Embankment Calculator
Estimate embankment fill volume, side slope material, compacted cubic yards, loose fill to order, base width, cross-section area, tons, truckloads, shrinkage, waste allowance, and total construction cost for roads, driveways, pads, berms, levees, ramps, and site grading projects.
Calculate Embankment Fill
Your Embankment Estimate
Formula used:
Practical recommendation:
Quick Formula Box
Side run per side = embankment height × side slope ratio
Base width = top width + 2 × side run
Trapezoid cross-section area = ((top width + base width) ÷ 2) × height
Triangular berm area = (base width × height) ÷ 2
Rectangular section area = top width × height
Compacted cubic feet = cross-section area × length
Compacted cubic yards = compacted cubic feet ÷ 27
Loose fill to order = compacted cubic yards ÷ (1 − shrinkage %) × (1 + waste %)
Tons = loose cubic yards × tons per cubic yard
Embankment Reference Table
| Embankment Type | Typical Use | Common Side Slope | Material Consideration | Common Mistake |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Road embankment | Driveways, access roads, rural roads, raised lanes | 2H:1V to 4H:1V | Granular or engineered fill placed in compacted lifts | Ignoring compaction shrinkage and shoulder width |
| Building pad embankment | Raised house pads, shop pads, slab support | 2H:1V to 3H:1V or engineered slope | Structural fill with compaction control | Using topsoil or organic material under a structural pad |
| Landscape berm | Privacy berms, garden mounds, visual screening | 3H:1V to 4H:1V | Stable fill with topsoil cap for planting | Making slopes too steep for mowing or erosion control |
| Levee-style embankment | Water control, farm ponds, drainage boundaries | Project-specific | Low-permeability core or engineered material may be required | Assuming landscaping fill is suitable for water retention |
| Ramp embankment | Equipment access, temporary construction ramps | Depends on vehicle slope limits | Well-graded fill or stone base | Not allowing enough ramp length for safe grade |
| Rail or trail embankment | Trail beds, small bridges, rail beds, paths | 2H:1V to 3H:1V | Stable subgrade and drainage layer | Forgetting drainage and shoulder erosion |
| Retaining wall backfill embankment | Raised grade behind walls | Wall design controls | Drainage aggregate, geogrid, and compacted lifts may be required | Adding surcharge soil without checking wall capacity |
| Temporary embankment | Construction access, staging, temporary diversion | Often flatter for safety | Reusable fill, stone, or project-specific material | Not planning removal, settlement, or erosion controls |
| Drainage embankment | Swales, diversion berms, stormwater control | Often 3H:1V or flatter | Compacted earth with erosion protection | Building without positive drainage or outlet planning |
| Rock fill embankment | Heavy-duty support, wet areas, drainage-heavy zones | Project-specific | Rock size, voids, filter layers, and settlement matter | Comparing rock fill volume directly with compacted soil volume |
How to Use the Embankment Calculator
Embankment Calculator Guide
An embankment calculator estimates the amount of fill material needed to build a raised earth structure. Embankments are used for roads, driveways, building pads, levees, berms, ramps, trails, rail beds, drainage diversions, and site grading. Because an embankment usually has a top width, height, length, and sloped sides, its volume is commonly calculated from a cross-section area multiplied by the embankment length.
The most common embankment shape is a trapezoid. The finished top is narrower than the base because the sides slope outward. For example, a road embankment may have a 12-foot top width, 4-foot height, and 2H:1V side slopes. A 2H:1V slope means the side runs horizontally 2 feet for every 1 foot of vertical height. Each side would extend 8 feet outward at the base, creating a base width of 28 feet. This larger base width has a major impact on fill volume.
What This Embankment Calculator Does
This calculator estimates side run, base width, cross-section area, compacted embankment volume, loose fill to order, tons, truckloads, material cost, placement cost, delivery or mobilization, tax, and total cost. It includes simple default inputs for quick use and advanced options for more realistic job planning.
The required inputs are only length, top width, height, and side slope. These are the minimum dimensions needed for a practical embankment volume estimate. The calculator also supports section shapes: trapezoid embankment, triangular berm, and vertical-sided rectangle. Trapezoid is the default because it fits most raised roads, pads, levees, and fills with sloped sides.
Why Embankment Volume Estimating Matters
Small changes in height or side slope can significantly increase embankment volume. A taller embankment does not simply add height; it also increases base width when slopes are included. A flatter slope such as 3H:1V is more stable and easier to maintain in many cases, but it requires more fill than a 2H:1V slope. This is why a calculator that includes side slopes is more useful than a basic length by width by height estimate.
Fill material also changes volume when placed and compacted. Loose soil delivered by truck is not the same as compacted fill in place. A project that needs 100 compacted cubic yards may require more than 100 loose cubic yards delivered, depending on shrinkage, compaction, moisture, and material type. This calculator accounts for shrinkage and waste allowance so the order quantity is more realistic.
