Concrete Footing Calculator

Planning a foundation project? Our Concrete Footing Calculator helps you quickly estimate how much concrete you need for footings based on length, width, and depth.

Whether you’re building a deck, fence, shed, or house foundation, this tool gives you accurate volume calculations in seconds — helping you avoid shortages, reduce waste, and stay on budget.

concrete footing calculator online
By ConstructlyTools Editorial Team · Published: April 7, 2026 · Updated: April 11, 2026 · Sources: ACI 318 · IRC · Quikrete
4.8 / 5 — rated by 2,183 users
Concrete Footing Calculator
📐 Formula Used
Round: Volume = π × (Diameter/2 ÷ 12)² × (Depth ÷ 12) cu ft per footing Bags = CEILING(Total Volume × 1.10 ÷ Bag Volume) · Sources: ACI 318, IRC, Quikrete product specs
Concrete Bags Needed
— bags
Enter footing dimensions above to calculate
Cu Ft per Footing
Total Volume
Total Cu Yards
Bags (exact, no waste)

Includes 10% waste overage · 80 lb bag = 0.60 cu ft · 60 lb bag = 0.45 cu ft · 40 lb bag = 0.30 cu ft · 27 cu ft = 1 cu yd · Over 1 cu yd? Ready-mix is cheaper

Always order the full rounded-up quantity. Footings must extend below local frost line. Verify dimensions with a structural engineer for load-bearing applications.

Understanding the Calculator Inputs

This calculator handles three types of concrete footings used in residential construction: round tube footings (for deck posts, fence posts, and pergola columns), square pad footings (for shed corners and isolated column bases), and continuous wall footings (for house foundations, retaining walls, and additions). Select the tab that matches your project type.

Round / Tube Footings

Round tube footings are the most common DIY footing type — poured into a cylindrical tube form (Sonotube is the most well-known brand) inside a drilled or dug hole. They’re used for deck posts, fence posts, pergola posts, gazebo posts, and freestanding structural columns. For most residential deck applications, a 12" diameter tube at 42" depth is the standard starting point — but always check your local code and deck span tables for the load your specific post carries.

Square / Pad Footings

Square pad footings (also called spread footings or isolated footings) are flat concrete pads poured at the base of a column or post. They’re used under shed corner posts, steel column bases in basements, and as isolated point-load footings in engineered structures. The pad dimensions are typically 2–3× the width of the post or column above, and the depth is sized to spread the load over sufficient soil bearing area.

Continuous Wall Footings

Wall footings are continuous concrete pads poured in a trench along the full length of a wall — used under house foundations, block retaining walls, and concrete stem walls. Standard rule: footing width = 2× the wall thickness, footing depth = the wall thickness. For an 8-inch concrete block wall, the footing is typically 16" wide × 8" deep. Wall footings must extend below the frost line in freeze-thaw climates.

Footing Depth

Footing depth is measured from finished ground surface to the bottom of the footing. In freeze-thaw climates, footings must extend below the local frost line to prevent frost heave — the upward movement of soil as groundwater freezes and expands. In frost-free climates, footings only need to reach stable bearing soil — typically 12–18" minimum. See the frost line guide below.

Bag Size

80 lb bags are most economical per cubic foot but heavy to mix solo. 60 lb bags are easier to handle. 40 lb bags suit small isolated footings. For 8+ footings totaling more than 1 cubic yard, ready-mix concrete is cheaper per cubic foot and eliminates bag mixing labor.

💡 When to Order Ready-Mix Instead of Bags

Bagged concrete is economical for small jobs — up to about 1 cubic yard. Above that, ready-mix delivered by truck is cheaper per cubic foot and eliminates mixing labor. Ready-mix minimum orders start at 1 cubic yard ($150–$250) with delivery fees of $50–$150. If your calculator shows more than 45 bags of 80 lb concrete (≈ 27 cu ft = 1 cu yd), call a local ready-mix supplier for a comparison quote.

3 Real-World Footing Examples

Example 1 — Deck Footings (6 round footings, 12" × 42")

A standard attached deck with 6 post footings. 12" diameter tube form, 42" deep (below frost line for Zone 5), using 80 lb bags.

