Calculate concrete volume needed for a slab in cubic yards. Enter length, width, and thickness to get accurate material estimates for your project.
Pouring a concrete slab is one of the most common construction tasks, whether you're building a garage floor, patio, shed foundation, or workshop. The single most important step before ordering concrete is accurately calculating the volume you need. Order too little and you'll have a short pour that weakens the slab; order too much and you waste money on excess material that hardens before you can use it.
This concrete slab volume calculator takes your slab's length, width, and thickness and converts those measurements into cubic yards — the standard unit used by ready-mix concrete suppliers. It also shows you the volume in cubic feet, accounts for a configurable waste factor, and gives you the number of 60-lb or 80-lb bags if you're mixing by hand.
Whether you're a professional contractor estimating a bid or a homeowner planning a weekend DIY project, getting the volume right ensures you buy the correct amount of material, avoid costly delays, and keep your project on budget.
Ready-mix concrete is sold by the cubic yard, and most suppliers have a minimum order of 1 yard with short-load fees for smaller deliveries. Knowing your exact volume lets you avoid overpaying for excess concrete or scrambling to order more mid-pour. This calculator also helps you compare the cost of ready-mix delivery versus mixing bags by hand — a critical decision for small projects under 2 cubic yards.
Volume (ft³) = Length (ft) × Width (ft) × Thickness (in) ÷ 12 Volume (yd³) = Volume (ft³) ÷ 27 With waste: Volume × (1 + waste%/100)
Result: 2.47 cubic yards
A 20 ft × 10 ft slab at 4 inches thick equals 200 × 0.333 = 66.67 cubic feet, or 2.47 cubic yards. Adding 5% waste brings the total to 2.59 cubic yards. You would order 3 yards from a ready-mix supplier to ensure full coverage.
The formula is straightforward: multiply length × width × depth (all in feet), then divide by 27 to convert cubic feet to cubic yards. The most common mistake is forgetting to convert the slab thickness from inches to feet — simply divide the inch value by 12.
A 10×10 ft slab at 4 inches thick needs 1.23 cubic yards. A 12×20 ft garage slab at 6 inches needs 4.44 cubic yards. A 20×20 ft patio at 4 inches requires 4.94 cubic yards. These are base volumes before adding waste.
For small projects (under 1 cubic yard), 80-lb bags of concrete mix are practical. Each bag yields about 0.6 cubic feet. For a full cubic yard, you'd need 45 bags — that's 3,600 pounds of mixing. For anything larger, ready-mix delivery is strongly recommended for quality, speed, and cost efficiency.
Compact your subgrade to prevent settling. Use 2×4 or 2×6 lumber for forms, staked every 3–4 feet. Place a 4-inch gravel base for drainage. Set your reinforcement on chairs so it sits in the lower third of the slab. Pour, screed, bull-float, and finish in one continuous operation.
Most residential slabs (patios, walkways, shed pads) use 4 inches of concrete. Driveways and garage floors typically require 5–6 inches. Heavy-duty applications like RV pads or commercial floors may need 6–8 inches. Always check local building codes for minimum thickness requirements.
A 10 ft × 10 ft slab at 4 inches thick requires about 1.23 cubic yards of concrete (100 sq ft × 0.333 ft ÷ 27). With 10% waste, order approximately 1.36 cubic yards.
A cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet. It's the standard unit for ordering ready-mix concrete. One cubic yard covers about 81 square feet at 4 inches thick or 65 square feet at 5 inches thick.
For projects under 1 cubic yard (about 45 bags of 80-lb mix), bagged concrete can be cheaper and more convenient. For larger pours, ready-mix delivery is faster, ensures consistent quality, and is typically more cost-effective.
Ready-mix concrete typically costs $125–$175 per cubic yard depending on your location, PSI strength, and delivery distance. Most suppliers charge a short-load fee ($50–$100) for orders under their minimum (usually 3–10 yards).
A waste factor accounts for concrete lost to uneven subgrade, form imperfections, spillage, and over-excavation. A 5–10% waste factor is standard for slab pours. Complex shapes or uneven ground may warrant 10–15%.
Yes, you can pour in sections using construction joints. Each section should be poured continuously without cold joints. Plan section sizes that can be finished within the concrete's working time (about 90 minutes in moderate weather).
Wire mesh (6×6 W1.4/W1.4) is recommended for most residential slabs to control cracking. Rebar (#3 or #4 on 18–24 inch centers) is used for driveways, garages, and structural slabs. Fiber mesh can supplement but usually doesn't replace steel reinforcement.