ton$15–$25
Coarse sand bedding (1")~120 lbs$6–$10/50 lb bag$15–$25
Plastic edge restraints48 LF perimeter$0.80–$1.20/ft$38–$58
Polymeric jointing sand1 bag (50 lb)$20–$30$20–$30
Plate compactor rentalHalf day$50–$80$50–$80
Total DIY materials + tool rental$395–$693
Contractor installed$1,440–$2,400

Real-world note: Brick pavers for a small walkway is a great first DIY paver project — the small scale keeps the base work manageable and mistakes are catchable before you're committed. The plate compactor is non-negotiable even for a 4 ft wide walkway — hand-tamped sand bedding will shift under foot traffic within one winter. Rent it for a half day, not a full day — a 4×20 ft base takes under 2 hours to compact properly.

Example 2 — Mid-Range Backyard Patio (16×20 ft, Concrete Pavers)

The most common residential paver project. 320 sq ft patio with running bond pattern, standard grey/tan concrete pavers, contractor-installed on a proper base system.

ItemQtyUnit CostTotal
Concrete pavers (12×12, running bond)Exact: 320 · Order: 352 (10%)$1.80–$3.50 each$634–$1,232
Compacted gravel base (6")~7 tons of ¾" road base$30–$45/ton delivered$210–$315
Coarse concrete sand bedding (1")~1.5 tons$25–$40/ton$38–$60
Plastic edge restraints + spikes72 LF perimeter$1–$1.50/ft installed$72–$108
Polymeric jointing sand3 bags (50 lb)$20–$30 each$60–$90
Labor (excavation, base, install)320 sq ft$5–$10/sq ft$1,600–$3,200
Total contractor installed$2,614–$5,005
DIY materials only$1,014–$1,805

Real-world note: Standard grey 12×12 concrete pavers run $1.80–$2.50 each at Home Depot and Lowe's. Tumbled or textured finish pavers in tan, charcoal, or mixed-color blends run $2.50–$4.00 each. The finish upgrade from standard to tumbled adds roughly 30–50% to paver cost but dramatically improves appearance — worth it for a primary backyard patio. Get the paver cost down by negotiating with a local masonry supplier rather than buying retail; contractor pricing for the same pavers is typically 20–30% less than big-box retail.

Example 3 — Premium Patio (20×24 ft, Natural Stone / Bluestone)

A high-end outdoor living space using irregular bluestone flagging laid in mortar over a concrete base. 480 sq ft, contractor-installed.

ItemQtyUnit CostTotal
Bluestone flagging (irregular, 1.5" thick)~530 sq ft with 10% overage$7–$15/sq ft$3,710–$7,950
Compacted gravel base (6")~10 tons$30–$45/ton$300–$450
Concrete setting bed (2")480 sq ft$1.50–$2.50/sq ft$720–$1,200
Mortar for joints~10 bags (60 lb)$8–$14 each$80–$140
Penetrating stone sealer (2 coats)480 sq ft$0.50–$0.80/sq ft$240–$384
Labor (cut, set, grout, seal)480 sq ft$12–$20/sq ft$5,760–$9,600
Total contractor installed$10,810–$19,724

Real-world note: Irregular bluestone is priced by the ton or by the square foot depending on supplier — $7–$15/sq ft for standard irregular pieces, $12–$22/sq ft for select-grade uniform pieces. Cutting irregular stone requires a wet saw and experience; this is not a beginner DIY project. If you want the natural stone look at lower cost, consider thermal-finish bluestone pavers (uniform size, easier to install) at $5–$10/sq ft vs irregular flagging.

Paver Sizes & Coverage Chart

Paver size directly determines how many pieces you need and significantly affects both the appearance and the installation labor. Larger pavers cover more area per piece but require more precise cutting at edges and borders.

Paver SizeSq Ft / PaverPavers / Sq FtPer 100 Sq Ft (w/waste)Best Use
4×8 inch0.2224.5495 piecesDriveways, walkways, traditional patterns
6×6 inch0.2504.0440 piecesPatios, borders, accent areas
6×9 inch0.3752.67294 piecesWalkways, patios, running bond
12×12 inch1.0001.0110 piecesPatios, pool surrounds, easy calculation
16×16 inch1.7780.5662 piecesLarge patios, contemporary look
18×18 inch2.2500.4449 piecesLarge patios, plazas, fewer joints
24×24 inch4.0000.2528 piecesModern minimalist patios, driveways

All counts include 10% waste. For herringbone at 45°, use 15%. For circular patterns, use 20–25%.

