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1.94 cubic yards
2.76 tons  ·  ≈ 105 bags (50 lb)  ·  $165 total cost

How to Calculate Crushed Stone Quantity

Crushed stone calculation is straightforward but has a few wrinkles compared to other materials: it compacts significantly during installation (you need to order extra), the size grades have specific structural roles, and most projects use multiple grades layered together. Our calculator handles the math — here's the formula behind it.

Cubic yards = (Area in sq ft × Depth in inches) ÷ 324
Weight (tons) = Cubic yards × 1.42  (standard #57 density)
Compacted volume = Loose volume × 0.80  (accounts for compaction)

The density of 1.42 t/yd³ is for standard #57 crushed stone (the most common landscape grade). Dense-grade aggregate (#411) is slightly denser at 1.45 t/yd³ because the smaller fines fill more void space. Larger #4 stone runs about 1.40 t/yd³. Always pad your order by 10-15% to account for compaction during installation.

Worked example: residential driveway

A 20 ft × 10 ft residential driveway with proper 6-inch total depth (4-inch base + 2-inch top):

  • Volume: (20 × 10 × 6) ÷ 324 = 3.70 cubic yards
  • Weight (mostly #411 base + #57 top): 3.70 × 1.43 avg = 5.29 tons
  • With 10% waste/compaction: Order 5.8 tons
  • Cost at $40/ton bulk: 5.8 × $40 = $232
  • Delivery: Add $75-150 for typical 25-mile radius
Always order extra — compaction is real
Loose crushed stone reduces 15-20% in volume after proper compaction with a plate compactor. For a driveway, that means a "3.7 cubic yard" estimate becomes about 3 cubic yards of finished depth. Account for this by ordering at least 10% extra, more for thick applications.

Understanding Crushed Stone Size Grades

ASTM size numbers reference specific gradations (size ranges) of crushed stone. Picking the right grade for your application is more important than how much you order. Here's the practical breakdown.

#57 (1/2 to 1 inch) — most common

The workhorse grade. Used for: driveway top course, paver base, drainage applications (French drains, foundation drainage), and general landscape. Drains well, looks clean, easy to compact. Density: 1.42 t/yd³. Cost: $30-50/ton bulk. Often called "3/4 inch clean" or "3/4 inch washed."

#411 (dense-grade with fines) — driveway top

Mix of stone fragments from dust to 1 inch. The fines pack into void spaces, creating a dense, hard surface when compacted. Used for: driveway surface course, parking pad surfaces, compacted walkways. Density: 1.45 t/yd³. Cost: $30-45/ton bulk. Drains poorly compared to clean stone — don't use where drainage matters.

#4 (1.5 to 2.5 inch) — heavy base

Larger stone for base courses under heavy loads. Used for: driveway base under #411 top, commercial parking lot base, riprap erosion control, oversized drainage projects. Density: 1.40 t/yd³. Cost: $25-40/ton. Doesn't compact as tightly as smaller grades but carries heavier loads.

#8 (3/8 inch) — paver bedding (with sand)

Small crushed stone used for paver bedding in commercial installations and sometimes residential. Often called "screenings" or "stone chips." Don't confuse with concrete sand or play sand — wrong materials for paver bedding. Density: 1.45 t/yd³.

DGA (Dense Graded Aggregate) — premium driveway base

Engineered mix of crushed stone and fines specifically designed for maximum compaction. Common in cold climates where freeze-thaw cycles are brutal. More expensive than standard #411 but lasts significantly longer. Cost: $35-55/ton.

Riprap (4-12 inch+) — erosion control

Large angular stones for stream bank protection, retaining wall fill, and major drainage. Sold by ton or by truckload. Not used for typical residential projects.

Crushed Stone by Project Type

Different projects use different grades and depths. Here are the most common applications with exact specifications.

Residential driveway (gravel/crushed stone)

Total depth 6 inches. Layer structure: 4 inches of #411 dense-grade base, compacted in 2-inch lifts, topped with 2 inches of #57 for a clean finish. For a typical 20x10 ft driveway: 2.5 yd³ of #411 + 1.2 yd³ of #57 = 3.7 yd³ total (≈ 5.3 tons).