Volume per footing (round tube formula):

π × (6")² × 42" ÷ 1,728 = 3.1416 × 36 × 42 ÷ 1,728 = 2.75 cu ft per footing

Total volume (6 footings):

2.75 × 6 = 16.5 cu ft total (0.61 cubic yards)

Bags needed (80 lb = 0.60 cu ft each) + 10% waste:

16.5 ÷ 0.60 = 27.5 → round up = 28 bags × 1.10 = 31 bags of 80 lb concrete

Cost estimate:

31 bags × $7–$10 per bag = $217–$310 in concrete

ItemQtyUnit CostTotal
Quikrete 80 lb bags31 bags$7–$10$217–$310
12" Sonotube forms (4 ft sections)6 tubes$10–$16$60–$96
Post base hardware (adjustable)6 bases$12–$20$72–$120
½" rebar (2 per footing, 3 ft)12 sticks$4–$7$48–$84
Total footing materials$397–$610

Real-world note: For 6 footings at 42" depth, rent a one-person gas auger ($60–$90/day) — it drills a 12" hole in minutes versus 30 minutes by hand clamshell digger. Set all tubes, mix and pour one at a time, place the post base anchor while the concrete is still wet (within 20–30 minutes of pouring). Let footings cure 48–72 hours before loading with post weight.

Example 2 — Shed Corner Footings (4 square pads, 16"×16"×8")

Four isolated square pad footings for an 8×10 ft shed, one at each corner. Poured on grade in stable soil (frost-free climate).

Volume per pad (square formula):

16" × 16" × 8" ÷ 1,728 = 2,048 ÷ 1,728 = 1.19 cu ft per pad

Total volume (4 pads) + 10% waste:

1.19 × 4 = 4.74 cu ft × 1.10 = 5.2 cu ft total

Bags (80 lb = 0.60 cu ft):

5.2 ÷ 0.60 = 8.7 → 9 bags of 80 lb concrete

Real-world note: 9 bags for 4 corner pads is easily manageable as a solo DIY project. Build simple square forms from scrap 2×6 lumber, level them carefully — the shed floor level depends entirely on these pads being coplanar — and embed a J-bolt or post base anchor while the concrete is wet. In freeze-thaw climates, these shallow pads will heave — increase depth to below frost line or use helical piers for a frost-free foundation.

Example 3 — Continuous Wall Footing (40 ft × 16" wide × 10" deep)

A continuous footing for a 40-foot concrete block garden wall — 16" wide, 10" deep, poured in a trench.

Volume (continuous wall formula):

40 ft × (16"÷12) × (10"÷12) = 40 × 1.333 × 0.833 = 44.4 cu ft = 1.64 cubic yards

Bags (80 lb) + 10% waste:

44.4 ÷ 0.60 = 74 bags × 1.10 = 82 bags

Ready-mix comparison:

1.64 cu yd × $150–$200/yd = $246–$328 ready-mix vs 82 bags × $8 = $656 in bags. Ready-mix is cheaper and much faster.

Real-world note: At 1.64 cubic yards, ready-mix is clearly the right choice — the bag option costs 2× as much and requires mixing and pouring 82 bags by hand. Call a ready-mix supplier, order 1.8 yards (built-in waste), poured in 30 minutes. For wall footings, place two runs of ½" rebar lengthwise before the pour and tie vertical rebar starters that will extend up into the block wall above. Use our rebar calculator to determine rebar quantity.

Footing Size Quick Reference

Standard footing sizes for common residential applications. Always verify against your local building code and actual loads — heavier loads or poor soil require larger footings.

Round Tube Footings — By Application

ApplicationTube DiameterTypical Depth80 lb Bags EachNotes
Fence post (4×4)8–10"Below frost + 6"1–2 bagsFast-set dry-pour method works well
Deck post (4×4, low deck)10–12"Below frost + 6"2–3 bagsCheck deck span tables for exact size
Deck post (6×6, elevated)12–14"Below frost + 6"3–4 bagsLarger footings for taller/heavier decks
Pergola / gazebo post12"Below frost + 6"2–3 bagsConfirm post base hardware fits tube OD
Freestanding shed post10–12"Below frost OR 24"2–3 bagsIn frost-free zones, 24" minimum
Carport / large structure16–24"Below frost + 12"6–14 bagsMay require engineer stamp

