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4.94 cubic yards
= 133.33 ft³  ·  3.78 m³  ·  ≈ 222 bags
Ready-mix delivered: $815  ·  Bags retail: $1,332

How to Calculate Concrete Quantity

Concrete is sold by the cubic yard for ready-mix delivery, and by the bag for retail. The math always starts with volume — length × width × depth — but the conversions and unit handling trip up first-time buyers. Our calculator handles all the math; here's the underlying formula so you can verify any result.

Volume (cubic feet) = Length × Width × Thickness (all in feet)
Cubic yards = Cubic feet ÷ 27
Bags of 80 lb = Cubic feet ÷ 0.60 (each bag = 0.60 ft³)
Bags of 60 lb = Cubic feet ÷ 0.45

The key gotcha: thickness is usually in inches but length and width are in feet. Convert thickness to feet first (divide by 12) before multiplying, or use a calculator that handles units automatically. Mixing units gives results that are wildly wrong — by a factor of 12 or 144.

Worked example: typical residential patio

A 20 ft × 20 ft patio slab at 4 inches thick:

  • Volume in cubic feet: 20 × 20 × (4 ÷ 12) = 133.33 ft³
  • Cubic yards: 133.33 ÷ 27 = 4.94 yd³
  • With 10% waste factor: Order 5.5 yd³ from ready-mix
  • Cost (ready-mix at $165/yd³): 5.5 × $165 = $908
  • Bagged equivalent (245 bags of 80 lb at $6): $1,470 (61% more expensive)
Ready-mix wins above 1 cubic yard
Bagged concrete is convenient for small projects (fence posts, small repairs, mailbox bases). Above 1 cubic yard (45 bags of 80 lb), ready-mix is cheaper AND faster AND higher quality. Short-load fees ($50-150) apply for orders under 8 yards but are still cheaper than the bagged alternative.

Concrete Requirements by Project Type

Different concrete projects need different shapes, thicknesses, and strength specifications. Here are the most common applications.

Slabs (patios, garages, driveways, sheds)

Standard 4-inch thickness for patios and walkways. Garages and driveways: 4-6 inches. Heavy vehicle areas (RV pads, commercial): 6-8 inches. Always include 4 inches of crushed stone base underneath plus a 6 mil vapor barrier for interior slabs. Reinforce with #3 or #4 rebar grid at 16-24 inch spacing, or use wire mesh for residential thicknesses.

Footings (foundations, columns, fence posts)

Width and depth depend on what's being supported. Typical residential foundation footing: 16 inches wide × 8 inches deep. For 100 linear feet of footing: 1.65 cubic yards. Fence posts: 10-12 inch diameter × 24-36 inch deep holes. Footings always need to extend below the frost line in cold climates — 36-48 inches in northern US.

Columns and piers

Round or square columns for deck supports, pole barns, fence corners. A 12-inch diameter × 4 ft tall column uses 3.14 cubic feet (~0.12 cubic yards). For a deck with 4 such piers: 12.6 cubic feet (~0.47 cubic yards), or 21 bags of 80 lb. Use SonoTube cardboard forms for clean round columns.

Steps and stairs

Concrete steps are complex because each step adds a wedge of concrete on top of the previous. For 3 steps at 7-inch rise × 11-inch tread × 4 ft wide: roughly 7.7 cubic feet (~0.29 cubic yards). Formwork is the hard part — measure carefully or hire a contractor for stairs.

Driveway expansion (extension or repair)

Typical residential driveway extension: 10 ft × 20 ft × 4 inches = 200 sq ft × 0.333 ft = 66.67 cubic feet (2.47 cubic yards). For a full driveway pour: 20 × 40 ft at 5 inches = 12.35 cubic yards. Major project — schedule ready-mix delivery and have crew ready before the truck arrives.

Sidewalks and walkways

4-inch thick, 3-4 ft wide typically. For 50 linear feet at 3 ft wide × 4 inches: 50 ft³ (~1.85 cubic yards). Use expansion joints every 5 feet to prevent random cracking. Score control joints 1 inch deep within 24 hours of pour.

Concrete Coverage Reference

How many cubic yards or bags you need for common slab dimensions:

Slab size At 4 inches thick At 5 inches At 6 inches
4 × 4 ft0.20 yd³ / 9 bags0.25 yd³ / 11 bags0.30 yd³ / 14 bags
8 × 8 ft0.79 yd³ / 36 bags0.99 yd³ / 45 bags1.18 yd³ / 54 bags
10 × 10 ft1.23 yd³ / 56 bags1.54 yd³ / 70 bags1.85 yd³ / 84 bags
12 × 12 ft1.78 yd³ / 80 bags2.22 yd³ / 100 bags2.67 yd³ / 120 bags
16 × 16 ft3.16 yd³ / 143 bags3.95 yd³ / 178 bags4.74 yd³ / 213 bags
20 × 20 ft4.94 yd³ / 222 bags6.17 yd³ / 278 bags7.41 yd³ / 333 bags
24 × 24 ft7.11 yd³ / 320 bags8.89 yd³ / 400 bags10.67 yd³ / 480 bags

Bags assume standard 80 lb bags (0.60 ft³ each). Add 10% to these figures for waste — irregular slabs or sloped sites add 15%. Round up to whole bags or to the nearest half yard for ready-mix orders.

