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How Many Bags of Concrete Do I Need?

How Many Bags of Concrete Do I Need? (Calculator + Charts)

How Many Bags of Concrete Do I Need?

Enter your project dimensions and instantly get the exact bag count for 40, 60, and 80 lb bags — with waste factor included.

✓ 40 / 60 / 80 lb Bags ✓ Cubic Yards Included ✓ 10% Waste Built In ✓ 100% Free
Quick Answer

For a standard 10×10 ft slab at 4 inches thick, you need 62 bags of 80 lb concrete (including 10% waste). One cubic yard requires 45 bags of 80 lb, 60 bags of 60 lb, or 90 bags of 40 lb concrete. Use the calculator below for your exact dimensions.

🧱 Concrete Bag Calculator

Cubic Yards
Cubic Feet
Cubic Meters
Bags needed (includes 10% waste):
40 lb Bags
0.30 ft³ yield
60 lb Bags
0.45 ft³ yield
80 lb Bags
0.60 ft³ yield

The Formula: How to Calculate Bags of Concrete

Every concrete bag calculation comes down to three steps. Here’s the full formula with a worked example:

Step 1: Volume (ft³) = Length × Width × (Thickness ÷ 12)
Step 2: Cubic Yards = ft³ ÷ 27
Step 3: 80 lb Bags = Cubic Yards × 45 (+10% waste)
60 lb Bags = Cubic Yards × 60 (+10% waste)
40 lb Bags = Cubic Yards × 90 (+10% waste)

Example: 10×10 slab, 4″ thick → 10×10×(4÷12)=33.3 ft³ → ÷27=1.23 yd³ → ×45×1.10 = 62 bags (80 lb)
⚠️ Always add a 10% waste factor. Running short on pour day forces you to stop mid-slab — this creates a “cold joint” where the first batch hardens before you add the second. Cold joints are a structural weak point and are permanent. It is always better to have extra bags than to run short.

How Many Bags of Concrete Per Cubic Yard?

This is the single most important reference table for concrete bag calculations. One cubic yard = 27 cubic feet. Each bag size has a fixed yield:

Concrete bag yield and bags required per cubic yard
Bag SizeYield (ft³)Yield (yd³)Bags Per Cubic YardCoverage @ 4″ Thick
40 lb bag0.30 ft³0.011 yd³90 bags~1.1 ft²
50 lb bag0.375 ft³0.014 yd³72 bags~1.4 ft²
60 lb bag0.45 ft³0.017 yd³60 bags~1.7 ft²
80 lb bag0.60 ft³0.022 yd³45 bags~2.2 ft²

The 80 lb bag is the most economical choice for most DIY projects — it has the highest yield per bag and costs less per cubic foot than smaller bags. Use 60 lb bags if you’re mixing by hand and the weight is an issue. Avoid 40 lb bags except for very small repairs.

40 lb bag
0.30 ft³
90 bags/yd³
60 lb bag
0.45 ft³
60 bags/yd³
80 lb bag
0.60 ft³
45 bags/yd³

How Many Bags for Every Common Slab Size

Use this quick-reference chart for common residential concrete slab sizes. All figures include a 10% waste factor and use 80 lb bags. For 60 lb bags, multiply cubic yards by 66 (60 × 1.10). For 40 lb bags, multiply by 99 (90 × 1.10).

Bags of 80 lb concrete needed by slab size (with 10% waste)
Slab SizeSq FtAt 3.5″ thickAt 4″ thickAt 5″ thickAt 6″ thick
4 × 4 ft16781012
4 × 8 ft3214162024
6 × 6 ft3616182227
8 × 8 ft6428324048
10 × 10 ft10043627793
10 × 20 ft2008699123148
12 × 12 ft1446188110132
12 × 20 ft240104119148178
16 × 16 ft256110126157189
20 × 20 ft400173222278333
24 × 24 ft576249285356427
30 × 30 ft900389444556667

Highlighted rows = most commonly searched slab sizes. For projects over 1 yd³, consider ordering ready-mix concrete.

How Many Bags for Specific Projects

How Many Bags for a 10×10 Slab?

A 10×10 ft slab is one of the most common DIY concrete projects. Here’s the exact count at every thickness:

ThicknessCubic Yards40 lb Bags60 lb Bags80 lb Bags
3.5 in (walkway)1.07 yd³1187153
4 in (patio / slab)1.23 yd³1228262
5 in (driveway)1.54 yd³15310277
6 in (garage floor)1.85 yd³18412293

How Many Bags for a 12×12 Slab?

