Concrete Calculator
for Sonotube
Instant volume, bag count & cost for any tube diameter and depth. Covers deck posts, fence posts, piers & structural columns.
How Much Concrete Do I Need for a Sonotube?
Use the cylinder formula: Volume (ft³) = π × (diameter ÷ 24)² × depth (ft)
- 12″ tube at 4 ft deep → 3.14 ft³ → 6 bags of 80 lb (per tube)
- 10″ tube at 3 ft deep → 1.64 ft³ → 3 bags of 80 lb (per tube)
- 8″ tube at 3 ft deep → 1.05 ft³ → 2 bags of 80 lb (per tube)
Always add 5–10% extra. Use the calculator below for any size combination.
Sonotube Concrete Calculator
Enter tube dimensions — get volume, bags & cost instantly
| Diameter | 2 ft deep | 3 ft deep | 4 ft deep | 5 ft deep | ft³ / ft depth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6″ | 1× 80lb | 1× 80lb | 1× 80lb | 2× 80lb | 0.196 |
| 8″ | 1× 80lb | 2× 80lb | 3× 80lb | 3× 80lb | 0.349 |
| 10″ | 2× 80lb | 3× 80lb | 4× 80lb | 5× 80lb | 0.545 |
| 12″ ⭐ | 3× 80lb | 5× 80lb | 6× 80lb | 8× 80lb | 0.785 |
| 14″ | 4× 80lb | 6× 80lb | 8× 80lb | 10× 80lb | 1.069 |
| 16″ | 5× 80lb | 8× 80lb | 10× 80lb | 13× 80lb | 1.396 |
| 18″ | 6× 80lb | 9× 80lb | 13× 80lb | 16× 80lb | 1.767 |
| 20″ | 8× 80lb | 11× 80lb | 15× 80lb | 19× 80lb | 2.182 |
| 24″ | 10× 80lb | 16× 80lb | 21× 80lb | 26× 80lb | 3.142 |
⭐ = Most common residential diameter. All figures rounded up to nearest whole bag. Add 10% waste to your order. 80 lb bag yield = 0.60 ft³.
What Is a Sonotube?
A Sonotube is a brand name by Sonoco Products Company for cylindrical fiber concrete forms — essentially a heavy-duty cardboard tube used as a mold to pour round concrete columns, piers, and footings. The term is widely used generically, the way “Kleenex” means any facial tissue.
Sonotubes are used wherever a cylindrical concrete structure is needed: deck posts, fence posts, pergola columns, sign bases, light poles, pier foundations, and structural supports. They act as a stay-in-place mold: you set the tube, pour the concrete, and once it cures, the cardboard can be peeled away (above grade) or left in place (below grade, where it naturally decomposes).
Types of Sonotube
| Product Line | Best For | Diameter Range | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Builder’s Tube | DIY deck posts, fence posts | 6″–16″ | Widely available at Home Depot / Lowe’s in 4 ft, 8 ft lengths |
| Sonotube FinishFree™ | Exposed above-grade columns | 6″–24″ | Peels cleanly for smooth finish, no forming marks |
| Sonotube Commercial | High-load structural piers | 12″–60″ | Heavy wax coating, resists wet soil pressure |
| Generic fiber tube | Budget DIY footings | 6″–16″ | Similar performance, lower cost |
The Sonotube Concrete Formula (Step-by-Step)
Sonotubes are cylinders, so all volume calculations use the cylinder volume formula. Here’s exactly how our calculator works:
-
Convert diameter to radius in feet Radius (ft) = (Diameter in inches ÷ 2) ÷ 12
Example — 12″ tube: (12 ÷ 2) ÷ 12 = 0.5 ft -
Get depth in feet (convert any inches) 4 ft 6 in = 4 + (6 ÷ 12) = 4.5 ft
-
Apply the cylinder volume formula Volume (ft³) = π × radius² × depth = 3.14159 × 0.5² × 4 = 3.14 ft³
-
Multiply by number of tubes 6 tubes × 3.14 ft³ = 18.85 ft³ total
-
Add waste factor (10% recommended) 18.85 × 1.10 = 20.74 ft³ needed