Concrete Cost Breakdown 2026

Type Per cubic yard Per bag (retail) Notes
Standard ready-mix (3,000 psi)$130–160Most residential use
4,000 psi ready-mix$150–180Driveways, structural
5,000 psi ready-mix$170–210Heavy commercial
Bagged 80 lb (Quikrete/Sakrete)$270 equivalent$5–70.60 ft³ per bag
Bagged 60 lb$300 equivalent$4–60.45 ft³ per bag
Bagged 40 lb (small repair)$340 equivalent$3–40.30 ft³ per bag
Rapid-set (60 min cure)$8–12 / 50 lbPosts, repairs only
Concrete pumping (if needed)$200–500 setup + per yard feePools, far pours

Additional costs to budget: short-load fee ($50-150) for orders under 8 yards, wait time beyond 5 minutes ($1-3/minute), Saturday/holiday delivery premium ($100-200), fuel surcharge ($25-100). For DIY projects with bagged concrete: rent a concrete mixer for $40-80/day or mix in a wheelbarrow for very small batches.

Reinforcement: Rebar and Wire Mesh

Concrete handles compression well but is weak in tension. Reinforcement adds tensile strength and prevents cracking. Choose between rebar and wire mesh based on slab type:

Wire mesh (for thin slabs)

6x6 inch W1.4×W1.4 welded wire mesh is standard for residential 4-inch slabs. Comes in 5x10 ft sheets ($25-40 each) or 5-ft wide rolls. Position in the middle of the slab thickness using mesh chairs or rocks. Don't lay flat on the ground — it must be elevated to work properly.

Rebar (for thicker slabs and driveways)

#3 rebar (3/8 inch) for residential slabs at 16-24 inch grid spacing. #4 rebar (1/2 inch) for driveways at 12-16 inch spacing. #5 (5/8 inch) for heavy commercial use. Cost: $4-8 per 10-ft section depending on size. Lap rebar 12-16 inches at all joints; wire-tie at every intersection.

Fiber reinforcement

Synthetic or steel fibers added to the concrete mix at the plant. Adds tensile strength without separate rebar work. Cost: $5-15 per cubic yard upcharge. Works great for thin residential slabs but not a substitute for primary reinforcement in structural applications.

How to Order Ready-Mix Concrete

  1. Calculate volume. Use this calculator. Add 10% waste factor for safety.
  2. Choose strength (psi). 3,000 psi for residential slabs; 4,000 psi for driveways; 5,000+ for heavy commercial.
  3. Specify slump. 4-inch slump is standard for most slabs (slightly stiff). 5-6 inch slump for pours that need to flow into forms.
  4. Add air entrainment if needed. Required for exterior slabs in freeze-thaw climates (5-7% air content).
  5. Schedule delivery. Confirm 24 hours ahead. Have 30-minute unload window — truck waits cost $50-100/hour beyond that.
  6. Prep forms and reinforcement before truck arrives. Vapor barrier, rebar/mesh, edge forms, control joint plans.
  7. Have enough labor for the pour. Concrete sets fast. Plan 1-2 people per cubic yard delivered, depending on access.
  8. Finishing tools ready. Bull float, edger, fresno trowel, broom for non-slip texture. Hire a finisher for jobs over 10 yards.

Concrete Curing: The Critical 28 Days

Concrete strength develops over time, not instantly. The curing process determines whether your concrete reaches its rated strength.

  • 0-4 hours: Initial set. Concrete becomes too stiff to remix.
  • 4-24 hours: Final set. Concrete is firm but still gaining strength rapidly.
  • 1-7 days: Strength develops to about 50-70% of final. Keep concrete moist with plastic sheeting, wet burlap, or curing compound.
  • 7 days: Generally drivable with passenger vehicles, but not heavy trucks.
  • 14 days: About 90% of design strength.
  • 28 days: Full design strength reached. The standard reference for concrete strength testing.

Critical mistake: letting concrete dry too quickly. In hot, dry, or windy conditions, surface evaporation pulls water out faster than the concrete can use it for hydration. Cover with plastic sheeting within 2-3 hours of finishing, mist throughout the first 24 hours, and keep moist for at least 7 days.