Square Pad Footings — By Application

ApplicationPad SizeDepth80 lb Bags Each
Small shed corner (4×4 post)12"×12"×8"Below frost or 12"1 bag
Standard shed corner (6×6 post)16"×16"×8"Below frost or 18"2 bags
Garage column base24"×24"×12"Below frost + 6"4–5 bags
Engineered point loadVaries — use engineerEngineeredVaries

Wall Footings — Standard Sizing Rule

Wall TypeFooting WidthFooting DepthCu Ft per LF
4" concrete block wall8–12"8"0.44–0.67
8" concrete block wall16"8–10"0.89–1.11
Poured concrete wall (8")16"10"1.11
House foundation (8" wall)20–24"12"1.67–2.00

Frost Line & Footing Depth Guide

In freeze-thaw climates, concrete footings must extend below the frost line — the depth at which soil freezes in winter. Footings above the frost line are pushed upward by frost heave as water freezes and expands. Even small movement can crack a concrete wall, shift a deck post, or misalign a fence.

RegionExample States/CitiesFrost DepthMinimum Footing Depth
Frost-free / SubtropicalSouthern FL, HI0"12–18" (bearing soil)
Very shallow frostGulf Coast, Southern CA0–6"18–24"
Shallow frostNC, VA, TN, Pacific NW6–18"24"
Moderate frostMid-Atlantic, Midwest, CO18–36"36–42"
Deep frostNew England, Great Lakes, Upper Midwest36–48"42–54"
Very deep frostNorthern MN, ND, MT, Upper MI48–60"54–66"
Extreme frostNorthern Canada, Alaska60–100"+ Below freeze depth
⚠ Always Confirm Frost Depth with Your Local Building Department

The table above shows typical ranges — your jurisdiction’s required footing depth may differ based on local soil conditions, elevation, and code amendments. Your local building department will give you the required depth in one phone call. For permitted projects, the inspector verifies footing depth before concrete is poured — the hole must be inspected open, before any concrete goes in.

Concrete Bag Size Comparison

Bag SizeVolume (cu ft)Avg CostCost / Cu FtBest For
40 lb bag0.30 cu ft$5–$7$17–$23/cu ftSmall isolated footings, solo work, tight spaces
60 lb bag0.45 cu ft$6–$9$13–$20/cu ftGood balance — easier to handle than 80 lb
80 lb bag0.60 cu ft$7–$10$12–$17/cu ftBest value — standard for deck & fence footings
Ready-mix (1 cy)27 cu ft$150–$250 + delivery$7–$14/cu ftBest value above ~1 cubic yard total volume

Fast-Set vs Standard Concrete for Footings

Fast-set concrete (Quikrete Fast-Setting, Sakrete Fast-Setting) is the popular choice for fence and deck post footings because it can be poured dry directly into the hole and watered in place — no mixing required. It sets firm in 20–40 minutes, allowing you to move to the next hole quickly, and reaches full strength in 4 hours. Standard concrete requires mixing and takes 24–48 hours to set sufficiently to load. For tube footings where you’re placing a post base anchor in wet concrete, fast-set is almost always preferred. It’s sold in 50 lb bags at the same price as standard 60 lb bags and covers the same volume.

Rebar in Concrete Footings

Concrete is strong in compression but weak in tension — rebar adds tensile strength and prevents cracking under load. Whether rebar is required depends on the footing type, load, and local code.

Footing TypeRebar Required?Typical SpecNotes
Fence post (tube)Usually noOptional: 1 vertical ½" barAdds crack resistance in deep holes
Deck post (tube)Code-dependent2 vertical ½" bars, 3 ft longCheck local deck code — often required
Square pad footingCode-dependent#4 bars in grid patternEngineered pads always require rebar
Continuous wall footingAlmost always2 runs of ½" horizontal + vertical startersRequired by IRC for most wall footings
House foundation footingAlwaysEngineered rebar scheduleRequires engineer and permit inspection

Use our rebar calculator to determine rebar quantity and weight for your footing project. For deck footings specifically, the IRC 2026 requires rebar in tube footings over 30" deep in most jurisdictions.

✓ Rebar Placement Tips

For round tube footings: place 2 vertical ½" (#4) rebar sticks centered in the tube before pouring, with 2–3 inches of concrete cover on all sides. Wire them together with a horizontal tie bar at mid-depth. For wall footings: run two horizontal ½" bars the full length, positioned 3 inches from the bottom. Tie vertical starter bars to the horizontal runs every 24–48 inches, extending up into the wall above. All rebar must have a minimum 3" concrete cover — use plastic rebar chairs to hold bars off the soil before pouring.

