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Concrete Calculator For Driveways

Concrete Driveway Calculator – Cubic Yards, Bags & Cost (Free)

Concrete Driveway Calculator

Enter your driveway dimensions to instantly get cubic yards, cubic feet, and the exact number of bags you need — plus cost estimates and pro tips.

✓ Engineer-Verified Formulas ✓ Imperial & Metric ✓ Instant Results ✓ 100% Free

🏗️ Concrete Driveway Calculator

Cubic Yards (yd³)
Cubic Feet (ft³)
Cubic Meters (m³)

Results include 10% waste factor — recommended for all pours.

Bags Needed (with 10% waste):
40 lb Bags
60 lb Bags
80 lb Bags

How Much Concrete Do I Need for a Driveway?

The amount of concrete you need for a driveway depends on three things: length, width, and thickness. The standard formula is:

Concrete Volume Formula:
(Length × Width × Thickness in inches ÷ 12) ÷ 27 = Cubic Yards

Example: 20 ft × 10 ft × 5 in thick = 3.09 yd³ (before waste factor)

For residential driveways, the recommended concrete thickness is 5 inches for standard passenger vehicles and 6 inches for trucks, RVs, or heavy loads. Never go below 4 inches for a driveway — thinner slabs crack prematurely under vehicle loads.

Always order 5–10% more concrete than your calculated volume to account for spillage, subgrade irregularities, and over-excavation. Running short on pour day means stopping mid-slab — and cold joints in the concrete are a serious structural weakness.

Concrete Driveway Size Chart — Cubic Yards Needed

Use this quick-reference chart for the most common residential driveway sizes. All figures include a 10% waste factor and are shown at both 5″ and 6″ thickness.

Concrete needed by driveway size (with 10% waste factor)
Driveway Size Sq Ft At 4″ thick At 5″ thick At 6″ thick Car Capacity
9 × 18 ft1622.22 yd³2.77 yd³3.33 yd³1 car
10 × 20 ft2002.74 yd³3.43 yd³4.12 yd³1 car
12 × 20 ft2403.26 yd³4.07 yd³4.89 yd³1 car wide
16 × 20 ft3204.35 yd³5.44 yd³6.52 yd³2 cars
20 × 20 ft4005.44 yd³6.79 yd³8.15 yd³2 cars
24 × 20 ft4806.52 yd³8.15 yd³9.78 yd³2–3 cars
30 × 20 ft6008.15 yd³10.19 yd³12.22 yd³3 cars
30 × 30 ft90012.22 yd³15.28 yd³18.33 yd³3+ cars

Highlighted rows = most common 2-car driveway sizes in the US. All figures include 10% waste factor.

How Thick Should a Concrete Driveway Be?

Thickness is the single most important factor in driveway longevity. Too thin and the slab cracks; too thick and you waste money. Here’s the breakdown by vehicle type:

ThicknessBest ForPSI RequiredNotes
4 inchesLight passenger cars only, mild climate3,500 PSIMinimum code in most areas — not recommended for long-term use
5 inchesStandard residential driveways4,000 PSIRecommended for most homeowners — good balance of strength and cost
6 inchesTrucks, SUVs, pickup trucks, RVs4,000 PSIBest long-term choice; handles heavier loads and freeze-thaw cycles better
7–8 inchesHeavy equipment, commercial vehicles4,500+ PSIRequired for forklifts, delivery trucks, heavy machinery access
⚠️ Never go below 4 inches for a vehicle driveway. Anything thinner will crack under vehicle loads, especially at the edges where thickness is hardest to control. If your soil is soft or expansive clay, increase thickness by 1–2 inches and add a compacted gravel subbase.

How to Calculate Concrete for a Driveway — Step by Step

Here’s exactly how the calculation works, with a real example of a 20 × 10 ft driveway at 5 inches thick:

1

Measure your driveway dimensions

Measure length and width in feet. For our example: 20 ft long × 10 ft wide. For irregular shapes, break into rectangles and calculate each separately.

2

Convert thickness from inches to feet

Divide thickness by 12: 5 inches ÷ 12 = 0.4167 ft

3

Calculate cubic feet

Length × Width × Thickness: 20 × 10 × 0.4167 = 83.33 ft³

4

Convert to cubic yards

Divide by 27: 83.33 ÷ 27 = 3.09 yd³

5

Add the 10% waste factor

Multiply by 1.10: 3.09 × 1.10 = 3.40 yd³. This is your order quantity.

6

Order ready-mix or calculate bags

At 3.40 yd³, order ready-mix concrete from a local batch plant. If using bags: 3.40 × 45 = 153 bags of 80 lb concrete.

Bags vs. Ready-Mix Concrete: Which to Use for a Driveway?

