Volume formula
Volume = length × (curb area + gutter area)
Curb area = curbWidth × curbHeight
Gutter area = gutterWidth × (thick_curb + thick_edge) ÷ 2
Concrete planning estimate
Calculate concrete volume for curb and gutter sections. Enter the run length, curb height, curb width, and gutter width to get cubic yards and bag count using the curb-plus-trapezoid cross-section formula.
The calculator models the curb and gutter as a composite cross-section: a rectangular curb face plus a trapezoidal gutter pan. Enter length, curb height, curb width, gutter width, and gutter thickness to get a volume estimate.
The formula models a uniform curb-and-gutter cross-section along the full run length.
Volume = length × (curb area + gutter area)
Curb area = curbWidth × curbHeight
Gutter area = gutterWidth × (thick_curb + thick_edge) ÷ 2
Length and curb height are in feet. Curb width, gutter width, and gutter thicknesses are in inches. The calculator converts all dimensions to a consistent unit before computing.
Does not account for curb returns, driveway cuts, radius curves, or tapered transitions at intersections. Add extra material for these features.
A standard curb and gutter (6 in curb height, 6 in curb width, 12 in gutter width) over 100 linear feet needs about 1.4–1.8 yd³ depending on cross-section profile. Use the calculator for your specific dimensions.
4000 psi (M300) is the standard for curb and gutter in most municipal specifications. Exterior concrete exposed to freeze-thaw cycles should include air entrainment.
A common residential curb and gutter is 6 in high × 6 in wide with a 12–18 in wide gutter that tapers from 4 in at the curb face to 3 in at the outer edge. Dimensions vary widely by municipality.
Yes — curb and gutter work in public right-of-way typically requires a municipal encroachment permit or right-of-way permit. Private driveway curb cuts require approval from the local authority.
These are rough material estimates for planning purposes. Local DOT or municipality standards may specify required curb profiles, concrete strength, air entrainment, and joint spacing. Verify specifications before ordering. Work in public right-of-way requires permits and may need inspector approval.