French drain

4 inches wide × 12 inches deep × 20 ft long trench around perforated pipe. Use #57 clean crushed stone exclusively — fines block drainage. Wrap pipe and stone in landscape fabric (top and sides only, not bottom). Quantity: 0.5 yd³ (0.7 tons) per 20 linear feet.

Foundation drainage

2 ft wide × 2 ft deep perimeter trench filled with #57 crushed stone. For typical 1,500 sq ft house with 160 linear feet of foundation: 24 yd³ (34 tons). Major project — often combined with new foundation construction.

Paver patio base

4 inches of compacted #57 base under 1 inch of paver sand bedding. For a 200 sq ft patio: 2.5 yd³ of crushed stone (3.6 tons) + 0.6 yd³ paver sand. Compact base in 2-inch lifts with plate compactor.

Shed / outbuilding pad

4 inches of compacted #411 or dense-grade. For a 12x16 ft shed pad: 2.4 yd³ (3.4 tons). Compact thoroughly — shed settling causes door alignment problems within 2-3 years if base is undersized.

Walkway / garden path

3 inches of #57 over fabric, with steel edging. For 3 ft × 30 ft walkway: 0.83 yd³ (1.2 tons). For wheelchair-accessible paths, use dense-grade for a firmer surface.

Coverage Reference Table

How many square feet 1 ton or 1 cubic yard of crushed stone covers at common depths:

Depth Per cubic yard Per ton (#57) Per ton (#411)
1 inch324 sq ft228 sq ft224 sq ft
2 inches162 sq ft114 sq ft112 sq ft
3 inches108 sq ft76 sq ft75 sq ft
4 inches81 sq ft57 sq ft56 sq ft
6 inches54 sq ft38 sq ft37 sq ft
8 inches40 sq ft28 sq ft28 sq ft
12 inches27 sq ft19 sq ft19 sq ft

Crushed Stone Pricing in 2026

Grade Per ton (bulk) Per cubic yard Per 50 lb bag
#57 (3/4")$30–50$40–70$4–7
#411 (dense-grade)$30–45$40–65$4–6
#4 (larger base)$25–40$35–55$4–6
#8 (paver chips)$35–55$50–80$5–8
DGA (premium)$35–55$50–80
Riprap (4–12")$45–75

Delivery typically adds $50-150 for local 1-ton minimums. Multi-ton deliveries (5+ tons) often include delivery in the per-ton price. Bulk pricing is dramatically cheaper than bagged — by 4-6× per ton. For any project over 0.5 yd³, always order bulk delivery.

How to Install Crushed Stone Properly

The difference between a crushed stone surface that lasts 20 years and one that fails in 3 is the installation. Here's the professional process:

  1. Excavate to proper depth. 6-8 inches for driveways, 4 inches for patio bases, 12-24 inches for foundation drainage. Remove all organic material (sod, topsoil).
  2. Compact existing subgrade. Use a plate compactor to firm up the excavation bottom. Soft spots will telegraph through and cause future depressions.
  3. Install landscape fabric. Non-woven geotextile prevents crushed stone from migrating into soil. Overlap seams 6 inches. Skip for French drains (use only top and sides, not bottom).
  4. Add base layer in lifts. Spread 2 inches of crushed stone, compact with plate compactor, repeat until target depth. Compacting in thick layers leaves voids and creates future settlement.
  5. Test compaction. Properly compacted crushed stone should feel solid underfoot — no give, no shifting. If it feels loose, compact more.
  6. Add top course (driveways). 2 inches of #57 over the #411 base, compacted lightly. Don't over-compact the top — leaves rough surface.
  7. Install edge restraint. Steel, stone, or concrete edging keeps crushed stone contained and prevents migration into adjacent lawn or street.
  8. Final water cure. Light water spray helps lock particles together for compacted surfaces. Don't oversaturate — just dampen.