A 12×12 ft slab at 4 inches thick needs 1.78 yd³, or 88 bags of 80 lb concrete with waste. At 6 inches thick (garage floor standard): 2.67 yd³ → 132 bags. At this volume, you are right at the break-even point between bags and ready-mix — either is viable.

How Many Bags for Fence Posts?

Post holes use the round column formula: π × radius² × depth. Here are pre-calculated counts:

Hole DiameterDepthVolume80 lb Bags (per hole)
6 in2 ft0.03 yd³1.5 bags
8 in2 ft0.05 yd³2.5 bags
10 in3 ft0.11 yd³3 bags (buy 3)
12 in3.5 ft0.17 yd³5 bags (buy 5)
12 in4 ft0.19 yd³5–6 bags

For 8 fence posts at 10″ × 3″ depth: 8 × 3 = 24 bags of 80 lb concrete. Always buy 2–3 extra bags to account for loose or oversized holes.

How Many Bags for a Sidewalk?

Standard residential sidewalks are 4 ft wide and 3.5–4 inches thick. A 4 ft × 20 ft sidewalk at 4 inches thick needs 0.99 yd³ — approximately 49 bags of 80 lb concrete with waste. A 4 ft × 50 ft sidewalk: 2.47 yd³ → 122 bags (at this volume, order ready-mix).

How Many Bags for Steps / Stairs?

A standard 4-step staircase (3 ft wide, 7″ rise, 10″ run) uses approximately 0.5–0.7 yd³ of concrete — roughly 25–32 bags of 80 lb concrete. Use our stairs calculator for exact figures based on your step count and dimensions.

Step-by-Step: How to Calculate Bags for a Patio

Real worked example for a 14 × 12 ft backyard patio at 4 inches thick:

1

Convert thickness to feet

4 inches ÷ 12 = 0.333 ft

2

Calculate cubic feet

14 × 12 × 0.333 = 55.9 ft³

3

Convert to cubic yards

55.9 ÷ 27 = 2.07 yd³

4

Add 10% waste

2.07 × 1.10 = 2.28 yd³ — your order quantity

5

Calculate 80 lb bags

2.28 × 45 = 103 bags of 80 lb concrete

6

Decide: bags or ready-mix?

At 2.28 yd³, ordering ready-mix is recommended. If using bags, you’ll need to mix 103 bags — plan for a full day with a rented mixer.

When to Use Bags vs. Ready-Mix Concrete

VolumeBest OptionReason
Under 0.5 yd³BagsSmall repairs, post holes — bags are fast and convenient
0.5 – 1.0 yd³BagsStill manageable — rent a small mixer to save mixing time
1.0 – 2.0 yd³EitherCompare ready-mix delivery fee vs. bag cost + labor
Over 2.0 yd³Ready-mixCheaper per yard and avoids cold joints from batch-to-batch mixing
Cost comparison per cubic yard (2025):
Bagged concrete (80 lb bags): $180–$250/yd³ in materials alone — plus 1–2 hours of mixing labor per yard.
Ready-mix delivered: $125–$175/yd³ including delivery. Minimum order is usually 1 yd³; short-load fee applies under 5 yd³.

Pro Tips Before You Buy Concrete Bags

📦

Round up, never down

If your calculation gives 57.3 bags, buy 60. An extra bag costs $6–$8. Running short mid-pour costs far more.

💧

Don’t over-water

An 80 lb bag needs ~3 quarts of water. Adding extra water weakens the mix. Each gallon added per yd³ reduces strength by ~200 PSI.

📅

Check the batch date

Old bags partially cure inside the bag, reducing yield and strength. Look for bags made within the last 6 months.

🔧

Rent a mixer

Hand-mixing is practical up to 15 bags. For larger pours, rent a drum mixer — it pays for itself in time and quality.

🌡️

Temperature matters

Don’t pour below 40°F or above 90°F without special precautions. Hot weather dries the concrete too fast; cold weather stops curing.

🏗️

Prep your subbase first

Compact the soil base and add 4″ of gravel. A bad subbase causes settling and cracking — no amount of concrete fixes a soft base.

Need a Specific Concrete Calculator?

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Frequently Asked Questions

The 20 most-asked questions about concrete bag calculations, answered with exact numbers.

Bag counts are estimates based on manufacturer-stated yields. Actual yield may vary slightly by brand and water content. Always add 5–10% overage. Consult a licensed contractor for structural projects.

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