Common Concrete Footing Mistakes

Pouring Above the Frost Line

The most consequential mistake in DIY footing work. A footing poured above the frost line will heave upward in winter — potentially by 1–4 inches — then settle back unevenly in spring. Over several freeze-thaw cycles, this cracks foundation walls, misaligns deck posts, and leans fence posts. Always dig below the local frost depth plus 6 inches of bearing soil.

Not Allowing Adequate Cure Time

Standard concrete reaches about 70% of design strength in 7 days and full strength at 28 days. Fast-set concrete is firm enough to load lightly in 4 hours but should not carry full structural loads for 24–48 hours. For deck footings, wait a minimum of 24 hours before setting posts, 72 hours before beginning framing.

Undersizing the Footing Diameter for the Load

A 10" tube footing carries significantly less load than a 12" tube — not because of concrete volume, but because the bearing area at the bottom determines how much weight the footing distributes into the soil. A 10" footing has 78 sq in of bearing area; a 12" footing has 113 sq in — 45% more. In soft clay, fill soil, or organic soil, you may need larger diameter footings than the standard 12".

Skipping the Tube Form for Round Footings

Some DIYers pour directly into the hole without a tube form. This fails in sandy, gravelly, or clay soils where hole sides collapse or concrete spreads at the bottom. The tube form (Sonotube or equivalent) keeps the concrete cylindrical, prevents soil contamination, and gives a clean finished footing at grade. At $8–$15 per section, it eliminates a significant failure mode.

Using Too Little or Too Much Water

Concrete mix design is precise — the water-to-cement ratio determines final strength. Too much water produces weak, porous concrete that cracks early. Too little produces stiff concrete that doesn’t consolidate properly around rebar. Follow the bag instructions exactly — typically 3 quarts of water per 80 lb bag. Use a mixing paddle in a drill for bags larger than 40 lb — hand mixing with a hoe doesn’t achieve thorough blending.

How We Calculate

Round footing: Volume (cu ft) = π × (Diameter ÷ 2 ÷ 12)² × (Depth ÷ 12) · converts diameter and depth from inches to feet, applies the cylinder volume formula (π × r² × h), multiplied by the number of footings for total volume.

Square pad: Volume (cu ft) = (Length × Width × Depth) ÷ 1,728 · all three dimensions in inches; dividing by 1,728 (12³) converts cubic inches to cubic feet.

Wall footing: Volume (cu ft) = Length (ft) × (Width ÷ 12) × (Depth ÷ 12) · length in feet; width and depth in inches converted to feet.

Bag count: Bags = CEILING(Total Volume × 1.10 ÷ Volume per Bag) — 10% waste applied, ceiling function used (always round up since partial bags can’t be purchased). Bag volumes: 40 lb = 0.30 cu ft, 60 lb = 0.45 cu ft, 80 lb = 0.60 cu ft per Quikrete and Sakrete manufacturer specifications.