Embankment Formula Explained
For a trapezoid embankment, first calculate side run:
Side run per side = height × side slope ratio
Then calculate base width:
Base width = top width + 2 × side run
Next, calculate cross-section area:
Cross-section area = ((top width + base width) ÷ 2) × height
Finally, calculate compacted volume:
Compacted cubic feet = cross-section area × length
Compacted cubic yards = compacted cubic feet ÷ 27
For example, if the embankment is 100 feet long, 12 feet wide at the top, 4 feet high, and has 2H:1V slopes, the side run is 8 feet on each side. The base width is 28 feet. The cross-section area is:
((12 + 28) ÷ 2) × 4 = 80 square feet
The compacted volume is:
80 × 100 = 8,000 cubic feet
8,000 ÷ 27 = 296.30 compacted cubic yards
If shrinkage is 12% and waste allowance is 10%, the loose fill to order is greater than the compacted embankment volume.
Side Slopes and Stability
Side slope selection affects volume, footprint, maintenance, erosion, safety, and stability. A 1H:1V slope is steep and may not be suitable for many soil conditions without engineering, reinforcement, or erosion protection. A 2H:1V slope is common for many earthwork applications, but flatter slopes such as 3H:1V or 4H:1V are often easier to mow, seed, stabilize, and maintain.
Road and driveway embankments often need side slopes that handle drainage, vehicle recovery, and erosion control. Landscape berms are usually flatter because steep berms erode and are difficult to plant or mow. Building pad embankments may require engineered slopes, setbacks, compaction testing, drainage, and approved fill material.
Compacted Volume vs Loose Fill
Compacted volume is the finished volume of the embankment after material has been placed and compacted. Loose fill is the delivered or excavated volume before compaction. The two are not equal. Granular fill may have lower shrinkage than clayey or wet soil, but every material should be estimated with realistic compaction behavior.
If fill is placed in lifts, each lift is spread and compacted before the next lift is added. This improves density and reduces future settlement. Thick loose lifts can trap moisture, compact poorly, and settle unevenly. For structural embankments, roads, and pads, compaction requirements should come from project specifications, geotechnical guidance, or local standards.
Practical Applications
Residential Uses
Contractor Uses
Material Selection
Common compactable fill is often used for general earthwork, but it must be suitable for the project. Granular structural fill is preferred for many load-bearing areas because it drains better and compacts more predictably. Sandy fill may be easier to work with, while clayey fill can be more sensitive to moisture. Topsoil is usually appropriate only for the final growing layer, not for structural support.
Rock fill can be useful in wet areas or heavy-duty fill zones, but it may require filter fabric, smaller choking stone, separation layers, or engineering review. For roads, building pads, retaining wall backfill, and slopes supporting structures, the fill material should be approved for the application.
Cost Factors
Embankment cost depends on fill material price, hauling distance, delivery minimums, compaction requirements, equipment access, slope shaping, erosion control, drainage, geotextile, moisture conditioning, and testing. A simple landscape berm may only require delivered fill and a skid steer. A road embankment may require survey layout, clearing, subgrade preparation, lift placement, compaction equipment, culverts, drainage stone, and final stabilization.
This calculator separates material cost, placement cost, delivery or mobilization, and tax. It also estimates truckloads based on selected truck capacity. Truckload estimates are rounded up because partial loads still require scheduling and delivery.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
The biggest mistake is using only top width instead of base width. Since side slopes extend outward, the base is wider than the top and the fill volume is larger. Another mistake is ignoring shrinkage. If you order only the compacted cubic yards, you may run short after material is placed and compacted.
Another common issue is building slopes too steep for the soil. Steep embankments can erode, slump, or become difficult to maintain. Drainage is also critical. Water should not be trapped inside or against an embankment without a designed drainage path. Poor drainage can weaken fill and cause settlement or slope failure.
Expert Recommendations
Use field measurements, survey data, or design grades whenever possible. For long embankments with changing height, divide the project into shorter sections and calculate each section separately. Use a higher waste allowance for irregular ground, rough grading, wet soil, or difficult access. For structural embankments, use approved fill material and place it in compacted lifts.
Plan drainage before placing fill. Include ditches, swales, culverts, geotextile, filter layers, slope stabilization, seed, mulch, stone, or erosion control blankets as needed. If the embankment supports a road, building, retaining wall, or water-control structure, consult a qualified professional for design requirements.
Conclusion
This embankment calculator estimates compacted fill volume, loose fill to order, base width, side slope footprint, tons, truckloads, and cost. It is useful for early planning of roads, driveways, pads, berms, ramps, and grading projects. Final quantities should be confirmed with actual ground elevations, material density, compaction specifications, drainage design, local requirements, and professional engineering guidance when needed.