-
Divide by bag yield to get bag count 80 lb bag = 0.60 ft³ → 20.74 ÷ 0.60 = 34.6 → buy 35 bags of 80 lb
-
Convert to cubic yards (for ready-mix orders) 20.74 ft³ ÷ 27 = 0.77 cubic yards
Sonotube Size Selection Guide
Choosing the right diameter before you calculate is critical — the wrong size tube means re-digging holes or structural failure. Here’s what engineers recommend:
| Diameter | Typical Use | Post Size | Depth (Northern US) | Depth (Southern US) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6″ | Mailbox, landscape lights, garden posts | 2×2, 4×4 light | 30–36 in | 24 in |
| 8″ | Fence posts, pergola, arbor | 4×4 | 36–42 in | 24–30 in |
| 10″ | Small deck (low load), sign post | 4×4, 6×6 | 42–48 in | 30–36 in |
| 12″ ⭐ | Residential deck posts (standard) | 6×6 | 42–54 in | 30–36 in |
| 14–16″ | Larger decks, heavy beams, carports | 6×6, 8×8 | 48–60 in | 36–42 in |
| 18–24″ | Structural piers, commercial, pole barns | Engineer-designed | 48–60 in | 36–48 in |
How Deep Should a Sonotube Be?
Depth is the single most critical dimension — a footing that doesn’t reach below the frost line will heave in winter, damaging your deck or structure. Here are frost line depths by US region:
| Region / State Examples | Min Frost Depth | Recommended Tube Depth |
|---|---|---|
| Deep South (FL, Gulf Coast) | 0–6 inches | 24–30 inches |
| Southeast (GA, SC, AL) | 6–12 inches | 24–36 inches |
| Mid-Atlantic (VA, NC, TN) | 12–24 inches | 30–42 inches |
| Midwest / Plains (OH, IN, IA) | 24–36 inches | 42–48 inches |
| Northern US (MI, MN, WI, NY) | 36–48 inches | 48–60 inches |
| Mountain West (CO, MT, WY) | 36–60 inches | 54–72 inches |
| Canada (most provinces) | 48–72 inches | 60–84 inches |
| Always verify frost depth with your local building department before digging. IBC requires footings below frost line for any structure subject to frost. | ||
Bagged Concrete vs. Ready-Mix for Sonotubes
The break-even point between bagged and ready-mix is around 0.75–1.0 cubic yard. For most Sonotube projects, bagged concrete is the right call:
| Factor | Bagged Concrete | Ready-Mix |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | 1–12 tubes, any site | 12+ tubes, open site |
| Minimum order | No minimum | Typically 1 yd³ |
| Cost (materials) | ~$270/yd³ (80 lb bags) | $130–$170/yd³ |
| Delivery fee | None (DIY haul) | $80–$150 short-load fee |
| Pace control | Pour each tube separately | Must pour all at once |
| Site access | Works anywhere | Needs truck clearance |
| Typical choice | ✅ 1–10 tubes | ✅ 10+ tubes |
How to Pour a Sonotube Footing (Step-by-Step)
- Call 811 and mark utilities Allow 2–3 business days. Mark hole locations with marking paint or stakes.
- Dig the hole Use a power auger (rent for ~$150/day) or clamshell digger. Diameter should be 2–3 inches wider than the tube. Depth = frost line + 6 inches for gravel base.
- Add gravel base Place 6 inches of compacted ¾” crushed gravel at the bottom. This provides drainage and reduces frost uplift.
- Cut and set the tube Cut the Sonotube 2–3 inches above finished grade. Set it in the hole, plumb it with a level, and backfill with soil around the tube to hold it in place. Stake it if needed.
