Volume formula
length (ft) × width (ft) × thickness (in) ÷ 12 ÷ 27 = yd³
Example: 20 × 4 × 4 ÷ 12 ÷ 27 = 0.99 yd³ net.
Concrete planning estimate
Estimate concrete volume, bag count, gravel base, and rough material cost for a sidewalk or walkway. The sidewalk preset uses 4 in thickness, 4 in road base, wire mesh reinforcement, and a 5% waste factor.
The walkway preset applies standard residential sidewalk defaults: 4 in slab thickness, 4 in road base, wire mesh reinforcement, and 3000 psi (M250) concrete.
Sidewalks are a simple slab calculation — length and width define the area, thickness determines depth.
length (ft) × width (ft) × thickness (in) ÷ 12 ÷ 27 = yd³
Example: 20 × 4 × 4 ÷ 12 ÷ 27 = 0.99 yd³ net.
Control joints are typically cut every 4–8 ft on a sidewalk (matching 24–30× slab thickness). A 4 in sidewalk needs joints roughly every 8 ft.
Where a sidewalk crosses a driveway apron, increase thickness to 6 in and use rebar reinforcement to handle vehicle loads.
Pre-calculated for 4 in thickness, M250 concrete, 5% waste, and 4 in road base.
| Sidewalk size | Net yd³ | Ordered yd³ | 80 lb bags |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 ft × 20 ft × 4 in | 0.74 | 0.78 | 36 |
| 4 ft × 20 ft × 4 in | 0.99 | 1.04 | 47 |
| 4 ft × 40 ft × 4 in | 1.98 | 2.08 | 95 |
| 5 ft × 50 ft × 4 in | 3.09 | 3.24 | 148 |
| 5 ft × 100 ft × 4 in | 6.17 | 6.48 | 295 |
Residential sidewalks are typically 4 in thick. Sidewalks that cross driveways or carry heavier traffic may be 5–6 in. Many municipalities specify minimums in their standards.
Residential walkways are typically 3–4 ft wide. Public sidewalks often require 5 ft or more to meet ADA/accessibility standards. Check local code or HOA requirements.
A 4 ft wide × 20 ft long × 4 in thick sidewalk needs about 0.99 yd³ net. With 5% waste, order about 1.04 yd³ — roughly 47 bags of 80 lb concrete.
Control joints are typically spaced every 4–8 ft for a 4 in sidewalk (the 24× thickness rule gives 8 ft as a maximum). Shorter joints are common near corners or driveway crossings.
Requirements vary. Front-yard public sidewalks often have municipal requirements, while backyard walks may not need a permit. Check with your local building department first.
These are rough material estimates for planning purposes. They are not purchasing guarantees, engineering designs, or code compliance guidance. Check local code for required width, thickness, reinforcement, and permit requirements before starting work.