Common Crushed Stone Mistakes

  • Wrong grade for application: #411 in drainage applications doesn't drain. #57 as driveway top is too loose. Match grade to use.
  • Skipping fabric: Crushed stone sinks into soil over 3-5 years without fabric. Order an extra ton just to compensate annually, or do it right the first time.
  • Compaction in thick lifts: Compacting 6 inches at once leaves voids underneath. Always 2-inch lifts maximum.
  • No edge restraint: Crushed stone migrates outward from any unconfined edge. Edging adds 10% to project cost but doubles longevity.
  • Underestimating compaction: Order 10-15% more than calculated. The "extra" disappears into the compacted result.
  • Mixing grades: #57 with #411 in the same layer creates uneven settling. Use one grade per layer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much crushed stone do I need for a driveway?

A typical 20x10 ft residential driveway at 6 inches total depth (4 base + 2 top) needs 3.7 cubic yards (5.3 tons) of crushed stone. For longer driveways at 30x12 ft: 6.7 yd³ (9.5 tons). Always order 5-10% extra for compaction and edge spillage.

What does #57 crushed stone mean?

The number is an ASTM size grade. #57 stone is roughly 1/2 to 1 inch — the most common landscape and drainage grade. #4 is 1.5-2.5 inches (larger base material), #411 is dense graded with fines (driveway top), and #8 is small at 3/8 inch (paver bedding). Each grade has specific uses.

How much does crushed stone cost?

Bulk crushed stone runs $30-55 per ton in 2026, depending on grade and region. Delivered to your site adds $50-150 typically. Bagged crushed stone (50 lb) costs $4-7 retail — about 5x more expensive per ton than bulk. For projects over 0.5 cubic yards, always order bulk.

How much area does a ton of crushed stone cover?

One ton of standard crushed stone (#57) at common depths: 80 sq ft @ 2 inches, 53 sq ft @ 3 inches, 40 sq ft @ 4 inches. For #411 dense-grade (compacts tighter): 75 sq ft @ 2 inches, 50 sq ft @ 3 inches, 38 sq ft @ 4 inches.

What's the best crushed stone for a driveway?

Use #411 (dense-grade) or DGA for the 4-inch base — it compacts hard. Top with 2 inches of #57 (3/4 inch) for a smooth surface. Avoid pure pea gravel as a top layer; it shifts under vehicle weight. Total recommended depth: 6 inches for residential, 8-12 for commercial.

Is crushed stone better than gravel?

For structural use (driveway base, walkway, drainage), crushed stone is better — angular pieces interlock and stay in place. For decorative use, smooth rounded gravel (pea gravel, river rock) looks better but doesn't compact. Use crushed stone where you need stability.

How deep should crushed stone be for drainage?

For French drains: 4-6 inches of #57 around perforated pipe, surrounded by landscape fabric. For foundation drainage: full 2-foot depth from footer to grade. For surface drainage swales: 3-4 inches over fabric. Going thinner than 3 inches reduces effectiveness significantly.

How much crushed stone for a French drain?

A typical French drain trench is 4 inches wide × 12 inches deep × 20 ft long: approximately 0.5 cubic yards (0.7 tons) of #57 crushed stone. For longer drains, scale linearly: 50 ft of trench needs 1.25 yd³. Add 10% for irregular trench profiles.

What size crushed stone for paver base?

Use 4 inches of compacted #57 (3/4 inch) or #411 (dense-grade) as the paver base. Top with exactly 1 inch of sharp paver sand (NOT crushed stone) for bedding. Common mistake: using crushed stone fines as paver bedding — fines don't level properly and cause paver heave.

How much does a yard of crushed stone weigh?

Standard #57 crushed stone weighs 2,840 lb (1.42 tons) per cubic yard. Dense-grade #411 with fines is slightly heavier at 1.45 tons/yd³. Larger grade #4 at 1.40 tons/yd³. Use these density values for accurate weight calculations and delivery weight limit checks.

Can you compact crushed stone?

Yes — crushed stone is designed to compact. Use a plate compactor (rental $40-60/day) for proper installation. Compact in 2-inch lifts for thick applications. After compaction, crushed stone volume reduces 15-20% — order accordingly. This compactability is what makes it ideal for bases.

Do I need landscape fabric under crushed stone?

Yes for most applications. Non-woven geotextile fabric prevents crushed stone from migrating into soil and blocks weed growth. The exception: French drains where you only want fabric on top and sides (not bottom) to allow water flow. Use 4 oz weight fabric for high-traffic areas.