- Add rebar (structural applications) For deck footings: place one #4 or #5 rebar vertically through the tube center, extending 12 inches above the top. For fence posts: optional but recommended.
- Mix and pour in 1-foot lifts Mix bags per instructions (typically 3–3.5 quarts water per 80 lb bag). Pour in 1-foot increments. Rodding between each lift removes air pockets.
- Set the anchor bolt or post base While concrete is still wet (within 30 minutes), insert the J-bolt or post base hardware. Use a template to ensure correct spacing. Check plumb and level.
- Cure and strip the form Wait 24–48 hours before peeling the above-grade portion of the tube. Wait 7 days before applying structural load. Full 28-day cure before maximum loading.
Rebar & Reinforcement for Sonotubes
Rebar in a Sonotube footing connects the foundation to the post hardware and resists lateral (horizontal) forces from wind and deck loads. Here’s what to use:
| Application | Rebar Size | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fence post, mailbox | Optional / #3 | 1 bar center | Not structurally required for most fence posts |
| Pergola / arbor post | #4 (½″) | 1 bar center | Extend 12″ above top of tube |
| Residential deck post | #4 or #5 | 1–2 bars | Required by most codes; connect to post base hardware |
| Heavy deck / beam pier | #5 (⅝″) | 2–4 bars spiral | Consult engineer; follow local code |
| Commercial / structural | #5–#6 | Engineer-specified | Stamped drawings required for permits |
Sonotube Project Cost Estimates (2025)
| Material / Item | Unit | Avg. Cost (2025) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80 lb concrete bag (Quikrete/Sakrete) | per bag | $5.50–$7.50 | Home Depot, Lowe’s, Menards |
| Sonotube Builder’s Tube (8 ft) | each | $12–$22 | Varies by diameter (6″–16″) |
| Sonotube FinishFree (8 ft) | each | $20–$40 | Smooth finish, above-grade use |
| #4 Rebar (4 ft length) | each | $4–$8 | Widely available at hardware stores |
| Post base / column cap | each | $8–$25 | Simpson Strong-Tie most common |
| J-bolt anchor set | each | $3–$8 | Set in wet concrete |
| Power auger rental | per day | $130–$200 | 12″ bit recommended for most deck footings |
| Gravel base (½ bag per tube) | per bag | $5–$8 | ½” or ¾” crushed stone |
| Typical 8-footing deck project | total materials | $350–$650 | Excludes labor and auger rental |
Project Cost Examples
- 4 fence posts (8″ × 3 ft): ~8 bags of 80 lb + 4 tubes + gravel = $80–$130 materials
- 8 deck footings (12″ × 4 ft): ~52 bags + 8 tubes + rebar + hardware = $400–$600 materials
- Pergola (4 posts, 12″ × 4 ft): ~26 bags + 4 tubes + hardware = $230–$350 materials
5 Most Common Sonotube Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
1. Not Going Below Frost Line
The most common and most damaging mistake. A footing above the frost line will heave in winter, cracking your deck boards and pulling apart frame connections. Always verify frost depth with your local building department before digging.
2. Skipping the Gravel Base
Pouring concrete directly onto undisturbed soil traps moisture and causes differential settlement. Always place 6 inches of compacted gravel at the bottom of every hole — it takes 10 minutes and prevents years of problems.
3. Using Too Much Water in the Mix
Adding extra water makes concrete easier to work but dramatically reduces strength. Every extra gallon per bag reduces compressive strength by approximately 200 PSI. Follow the bag instructions exactly — typically 3–3.5 quarts per 80 lb bag.
4. Setting Anchor Bolts After Concrete Hardens
Once concrete begins to set (within 30–45 minutes), you can’t move anchor bolts without cracking the pour. Set all hardware while concrete is still plastic, using a level and template to get perfect alignment.
5. Not Adding 10% Waste
Running short during a pour leaves a cold joint — a visible and structurally weak seam between two pours. Always buy 10% more bags than your calculation shows. Unopened bags can be returned to most hardware stores within 90 days.
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