Calculate sod rolls needed for a new lawn. Enter area dimensions to find rolls, pallets, and cost for instant lawn installation.
Installing sod gives you an instant lawn — no waiting weeks for seed to germinate and fill in. But sod is priced by the roll, pallet, or square foot, and getting the quantity right is essential. Under-ordering means gaps in your lawn and extra delivery fees; over-ordering means paying for sod that dries out before you can lay it.
This calculator takes your lawn area and converts it to the number of sod rolls and pallets needed. Standard sod rolls cover approximately 10 square feet each (16–24 inches wide by 5 feet long varies by supplier). A pallet typically covers 450–500 square feet.
Whether you're sodding a new construction lot, repairing bare patches, or replacing an old lawn, this tool ensures you order the right amount for same-day installation.
This measurement supports better project estimation, enabling contractors and engineers to deliver accurate bids and avoid costly overruns during the construction process.
Sod is perishable and must be installed within 24–48 hours of harvest. Ordering too much wastes money; ordering too little causes delays. This calculator gives you the exact roll count plus a waste factor for cuts and trimming. Data-driven calculations reduce financial risk by ensuring that material orders, labor estimates, and project budgets reflect actual requirements rather than rough approximations.
Adjusted Area = Area × (1 + Waste%/100) Rolls = Adjusted Area ÷ Roll Coverage (sq ft) Pallets = Adjusted Area ÷ Pallet Coverage (sq ft)
Result: 220 rolls / ~4.4 pallets
A 2,000 sq ft lawn with 10% waste factor needs 2,200 sq ft of sod. At 10 sq ft per roll, that's 220 rolls or about 4.4 pallets (500 sq ft each). Order 5 pallets to ensure full coverage.
Sod provides an instant lawn with immediate erosion control. Seed is dramatically cheaper and offers more variety options. For slopes, high-traffic areas, or strict timelines, sod is the better choice. For large areas on a budget, seed makes more sense.
Break your lawn into simple shapes (rectangles, triangles, circles). Calculate each area separately and sum them. Subtract areas for walkways, beds, and structures. Add 10–15% for waste from cutting and fitting.
Have all soil prep done before the sod arrives. Stage rolls near the work area. Start with a straight edge (driveway, walkway) and work outward. Stagger joints and press rolls tightly together. Cut pieces with a sharp utility knife.
Water immediately after installation — soak the soil to a depth of 4–6 inches. Water daily for the first 2 weeks, then gradually reduce to every other day, then twice per week. Reduce frequency further once roots are established (3–4 weeks).
Sod costs $0.30–$0.85 per sq ft or $150–$425 per pallet (450–500 sq ft). Installation labor adds $0.50–$1.50 per sq ft. Total installed cost is typically $1–$2 per sq ft.
Standard sod rolls are about 2 ft wide × 5 ft long, covering 10 sq ft. Some suppliers use 16-inch or 24-inch wide rolls. Large commercial rolls can be 2 ft × 5 ft to 4 ft × 100+ ft. Check with your supplier.
A standard pallet holds 50 rolls (500 sq ft at 10 sq ft/roll) or 45–60 rolls depending on the roll size and supplier. Always confirm pallet coverage with your supplier when ordering.
Spring and early fall are ideal for cool-season grasses (fescue, bluegrass). Late spring through summer works for warm-season grasses (Bermuda, zoysia). Avoid extreme heat or freezing temperatures.
Remove old grass and weeds. Grade the soil to slope away from buildings. Add 2–4 inches of topsoil if needed. Rake smooth and lightly roll or compact. Water the soil bed lightly before laying sod.
Sod typically roots into the soil within 2–3 weeks in warm conditions. During this time, water daily and avoid heavy foot traffic. You can test rooting by gently tugging a corner — resistance means roots are established.
It's not recommended. Old grass will decompose unevenly under the sod, creating lumps and air pockets. Always remove or kill existing vegetation and prepare a clean, graded soil bed for best results.
Sod gives instant results and prevents erosion immediately, but costs 5–10× more than seed. Seed is cheaper and offers more grass variety options but takes 6–8 weeks to establish. Choose based on budget, timeline, and erosion risk.