Common Concrete Mistakes

  • Skipping the base layer: No crushed stone under slab = drainage issues, frost heave, premature cracking.
  • Mixing units: Thickness in inches × length in feet = wrong answer. Convert first.
  • Adding too much water: "Wet" mix is easier to work but dramatically weaker. Stick to the recommended water-cement ratio.
  • Skipping reinforcement: 4-inch slabs need wire mesh minimum. Driveways need rebar. No reinforcement = cracks within 1-2 years.
  • No control joints: Score joints every 5-10 feet within 24 hours. Without them, concrete cracks randomly where you don't want it.
  • Pouring in extreme weather: Below 40°F or above 90°F creates major curing problems. Schedule accordingly.
  • Not curing properly: Letting fresh concrete dry out is the most common DIY failure. Keep moist 7 days minimum.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much concrete do I need for a slab?

For a 10 ft x 10 ft slab at 4 inches thick: 100 sq ft x 0.333 ft ÷ 27 = 1.23 cubic yards. For a 20x20 slab at 4 inches: 4.94 yd³. Always add 10% waste factor for forms and spillage, so order 5.5 yards minimum from a ready-mix truck.

How many bags of concrete in a yard?

It takes 45 bags of 80 lb concrete, or 60 bags of 60 lb concrete, to equal one cubic yard. At $5-6 per 80 lb bag retail, one yard of bagged concrete costs $225-270. Ready-mix delivery at $150-180 per yard is cheaper for projects over 1 cubic yard.

How much does a yard of concrete cost?

Ready-mix concrete delivery costs $130-180 per cubic yard in 2026, varying by region and strength. Short-load fees ($50-150) apply for orders under 8 yards. Bagged concrete from home stores costs $5-6 per 80 lb bag ($225-270 per yard equivalent — significantly more expensive).

How thick should a concrete slab be?

Patios and walkways: 4 inches. Garages and driveways: 4-6 inches. Heavy vehicle areas (RV pads, commercial): 6-8 inches. Foundations: per engineering specs, typically 8-12 inches. Always add a 4-inch crushed stone base under any slab for proper drainage.

How much area does a yard of concrete cover?

At 4 inches thick: 81 sq ft per cubic yard. At 5 inches: 65 sq ft. At 6 inches: 54 sq ft. At 8 inches: 41 sq ft. Use these figures to estimate coverage area, then add 5-10% waste factor for the actual order. Sloped or irregular areas need more buffer.

How long does concrete take to cure?

Initial set: 4-8 hours (can walk on it). Strong enough for foot traffic: 24-48 hours. Drivable: 7 days. Full design strength (28-day cure): 28 days. Keep concrete moist during the first 7 days with plastic sheeting or wet burlap — premature drying weakens the final strength significantly.

Should I use ready-mix or bagged concrete?

For projects under 1 cubic yard (45 bags or less), bagged concrete is convenient. From 1 to 3 yards, the choice depends on labor and timing. Over 3 cubic yards, ready-mix delivery is significantly cheaper, faster, and produces better quality concrete from consistent mixing.

How much rebar do I need for a concrete slab?

Standard 4-inch slab uses #3 or #4 rebar in a grid pattern at 16-24 inch spacing. For a 10x10 slab at 18-inch spacing: 7 rebars each direction = 14 pieces of 10-ft rebar. For driveways, use #4 rebar at 12-inch spacing for added strength. Always lap rebar 12-16 inches at joints.

How much concrete for fence post holes?

A typical 6-foot fence post in a 10-inch diameter x 24-inch deep hole needs 1.1 cubic feet of concrete (about 2 bags of 80 lb). For 10 posts: 11 cubic feet (0.4 yd³ / 20 bags). Use a slightly wetter mix than for slabs to fully encapsulate the post bottom.

How much does concrete weigh per cubic yard?

Standard concrete weighs about 4,000 lb (2 tons) per cubic yard fully cured. Wet concrete is heavier at 4,200-4,400 lb/yd³. For comparison: a typical 4-inch residential slab of 10x10 ft weighs about 2 tons. Plan structural support accordingly.

What's the difference between concrete and cement?

Cement is the binder ingredient (typically Portland cement); concrete is the mixed final product. Concrete = cement + sand + aggregate (gravel) + water. Saying 'cement slab' is technically incorrect — you mean 'concrete slab.' Portland cement is one component of the concrete mix.

Do I need a vapor barrier under a concrete slab?

For interior slabs (basements, garages, sheds): yes, always. Use 6-10 mil polyethylene sheeting under the slab to prevent moisture migration up through concrete. For exterior slabs (patios, driveways, walkways): typically no — drainage is more important than vapor blocking.