Rainfall Volume Calculator

Calculate total water volume from rainfall on a given area. Includes runoff coefficients, rainwater harvesting potential, and stormwater management.

About the Rainfall Volume Calculator

Every inch of rain falling on 1,000 square feet produces over 620 gallons of water. Understanding rainfall volume is essential for rainwater harvesting, stormwater management, drainage design, and landscape irrigation planning. The same storm can be a resource in one design and a runoff problem in another. Converting depth to volume is the step that makes the decision concrete. Once you have the volume, storage and overflow sizing become much clearer.

This calculator computes the total water volume from rainfall on any surface area, applying runoff coefficients for different surface types (roofs, pavement, lawns, etc.). It shows how much water you can collect, how fast runoff flows, and helps size rain barrels, cisterns, and drainage systems.

Whether you're designing a rainwater collection system, sizing storm drains, calculating irrigation offsets, or estimating flood volume for a watershed, this tool converts precipitation depth to practical water volumes in gallons, liters, and cubic feet.

Why Use This Rainfall Volume Calculator?

Use this calculator when you need to turn rainfall depth into a real water volume for harvesting, drainage, or runoff planning. It is useful whenever you need to estimate how much water a surface will collect or shed. That is helpful when sizing both storage and overflow paths from the same rainfall event.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the rainfall amount in inches or millimeters.
  2. Enter the catchment area in square feet or square meters.
  3. Select the surface type for the correct runoff coefficient.
  4. Optionally set the rainfall intensity (inches/hour) for flow rate.
  5. Review total volume, harvestable amount, and equivalent metrics.
  6. Check the surface comparison table for different scenarios.
  7. Use the rain barrel sizing section for harvesting systems.

Formula

Volume = Rainfall depth × Area × Runoff coefficient. V(gallons) = Rainfall(in) × Area(ft²) × 0.623 × C. Flow rate Q(CFS) = C × I(in/hr) × A(acres) / 1 (Rational Method).

Example Calculation

Result: 888 gallons (3,361 L) harvestable from 1" rain on 1,500 ft² metal roof

1 inch of rain on 1,500 sq ft with 95% runoff coefficient (metal roof) yields 888 gallons of collectible water.

Tips & Best Practices

Rainfall Volume Conversions

Understanding the relationship between precipitation depth and volume is straightforward but the numbers are surprisingly large. One inch of rain on one acre produces 27,154 gallons — enough to fill a standard swimming pool. Even a modest 1,000 sq ft roof captures 623 gallons from a single inch of rain.

The conversion factor is simple: 1 inch × 1 sq ft = 0.0833 cu ft = 0.623 gallons = 2.36 liters. For metric: 1 mm × 1 m² = 1 liter exactly — one of the most elegant unit relationships in measurement.

Rainwater Harvesting Systems

A complete rainwater harvesting system includes: collection surface (roof), conveyance (gutters and downspouts), pre-filtration (leaf screens, first-flush diverter), storage (rain barrel or cistern), and distribution (gravity or pump). System sizing depends on local rainfall patterns, storage goals, and water demand.

Stormwater Management and the Rational Method

Urban development dramatically increases runoff by replacing permeable surfaces with impermeable ones. The rational method (Q = CIA) is the standard approach for sizing storm drains for small watersheds. For larger watersheds, the SCS Curve Number method accounts for soil type, land use, and antecedent moisture conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much water does 1 inch of rain produce?

On 1,000 sq ft: 623 gallons (2,359 liters). On 1 acre: 27,154 gallons. A typical house roof (2,000 sq ft) captures 1,247 gallons per inch of rain.

What is a runoff coefficient?

The fraction of rainfall that becomes runoff (versus absorption). Metal roofs: 0.95, asphalt: 0.90, concrete: 0.85, compacted soil: 0.60, lawn: 0.20-0.35.

How big a rain barrel do I need?

A 55-gallon barrel fills from just 0.1" of rain on 1,000 sq ft of roof. For meaningful collection, consider 200+ gallon cisterns or multiple barrels.

Is rainwater safe to drink?

Roof-collected rainwater can contain contaminants from roofing materials, bird droppings, and pollution. It requires filtration and disinfection for potable use. It's fine for irrigation.

What is the Rational Method for stormwater?

Q = CIA where C is runoff coefficient, I is rainfall intensity (in/hr), and A is area (acres). It estimates peak runoff flow rate for drainage design.

How much rain falls globally per year?

Global average precipitation is about 39 inches (990 mm) per year. Seattle gets ~37", London ~23", Mumbai ~95", Atacama Desert <0.5".

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