For most driveways, ready-mix concrete is the right choice. Here’s why — and when bags make sense:

FactorBagged ConcreteReady-Mix Concrete
Project sizeUnder 1 yd³ (small repairs)Any size — ideal over 1 yd³
Cost per yd³$180–$250 (materials only)$125–$175 delivered
LaborVery high — mix each bagLow — just place and finish
Quality controlVariable — depends on mixingConsistent plant-batched mix
Cold joints riskHigh — batch-to-batch gapsLow — continuous pour
Minimum orderAny quantityUsually 1 yd³ minimum
Rule of thumb: If your driveway calculation comes out to more than 1 cubic yard, order ready-mix. A standard 20×20 ft driveway at 5 inches thick needs 6+ cubic yards — that’s 270+ bags of 80 lb concrete that you’d have to manually mix. Ready-mix is faster, cheaper, and produces a stronger, more uniform slab.

Concrete Driveway Cost Estimate (2025)

Concrete driveway costs vary based on size, thickness, finish type, and region. Here are the typical installed costs including labor, materials, forming, and finishing:

Driveway SizeSq FtPlain ConcreteStamped / Decorative
10 × 20 ft (1 car)200$800 – $2,000$2,400 – $4,000
16 × 20 ft (2 car)320$1,280 – $3,200$3,840 – $6,400
20 × 20 ft (2 car)400$1,600 – $4,000$4,800 – $8,000
24 × 20 ft (2–3 car)480$1,920 – $4,800$5,760 – $9,600
30 × 30 ft (3+ car)900$3,600 – $9,000$10,800 – $18,000
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Material Only

Ready-mix: $125–$175/yd³. Includes concrete delivery. Does not include rebar, forming, or labor.

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Labor

$2–$5 per sq ft for standard pour and finish. Decorative finishes add $5–$10/sq ft extra.

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Regional Variation

Prices are highest in the Northeast and West Coast. Midwest and South tend to be 15–25% lower.

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Extras to Budget

Demo of old driveway: $1–$2/sq ft. Pump truck if needed: $300–$600 extra.

How to Prepare the Ground for a Concrete Driveway

A concrete driveway is only as good as what’s underneath it. Poor subbase preparation is the number one cause of premature driveway cracking and slab settlement.

  1. Remove all vegetation and organic material — tree roots, grass, and topsoil compress over time and cause the slab to settle unevenly.
  2. Excavate to the proper depth — for a 5″ slab with 4″ gravel base, excavate 9 inches below finished grade.
  3. Compact the subgrade — use a plate compactor to achieve at least 95% Proctor density. Soft or loose soil must be removed and replaced.
  4. Install a 4–6 inch compacted gravel base — use crushed stone or road base gravel, compacted in layers. This provides drainage and load distribution.
  5. Set forms at the correct grade — slope the driveway 1/8″ to 1/4″ per foot away from your house for drainage. Never slope toward the structure.
  6. Install reinforcement — place #4 rebar on 18″ centers or 6×6 WWM. Keep reinforcement at mid-slab depth using chairs or supports.

Best Concrete Mix for a Driveway

Not all concrete is the same. Choosing the right mix design is critical for a driveway that lasts 30–50 years.

ClimateRecommended PSIAir EntrainmentW/C Ratio
Warm / no freeze-thaw3,500–4,000 PSINot required≤ 0.50
Moderate freeze-thaw (most of US)4,000 PSI5–7% air content≤ 0.45
Severe freeze-thaw (Northern US, Canada)4,000–4,500 PSI6–7% air content≤ 0.40
Heavy traffic / trucks4,500–5,000 PSIOptional≤ 0.40
⚠️ Never add extra water at the job site. Each additional gallon of water per cubic yard reduces concrete strength by approximately 200 PSI and increases shrinkage cracking. Specify the proper slump (3–5 inches for driveways) when ordering ready-mix and stick to it.

Concrete Driveway Curing Time

Time After PourActivity Allowed% Strength Gained
24–48 hoursWalk on surface carefully~20%
3 daysRemove forms~40%
7 daysLight vehicle traffic (passenger cars)~70%
14 daysStandard vehicle traffic~85%
28 daysFull design strength — all vehicles and loads100%

Keep the slab moist for the first 7 days using wet burlap, plastic sheeting, or a curing compound. Proper moisture curing dramatically improves final strength — dry curing in hot weather can reduce strength by 30–40%.

Need More Concrete Calculations?

Our free calculator covers every type of concrete pour — slabs, footings, columns, stairs, post holes, and more.

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Frequently Asked Questions — Concrete Driveway Calculator

The 20 most asked questions about concrete driveways, answered with specific numbers and practical guidance.

Results are estimates based on standard engineering formulas. Always consult a licensed contractor or structural engineer for permitted work. Add 5–10% waste to all concrete orders.

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