Concrete Volume Calculator

Use this free concrete volume calculator to quickly estimate the amount of concrete needed for your project. Enter dimensions like length, width, and depth to get accurate results in cubic yards or cubic feet, making it ideal for slabs, footings, foundations, and construction planning.

By ConstructlyTools · Published: March 29, 2026 · Updated: April 14, 2026
Concrete Volume Calculator
📐 Formula
Volume (cu ft) = Length × Width × Thickness (ft) · Cu Yd = Cu Ft ÷ 27 · 60-lb bags = Cu Yd × 45 · 80-lb bags = Cu Yd × 34
Concrete Needed
Enter dimensions above
Cubic Feet
60-lb Bags
80-lb Bags
Pounds of Concrete

1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet · 60-lb bag ≈ 0.45 cu ft · 80-lb bag ≈ 0.60 cu ft · Ready-mix is more economical above ~1 cu yd · Always add 10% overage before ordering

How Does the Concrete Volume Calculator Work?

This calculator converts your project dimensions into cubic yards of concrete — the unit used for ready-mix ordering — and also tells you how many 60-lb or 80-lb bags you need for smaller pours. It handles four common shapes: rectangular slabs and footings, round columns (using tube form diameter), walls, and stairs.

Unlike our full concrete material calculator which covers rebar, forming, and finishing, this tool focuses on a single question: how much concrete do I need? It outputs cubic yards for ready-mix delivery and bag counts for hand-mixed small jobs, with a built-in overage factor to prevent running short mid-pour.

💡 The #1 Concrete Ordering Mistake

Ordering exactly the calculated volume and running short mid-pour is the most common and costly concrete mistake. Once a pour begins, you cannot stop — the concrete already placed will begin to cure. If the truck runs dry, you're stuck with a cold joint (a weak plane between old and new concrete) that may require demolition and replacement. Always order 10% more than your calculated volume. The extra cost of a little leftover concrete is nothing compared to a failed pour.

Bags vs Ready-Mix Concrete — Which to Use?

VolumeBest OptionWhyCost Range
Under 0.5 cu ydBagged concreteNo minimum delivery; mix at your pace$5–$8/60-lb bag
0.5 – 1 cu ydEitherBagged is flexible; ready-mix fasterBags ~$200–$400; Mix ~$150–$250+delivery
1 – 3 cu ydReady-mixShort-load fee applies but worth it$200–$600 + short-load fee
Over 3 cu ydReady-mixCost-effective, consistent mix, faster pour$130–$170/cu yd (2026)
✅ Ready-Mix Minimum Loads & Short-Load Fees

Most ready-mix companies have a minimum load of 1–3 cubic yards. If you order less than the minimum, you pay a "short-load" surcharge of $50–$150. For loads under 1 cubic yard, bagged concrete is almost always more economical once the short-load fee is factored in. For larger pours, ready-mix is not only cheaper but produces a more consistent mix and allows a faster, uninterrupted pour — critical for structural applications and hot-weather pours where concrete sets quickly.

Concrete Mix & Strength Guide

Mix / PSICommon Bag TypeBest ForMin Thickness
2,500 PSIStandard mixSidewalks, patios, non-structural slabs4"
3,000 PSIQuikrete 80-lbDriveways, garage floors, footings4"
4,000 PSIHigh-strength mixStructural slabs, heavy vehicle areas, columns4"
5,000 PSIFiber-reinforced / commercialIndustrial floors, bridge decks, precast4"
Fast-settingQuikrete Fast-SettingPost holes, fence posts — no mixing requiredN/A
Self-levelingUnderlayment mixFloor leveling overlays — poured thin¼"–2"
⚠️ Residential Minimums by Application

IRC requires 3,500 PSI for garage floors exposed to deicing salts; 2,500 PSI minimum for interior slabs. Driveways subject to freeze-thaw cycles should use 4,000 PSI with air entrainment. Always use at least #4 rebar on 18" centers or welded wire mesh for any slab larger than 100 sq ft — concrete is strong in compression but weak in tension, and reinforcement prevents cracking from ground movement and thermal expansion.