Choosing the Right Paver Size

  • Small spaces (under 150 sq ft) — 4×8 or 6×6 pavers create visual interest and scale well. Larger pavers look oversized in small areas.
  • Standard patios (150–400 sq ft) — 12×12 is the most popular choice: easy to calculate, widely available, and suits most styles. 16×16 creates a more upscale look.
  • Large patios (400+ sq ft) — 16×16, 18×18, or 24×24 reduces the number of joints and creates a cleaner, more expansive feel. Also reduces installation time significantly.
  • Driveways — 4×8 brick-style or 6×9 pavers are preferred for driveways because smaller pavers distribute vehicle loads better across more joints, reducing individual paver stress and cracking.

Paver Cost by Type (2026)

Material cost is the most variable factor in paver budgeting — it ranges from $3/sq ft for rubber pavers to $30/sq ft for premium natural stone. Here's the complete 2026 cost breakdown with total project costs by common patio sizes.

Cost Per Square Foot — Materials & Installed

Paver TypeMaterial $/sq ftInstalled $/sq ftLifespanMaintenance
Rubber Pavers$3–$8$8–$1510–20 yrsLow — wash annually
Concrete Pavers$10–$20$15–$3025–50 yrsResand joints, seal every 3 yrs
Brick Pavers$10–$18$18–$3225+ yrsResand joints every 5 yrs
Porcelain Pavers$12–$25$20–$4225–30 yrsMinimal — wipe clean
Natural Stone$15–$30$25–$5550+ yrsSeal every 2–3 yrs

Total Installed Cost by Patio Size — Concrete Pavers

Patio SizeSq FtPavers Needed (12×12)DIY MaterialsContractor Installed
10×10 ft100110 pieces$1,000–$2,000$1,500–$3,000
12×12 ft144158 pieces$1,440–$2,880$2,160–$4,320
12×16 ft192211 pieces$1,920–$3,840$2,880–$5,760
16×20 ft320352 pieces$3,200–$6,400$4,800–$9,600
20×20 ft400440 pieces$4,000–$8,000$6,000–$12,000
20×24 ft480528 pieces$4,800–$9,600$7,200–$14,400

DIY cost includes pavers + gravel base + sand + edge restraints + polymeric sand. Contractor installed includes all materials + labor. Concrete pavers at $10–$20/sq ft material. Add 25–40% for Northeast and Pacific Coast markets.

💰 Best Value Pick: Concrete Pavers

Concrete pavers offer the best combination of cost, durability, variety, and repairability. They come in dozens of colors, textures, and sizes, last 25–50 years, and individual pavers can be replaced without disturbing the surrounding installation — unlike poured concrete, which cracks and must be repoured in sections. The cost premium over concrete flatwork ($15–$30/sq ft vs $9–$18/sq ft) buys you a surface that's easier to repair, doesn't crack from frost heave, and adds more resale value.

Base & Supporting Materials Guide

The pavers themselves are only part of what you need to order. A properly constructed base system accounts for 30–50% of the total material cost and is the single most important factor in how long the paved surface lasts. Pavers installed without a proper base will shift, sink, and crack within 2–5 years in freeze-thaw climates.

Complete Base System — What to Order

MaterialPurposeDepthPer 100 Sq FtCost
¾" crushed stone (road base)Compacted structural base4–6"1.5–2.5 tons$30–$50/ton
Coarse concrete sandLeveling bedding layer1"~400 lbs$25–$40/ton
Geotextile fabricSeparates base from subsoil (optional but recommended)Below gravel~110 sq ft$0.15–$0.30/sq ft
Plastic edge restraintsPerimeter containmentAt grade~40 LF (10×10)$0.80–$1.50/LF
Spike nails for edgingAnchor edge restraints1 box$8–$15
Polymeric jointing sandFills and hardens jointsJoint full1–2 bags (50 lb)$20–$30/bag

Excavation Depth

Total excavation depth = paver thickness + 1" sand + gravel base depth. Standard calculation: 2.5" paver + 1" sand + 5" gravel = 8.5" total excavation. Compact the native soil after excavation before adding gravel. For driveways or areas with vehicle traffic, use a minimum 6" compacted gravel base — 8" is better. Use our gravel calculator to find the exact tonnage needed for your project area and base depth.

