Calculate tree basal area from diameter at breast height (DBH). Estimate stand density, basal area per acre, and stocking levels for forest management.
Basal area is one of the most important measurements in forestry and woodland management. It represents the cross-sectional area of a tree trunk measured at breast height (4.5 feet or 1.37 meters above ground level), and when summed across all trees in a plot, it gives a powerful indicator of stand density and forest productivity.
Foresters use basal area to make critical decisions about timber harvests, thinning operations, wildlife habitat quality, and reforestation planning. A stand's basal area — expressed in square feet per acre or square meters per hectare — tells you more about forest health than simple tree counts because it accounts for tree size. A stand with 200 small saplings per acre may have less basal area than one with 50 mature oaks.
This calculator computes individual tree basal area from DBH (diameter at breast height), total stand basal area from multiple trees, basal area per acre/hectare, and stocking percentage relative to reference values. Whether you're a professional forester, woodland owner, wildlife biologist, or forestry student, this tool streamlines the calculations needed for forest inventory and management planning.
Manual basal area calculations are tedious when inventorying dozens or hundreds of trees. This calculator instantly converts DBH measurements to individual and stand-level basal areas, compares to stocking guides, and handles unit conversions between imperial and metric systems. This basal area calculator helps you compare outcomes quickly and reduce avoidable mistakes when making day-to-day care decisions. Use the estimate as a planning baseline and confirm final decisions with a qualified professional when risk is high.
Basal Area (ft²) = π/4 × (DBH in inches / 12)² = 0.005454 × DBH². For metric: BA (m²) = π/4 × (DBH in cm / 100)². Stand BA per acre = Sum of individual tree BAs × (43,560 / plot area in ft²).
Result: 128.1 ft²/acre
A 14-inch DBH tree has a basal area of 0.005454 × 14² = 1.069 ft². With 12 similar trees in a 1/10 acre plot, the stand basal area is 12 × 1.069 × 10 = 128.1 ft² per acre.
Stand density is a measure of how many trees occupy a given area, but raw tree count alone doesn't capture the full picture. A stand of 500 small seedlings per acre is vastly different from 500 mature pines per acre. Basal area provides a size-weighted measure that correlates strongly with canopy closure, light availability, and timber volume. Stocking guides developed by the USDA Forest Service express basal area as a percentage of the theoretical maximum for a species and site quality.
Different forest types have different optimal basal area ranges. **Southern pine plantations** are typically managed at 80-100 ft²/acre for sawtimber production and thinned when they reach 120+ ft²/acre. **Northern hardwoods** (maple, beech, birch) naturally stock at 100-140 ft²/acre in mature stands. **Oak-hickory forests** perform well at 70-100 ft²/acre, with lower densities favoring acorn production for wildlife. **Douglas-fir** stands in the Pacific Northwest can exceed 200 ft²/acre in old-growth conditions.
Variable-radius point sampling using a BAF prism or angle gauge is the fastest field method for estimating stand basal area. Each "in" tree counts as the BAF value (commonly 10 ft²/acre). If you count 12 "in" trees at a BAF 10 point, the estimated basal area is 120 ft²/acre. This method requires no plot boundary measurement and is remarkably accurate when multiple points are averaged across a stand. Most state forestry agencies recommend BAF 10 for general hardwood and pine inventories.
DBH (Diameter at Breast Height) is measured at 4.5 feet (1.37 m) above ground on the uphill side of the tree. Use a diameter tape or measure circumference and divide by π (3.14159).
It depends on species and management goals. Fully stocked hardwood stands typically have 80-120 ft²/acre, while pine plantations may target 80-100 ft²/acre. Wildlife habitat often benefits from 60-80 ft²/acre.
Measuring at 4.5 feet standardizes the measurement above root flare and buttress swell, giving consistent and comparable readings across trees and over time.
Basal area is the actual measurement of cross-sectional area. Stocking is the percentage of basal area relative to a reference standard for a fully stocked stand of that forest type.
For a reliable estimate, measure all trees in fixed-radius plots (typically 1/10 or 1/5 acre) or use variable-radius point sampling with a BAF prism or angle gauge. This keeps planning practical and lowers the chance of preventable errors.
Yes, basal area combined with average tree height is the basis for most timber volume estimation equations. Higher basal area generally means more board feet per acre.