Example Calculations

Example 1 — Backyard Patio Slab

12 × 16 ft patio, 4 inches thick

Volume = 12 × 16 × (4/12) = 12 × 16 × 0.333 = 64 cu ft

64 ÷ 27 = 2.37 cubic yards

Add 10% overage: 2.37 × 1.10 = 2.6 cu yd → order 3 cu yd ready-mix

Example 2 — Fence Post Footings (bags)

8 posts, 10" diameter tube, 36 inches deep

Volume per post = π × (5/12)² × 3 = 3.14159 × 0.1736 × 3 = 1.636 cu ft

8 posts × 1.636 = 13.09 cu ft total

13.09 ÷ 27 = 0.485 cu yd → use bags

80-lb bags: 13.09 ÷ 0.60 = 22 bags (add 10% = 25 bags)

Example 3 — Garage Floor Slab

24 × 24 ft two-car garage, 6 inches thick

Volume = 24 × 24 × (6/12) = 24 × 24 × 0.5 = 288 cu ft

288 ÷ 27 = 10.67 cubic yards

Add 10%: 10.67 × 1.10 = 11.7 → order 12 cu yd ready-mix

At $150/cu yd: ~$1,800 materials (plus pump truck if needed)

Frequently Asked Questions

How many bags of concrete do I need for a 10×10 slab?+
A 10×10 ft slab at 4 inches thick requires 1.23 cubic yards of concrete (10 × 10 × 0.333 = 33.3 cu ft ÷ 27 = 1.23 cu yd). Add 10% overage = 1.35 cu yd. In 80-lb bags: 1.35 × 34 = 46 bags. In 60-lb bags: 1.35 × 45 = 61 bags. For a pour this size, ready-mix is worth considering — 46 bags of 80-lb concrete is significant physical labor and harder to get a consistent mix than ready-mix delivery.
How many cubic yards are in a truck of concrete?+
A standard ready-mix truck holds 8–10 cubic yards of concrete (some newer trucks hold up to 11 yards). Most residential pours are 3–8 cubic yards, fitting in a single truck. For larger projects requiring more than one truck, coordinate deliveries so trucks arrive 15–20 minutes apart — you need time to place and consolidate the first load before the second arrives, but not so long that the first load begins to set before you can join the pours.
How many 80-lb bags of concrete make a cubic yard?+
It takes approximately 45 bags of 80-lb concrete to make one cubic yard. Each 80-lb bag of concrete yields about 0.60 cubic feet of mixed concrete. Since 1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet: 27 ÷ 0.60 = 45 bags. For 60-lb bags, each yields about 0.45 cubic feet, so you need approximately 60 bags per cubic yard (27 ÷ 0.45 = 60 bags). The calculator above computes both automatically for your specific volume.
How thick should a concrete slab be?+
Standard residential slab thickness: 4 inches for patios, sidewalks, and non-load-bearing interior slabs; 5–6 inches for driveways and garage floors that see vehicle traffic; 6–8 inches for heavy vehicle areas or structural slabs. Footings are typically 12 inches deep and twice as wide as the wall they support. Increasing thickness from 4" to 6" uses 50% more concrete but significantly increases load capacity — always specify the right thickness for the application rather than defaulting to the minimum.
How long does concrete take to cure?+
Concrete reaches approximately 70% of its design strength at 7 days and about 99% at 28 days (the standard curing period for structural testing). For practical purposes: light foot traffic after 24–48 hours, full pedestrian use after 7 days, vehicle traffic after 28 days. Proper curing (keeping the surface moist for 7 days) is as important as the mix design — concrete that dries too fast develops surface cracks and can lose 50% of its potential strength. Cover fresh slabs with plastic sheeting or curing compound, especially in hot or windy conditions.
What is the difference between concrete and cement?+
Cement is an ingredient in concrete — specifically the binding agent (Portland cement) that reacts with water to harden. Concrete is the finished material: cement + sand + gravel (aggregate) + water. A common analogy: cement is to concrete what flour is to bread. Bagged "concrete mix" already contains cement, sand, and aggregate — you just add water. "Cement mix" or "mortar" usually contains only cement and sand without coarse aggregate, and is used for setting stone, brick, or as a repair mortar — not for structural slabs or footings.
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