Tools You'll Need (DIY)

  • Plate compactor rental ($60–$100/day) — compact the gravel base and set the pavers after installation. Hand tamping is not sufficient for any paver project over 50 sq ft.
  • Wet saw or angle grinder with diamond blade ($30–$60/day rental) — for cutting border and edge pavers to fit. Score-and-snap technique works for some paver types but a wet saw gives cleaner cuts.
  • Screed board and 1" steel pipes — for leveling the sand bedding layer to a consistent 1" depth. Two pipes of the same diameter set 4–6 ft apart, lay sand, screed across the pipes to level.
  • Rubber mallet — for setting pavers without cracking them. Never use a steel hammer directly on pavers.
  • Level and string line — for establishing grade and slope (minimum ¼" per foot away from structures for drainage).

Laying Patterns & Waste Guide

The pattern you choose affects both appearance and how many extra pavers you need. Some patterns require cuts at virtually every border piece; others have minimal cuts. Choosing the wrong pattern for your skill level can double installation time and significantly increase waste.

PatternWaste FactorDifficultyBest ForNotes
Running Bond (horizontal)5–8%EasyWalkways, patios, drivewaysMost popular; offsets joints by half a paver
Stack Bond (grid)5%EasyModern look, large paversJoints line up — requires precise layout
Basket Weave5–8%EasyTraditional patios with 4×8 brickRequires square area for best appearance
Herringbone 90°10%MediumDriveways, patiosInterlock distributes vehicle loads well
Herringbone 45°15%Medium-HighDecorative patiosDiagonal cuts at every border = more waste
Circular / Fan20–25%HighFeature areas, medallionsRequires wet saw + template; contractor-level
Random / Irregular10–15%Medium-HighNatural stone, flaggingCuts every piece to fit; time-intensive
💡 For First-Time DIY: Use Running Bond

Running bond (brick-like offset pattern) is the universal recommendation for first-time paver installers. It's forgiving of minor dimensional inconsistencies, produces clean results without complex layout, requires the fewest cuts per linear foot of border, and works for any paver size from 4×8 up to 24×24. Save herringbone and circular patterns for projects where you're hiring a professional installer or for your second paver project.

Hidden Costs Most Estimates Miss

The paver count and material cost are the starting point. These are the items that routinely appear in the final invoice that weren't in the original estimate.

1. Excavation and Spoil Removal

Excavating 8 inches across a 320 sq ft patio produces approximately 8 cubic yards of soil — roughly 3 pickup truck loads. If you're DIYing, you need somewhere to put this soil (garden bed fill, grading elsewhere on the property, or a hired haul-away at $150–$400/load). Contractors typically include excavation in their price but may charge separately for haul-away if access is difficult.

2. Slope Grading for Drainage

Every paved surface must slope away from structures at a minimum ¼" per foot for water to drain properly. On a level yard, this is built into the base grading and costs nothing extra. On a sloped yard where you want a level patio, you may need to cut-and-fill the grade or build a retaining edge on the low side. A modest 6-inch grade difference across a 16×20 ft patio adds $300–$800 in grading work that isn't in the base paver estimate.

3. Polymeric Sand Quantity

Polymeric sand is usually quoted as "1–2 bags per 100 sq ft" — but that range is wide for a reason. Coverage depends heavily on joint width and paver size. Small 4×8 pavers with 3/16" joints use significantly more sand per square foot than large 16×16 pavers with ¼" joints. Underbuy and your last joints get filled with regular sand that washes out. Buy an extra bag — leftover polymeric sand stores well in a sealed bucket.

4. Sealing (Optional but Recommended)

Concrete and natural stone pavers benefit significantly from a penetrating sealer applied 30–60 days after installation (after the pavers have cured and joints have settled). Sealing enhances color, prevents staining, and protects joint sand from washing out. A quality penetrating sealer costs $0.20–$0.50 per sq ft in materials. Professional sealing adds $0.50–$1.50 per sq ft. On a 300 sq ft patio: $200–$600 all-in. This is not in the standard paver calculator estimate.