💡 Always Buy the Rounded-Up Bag Count

The calculator’s bag count already includes 10% waste and rounds up. Don’t round down to save money — running out mid-pour forces a cold joint (fresh concrete poured onto partially set concrete), which creates a structural weak plane in the footing. Buy the full quantity and return any unopened bags to the store.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many bags of concrete do I need for a fence post footing?+
For a standard fence post in a 10" tube at 36" depth: volume = π × (5")² × 36" ÷ 1,728 = 1.64 cu ft. At 0.60 cu ft per 80 lb bag: 1.64 ÷ 0.60 = 2.7 → 3 bags per post (with waste). For a shorter fence in an 8" tube at 24" depth: ≈ 1 bag per post. Use the Round / Tube tab above with your specific tube diameter and depth for an exact count. Fast-set 50 lb bags are the most popular choice for fence posts — pour dry into the hole and add water, no mixing needed.
How many bags of concrete do I need for a deck footing?+
A standard deck footing — 12" diameter tube at 42" depth — requires approximately 5 bags of 80 lb concrete (2.75 cu ft ÷ 0.60 = 4.6, rounded up to 5 with waste). For 6 footings: 5 × 6 = 30 bags. Enter your exact dimensions in the Round / Tube tab above. Larger decks or deeper frost depths require wider and deeper footings — always check your local deck code for required footing size by tributary load area.
How deep do concrete footings need to be?+
In freeze-thaw climates, footings must extend below the local frost line. Typical frost depths: Southern US — 18–24" minimum; Mid-Atlantic and Midwest — 36–42"; New England and Great Lakes — 42–54"; Northern states — 54–66". In frost-free climates (southern Florida, Hawaii), footings only need to reach stable bearing soil — typically 12–18" minimum. Always confirm the required depth with your local building department before digging.
What size footing do I need for a deck post?+
The required footing diameter depends on the post load and soil bearing capacity. General starting points for residential decks in average soil: 4×4 post supporting up to 64 sq ft of deck — 10" tube; 6×6 post supporting 64–144 sq ft — 12" tube; larger tributary areas — 14–16" tube. Most local deck codes specify minimum footing sizes by load. The IRC 2026 provides prescriptive footing tables — your local building department can give you the required footing size for your specific deck design.
How many cubic yards of concrete do I need for footings?+
The calculator shows cubic yards in the results. As a reference: 6 standard deck footings (12" × 42") = 0.61 cubic yards. A 40 LF continuous wall footing (16" × 10") = 1.64 cubic yards. One cubic yard = 27 cubic feet = approximately 45 bags of 80 lb concrete. If your total is over 1 cubic yard, call a ready-mix supplier — delivered concrete is significantly cheaper per cubic foot and eliminates mixing labor.
Can I pour concrete footings in cold weather?+
Concrete must not freeze during curing. Don’t pour when air temperature is below 40°F and falling. Use warm mixing water. Cover fresh pours with insulating blankets for at least 48 hours. Use a concrete accelerator additive for temperatures between 40–50°F. Never pour on frozen ground — thaw the soil first. The safest approach is to avoid pouring footings when temperatures are expected to drop below 40°F within 48 hours of the pour.
When should I use ready-mix concrete instead of bags?+
Ready-mix is more economical when your total concrete volume exceeds about 1 cubic yard (27 cubic feet, approximately 45 bags of 80 lb). Below 1 yard, bags are more convenient — no minimum order, no truck scheduling, work at your own pace. Above 1 yard, ready-mix costs $7–$14 per cubic foot vs $12–$17 per cubic foot for bags, and a 40-minute pour vs a full day of bag mixing. If the calculator shows over 1.0 cu yd, get a ready-mix quote before buying bags.
📚 References & Data Sources
  1. ACI 318 — Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete — Primary US standard for concrete design including footing geometry requirements, minimum cover for reinforcement (3 inches for footings on soil), and structural design requirements for isolated and continuous footings. Referenced for footing sizing formulas and rebar cover requirements. American Concrete Institute, current edition.
  2. IRC (International Residential Code) — Sections R401–R408: Foundations — Prescriptive foundation requirements for residential construction including minimum footing widths by wall load, depth below frost line requirements, and rebar specifications for wall footings. Referenced for wall footing sizing table and rebar requirement guidance. ICC, current edition.
  3. IRC Appendix E — Manufactured Housing — Frost depth map and foundation depth requirements by USDA Plant Hardiness Zone used as the basis for the frost line table. Referenced for frost depth ranges by region. ICC, current edition.
  4. Quikrete — Concrete Mix Product Data Sheets — Bag yield volumes: 40 lb = 0.30 cu ft, 60 lb = 0.45 cu ft, 80 lb = 0.60 cu ft. Fast-set concrete curing time specifications (firm in 20–40 min, full strength 4 hours). Referenced for bag volume data in the bag count formula. Quikrete, current product specifications.
  5. Sakrete — Fast-Setting Concrete Product Data Sheet — Bag yield volumes cross-validated against Quikrete specifications. 50 lb fast-set bag coverage. Referenced for bag size comparison table. Sakrete, current product specifications.
  6. HomeAdvisor True Cost Guide 2026 — Footing installation cost data by region and project type. Ready-mix concrete pricing ranges by cubic yard. Referenced for cost estimates in worked examples. HomeAdvisor / Angi, 2026.

Frost depth data reflects USDA and local building department typical ranges — always confirm required footing depth with your local building department before construction. ConstructlyTools does not have a paid relationship with Quikrete, Sakrete, or any concrete product brand mentioned on this page.

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