5. Steps at Grade Transitions

If the patio sits lower or higher than the house entry, steps are needed. Each paver step costs $150–$400 in materials and labor. A simple 2-step transition from the back door to the patio adds $300–$800 that's rarely included in base estimates. This applies to both DIY and contractor bids — contractors often exclude steps unless explicitly noted in the scope.

6. Retaining Edge on Sloped Sites

When a patio is built on a sloped yard, the downhill edge often needs a retaining structure to hold the base material in place. This can range from a simple boulder edging ($100–$300) to a proper retaining wall ($500–$3,000+ depending on height and length). Use our retaining wall cost calculator to estimate this separately if your site has significant slope.

⚠️ The Real Budget: Add 15–20% Contingency

Professional hardscape contractors add 15% contingency to paver projects. For an $8,000 estimate, that's $1,200 in reserve. The most common surprises: discovering soft spots in the subgrade that require additional base depth, irrigation lines that need rerouting, and tree roots encountered during excavation. Budget the contingency before you start — not after the unexpected hits.

Common Paver Estimation Mistakes

Only Pricing the Pavers

The pavers are typically 40–60% of the total project cost. The base system (gravel, sand, fabric, edging, polymeric sand) adds another 20–30%. Labor adds the rest. A 320 sq ft patio with $3,200 in pavers doesn't cost $3,200 — it costs $7,000–$12,000 installed. Always build the full system cost before comparing DIY vs contractor.

Using the Wrong Waste Factor for the Pattern

Ordering 10% extra for a 45° herringbone pattern isn't enough — you need 15%. Every diagonal border cut produces an offcut that can't be reused on the other side of the same border. On a 300 sq ft patio with herringbone at 45°, the difference between 10% and 15% waste is 15 pavers — roughly $30–$60 in materials but a return trip and potential batch mismatch if you run short. Always match the waste factor to the pattern.

Buying From Multiple Batches

Concrete pavers are manufactured in production runs. Color consistency varies between runs even for identical products from the same supplier. Buying 200 pavers today and 50 more next month almost always produces a visible color patch where the second batch was used. Order everything at once and store the extras — leftover pavers in the same batch are your repair supply for the next decade.

Skimping on Base Depth

In freeze-thaw climates (most of the US north of Virginia), 4 inches of gravel base is the minimum — 6 inches is standard. Contractors in competitive markets sometimes quote thinner bases to lower their bid. Ask specifically: "What depth of compacted gravel base are you including?" The answer should be 4 inches minimum for pedestrian areas and 6 inches minimum for driveways. A thin base produces a patio that heaves, settles, and needs releveling within 3–5 years.

Skipping the Plate Compactor

Hand-tamping or foot-tamping the sand bedding layer is not equivalent to plate compaction. The plate compactor both levels the sand and locks the pavers into the bedding layer by vibrating them into position. A properly compacted paver installation doesn't rock or shift under foot. One that was hand-tamped will develop loose pavers within 1–2 seasons. Rent the compactor — at $60–$100/day it's the single cheapest thing you can do to protect a $3,000+ material investment.

How We Estimate Costs

The Paver Count Formula

Pavers = CEILING(Area ÷ Paver Area × 1.10)

We calculate exact paver size in square feet from the nominal dimensions, divide the project area by that value to get the exact count, multiply by 1.10 for the 10% waste allowance, and apply a ceiling function to always round up — you can't buy a fraction of a paver. This matches the methodology used by paver manufacturers (ICPI — Interlocking Concrete Pavement Institute) for standard rectangular installations in straight patterns.

Pricing Data Sources

Material cost ranges are derived from retail pricing at Home Depot, Lowe's, and regional masonry supply distributors for the specific paver types in the calculator, reviewed annually. Installation cost per square foot is sourced from contractor bid data on HomeAdvisor and Angi for clearly scoped paver installation projects, cross-referenced with RSMeans unit cost data for hardscape installation. The ranges represent the 20th to 80th percentile of observed market pricing — excluding the cheapest bids (inadequate base) and the most expensive (premium markets or complex sites).

What the Calculator Assumes

  • Rectangular area on reasonably level ground
  • Straight pattern installation (running bond, stack bond, or basket weave)
  • Standard 6-inch compacted gravel base + 1-inch sand bedding
  • National average US pricing — add 25–40% for Northeast and Pacific Coast
  • No excavation haul-away, retaining structures, or steps included
💡 Why We Show Cost Ranges

A 12×12 concrete paver costs $1.50 at one supplier and $4.50 at another in the same metro area for meaningfully different quality and finish levels. Contractor installation for the same 300 sq ft patio runs $4,000 in rural Ohio and $9,000 in Boston. Showing a single number would be useless at best and misleading at worst. Use the midpoint for planning, the high end as your budget ceiling, and actual supplier quotes plus 3 contractor bids for final project decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many pavers do I need for a 10×10 patio?+
A 10×10 ft patio (100 sq ft) needs: 110 pieces of 12×12 inch pavers (including 10% waste). 495 pieces of 4×8 inch brick pavers. 62 pieces of 16×16 inch pavers. 28 pieces of 24×24 inch pavers. Use the calculator above for exact counts with your specific paver size. For the full project budget including base materials, a 10×10 concrete paver patio runs $1,000–$2,000 DIY or $1,500–$3,000 contractor-installed.
How many pavers do I need for a 12×12 patio?+
A 12×12 ft patio (144 sq ft) needs: 158 pieces of 12×12 inch pavers (with 10% waste). 716 pieces of 4×8 brick pavers. 89 pieces of 16×16 pavers. 40 pieces of 24×24 pavers. Total installed cost for a 12×12 concrete paver patio runs $2,160–$4,320 contractor-installed or $1,440–$2,880 in DIY materials. Note: a 12×12 ft patio fits a 4-seat bistro set but is tight for a 6-seat dining table — most homeowners find 14×16 or larger works better for primary outdoor dining.
How many pavers do I need per square foot?+
Pavers per square foot by size: 4×8 inch = 4.5 per sq ft. 6×6 inch = 4.0 per sq ft. 6×9 inch = 2.67 per sq ft. 12×12 inch = 1.0 per sq ft. 16×16 inch = 0.56 per sq ft. 18×18 inch = 0.44 per sq ft. 24×24 inch = 0.25 per sq ft. Always add your waste factor on top of the base count — 10% for straight patterns, 15% for herringbone at 45°.
How much does it cost to install pavers per square foot?+
Professional paver installation costs $15–$30/sq ft for concrete pavers, $18–$32/sq ft for brick, $25–$55/sq ft for natural stone — all installed at national average US pricing. In the Northeast and Pacific Coast, add 30–50% to these figures. DIY saves the labor portion ($5–$15/sq ft) but requires renting a plate compactor and wet saw. For a complete 300 sq ft concrete paver patio: $4,500–$9,000 contractor-installed, or $1,500–$3,000 in DIY materials.
Can I lay pavers myself?+
Yes — paver installation is one of the most learnable hardscape DIY projects. The steps: excavate 8–10 inches, lay geotextile fabric (optional but recommended), add 5–6 inches of compacted crushed stone, add 1 inch of leveled coarse sand, lay pavers in your pattern, install edge restraints, compact with a plate compactor, sweep in polymeric sand, final compact, and mist with water. The plate compactor and a wet saw for cuts are the two rental tools that make the difference between professional results and a shifting, uneven surface. Our step-by-step paver patio guide covers the full process.
What size pavers are best for a patio?+
12×12 and 16×16 inch pavers are the most popular residential choices — they're widely available, easy to install, require fewer cuts, and suit most styles from traditional to contemporary. For a traditional or cottage look, 4×8 inch brick pavers in herringbone or running bond are classic. For a modern minimalist look, 24×24 inch pavers create a clean, expansive appearance with minimal joints. Smaller spaces (under 150 sq ft) look better with smaller pavers — 12×12 or 4×8 rather than 24×24.
Why should I add 10% extra pavers?+
The 10% accounts for: cuts at edges and borders (every border paver is cut to fit), breakage during cutting and installation, and future repairs. For herringbone at 45°, use 15% — the diagonal cuts produce more offcuts that can't be reused. For circular patterns, use 20–25%. More importantly: always order all pavers from the same production batch. Concrete paver color varies between batches — pavers ordered later to fill gaps or make repairs will visibly differ in shade. Order 15% extra on the first order and keep leftovers.
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