Board Foot Calculator
Calculate board feet for hardwood, rough lumber, dimensional boards, sawmill stock, slabs, furniture parts, and woodworking projects. Enter thickness, width, length, and quantity to estimate total board footage, waste allowance, cost, linear feet, and wood volume.
Calculate Board Feet
Your Board Foot Estimate
Formula used:
Practical recommendation:
Quick Formula Box
Board feet per board = thickness(in) × width(in) × length(ft) ÷ 12
Total board feet = board feet per board × number of boards
Board feet with waste = total board feet × (1 + waste percentage)
Estimated cost = board feet with waste × price per board foot
A board foot is a volume measurement equal to a board 1 inch thick, 12 inches wide, and 12 inches long. It is widely used for hardwood, rough lumber, slabs, and sawmill boards.
Board Foot Reference Table
| Board Size | Length | Board Feet per Board | Common Use | Planning Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 in × 6 in | 8 ft | 4.00 bd ft | Shelves, panels, small woodworking | Simple example: 1 × 6 × 8 ÷ 12. |
| 1 in × 8 in | 10 ft | 6.67 bd ft | Hardwood boards, furniture parts | Common rough lumber estimate. |
| 1 in × 12 in | 8 ft | 8.00 bd ft | Wide boards, table parts, shelving | Wide boards often need extra waste for defects. |
| 2 in × 6 in | 8 ft | 8.00 bd ft | Thick parts, benches, framing comparison | Thickness doubles board footage compared with 1 in stock. |
| 2 in × 8 in | 10 ft | 13.33 bd ft | Slabs, thick shelves, table legs | Useful for 8/4 rough lumber planning. |
| 4/4 hardwood | Varies | Thickness treated near 1 in rough | Furniture, cabinets, trim, crafts | Allow extra for jointing, planing, and defects. |
| 8/4 hardwood | Varies | About twice 4/4 volume | Table legs, turning blanks, thick parts | More expensive and heavier; plan cuts carefully. |
How to Use the Board Foot Calculator
Board Foot Calculator Guide
A board foot calculator helps estimate lumber volume for hardwood boards, rough lumber, sawmill stock, wood slabs, furniture parts, cabinetry, trim, shelving, and woodworking projects. Board feet are commonly used when buying hardwood and rough lumber because they measure volume instead of length or surface area. This calculator uses thickness, width, length, and quantity to estimate total board footage and material cost.
Board feet can feel confusing at first because they combine three dimensions into one volume measurement. A board that is 1 inch thick, 12 inches wide, and 12 inches long equals one board foot. A board that is twice as thick has twice the board footage if width and length stay the same. That is why a 2-inch-thick board costs more than a 1-inch-thick board of the same width and length when sold by board foot.
What This Board Foot Calculator Does
This tool calculates board feet per board, exact total board feet, board feet with waste allowance, linear feet, approximate cubic feet, estimated cost, and target board-foot comparison. It is useful for woodworkers, cabinetmakers, furniture makers, sawmill customers, lumber yard shoppers, contractors, carpenters, and DIY builders who want to plan lumber purchases more accurately.
The default workflow uses only four required inputs: thickness, width, length, and number of boards. Advanced options are available for common thickness presets, length units, waste allowance, price per board foot, target board feet, and trim loss. This keeps the tool simple enough for beginners while still useful for real-world lumber buying.
Why Board Foot Estimates Matter
Accurate board-foot estimates help you buy enough lumber without overspending. Hardwood can be expensive, and boards may vary in width, grain, color, defects, moisture content, and usable yield. If you buy too little, you may not be able to match grain or color later. If you buy too much, you may tie up money in extra lumber that needs careful storage.
Board-foot estimating also helps compare lumber prices. One supplier may price rough hardwood by board foot, another may price surfaced lumber by piece, and another may price trim by linear foot. Knowing the board-foot amount helps you compare value more fairly, especially when boards have different thicknesses and widths.
Board Foot Formula Explained
The standard board foot formula is:
Board feet = thickness in inches × width in inches × length in feet ÷ 12
For example, a board that is 1 inch thick, 8 inches wide, and 10 feet long equals 1 × 8 × 10 ÷ 12, or 6.67 board feet. If you have 6 identical boards, the total is 40 board feet before waste. With a 10% waste allowance, the recommended purchase estimate is 44 board feet.
If your lumber length is measured in inches, convert length to feet first by dividing by 12. If your length is measured in meters, convert meters to feet before applying the board-foot formula. This calculator handles those conversions automatically when the correct length unit is selected.
Board Feet vs Linear Feet vs Square Feet
Board feet measure volume. Linear feet measure length. Square feet measure surface area. These measurements are not interchangeable. A 10-foot board has 10 linear feet regardless of thickness or width, but its board footage changes when thickness or width changes. A wide, thick board may have much more board footage than a narrow board of the same length.
Square feet can be helpful for flooring, paneling, or surface coverage, but board feet are better for lumber volume. For example, a tabletop may require a certain square footage of surface area, but the lumber cost depends on thickness and total board feet.
Rough Lumber, S4S Lumber, and Quarter Thickness
Hardwood is often sold using quarter thickness such as 4/4, 5/4, 6/4, and 8/4. A 4/4 board is commonly treated as about 1 inch thick in rough form, while 8/4 is about 2 inches thick. After jointing, planing, and sanding, the finished thickness is usually less. This is why rough lumber projects need milling allowance.
S4S lumber means surfaced on four sides. It has already been planed and jointed, so its actual thickness and width may be smaller than rough size. If you are calculating surfaced boards, use the actual measured dimensions. If you are buying rough lumber from a sawmill, use the rough thickness and add waste for milling and defects.
Practical Applications
Woodworking Uses
Buying and Estimating Uses
Common Mistakes to Avoid
A common mistake is confusing board feet with square feet. Square footage ignores thickness, while board footage includes thickness. Another mistake is forgetting that finished lumber may be smaller than nominal or rough dimensions. If you use the wrong dimensions, your estimate may be too high or too low.
Users also forget waste. Lumber waste is normal because boards have knots, splits, checks, sapwood, wane, bow, twist, cup, color variation, and grain direction. Furniture and cabinetry projects often require higher waste than rough construction because the visible parts need better appearance and grain selection.
Another mistake is treating random-width lumber as if every board has the same width. For best accuracy, measure each board separately and add the board feet together. If you only need a quick estimate, use average width, average length, and total board count.
Expert Recommendations
For simple projects, add at least 10% waste. For hardwood furniture, cabinetry, or projects requiring grain matching, consider 15% to 25% waste. For rough lumber, allow extra for jointing and planing. For slabs and wide boards, inspect for checking, cracks, moisture, and usable shape before buying.
When comparing prices, ask whether the lumber is rough, surfaced, kiln dried, air dried, or sold by actual measured board footage. A lower price may not be a better deal if the boards have more defects or require more milling. For valuable species, calculate board footage carefully and confirm the seller’s measurement method.
Conclusion
This board foot calculator gives a fast, practical estimate for lumber board feet, waste-adjusted purchase quantity, linear feet, volume, and cost. It is built for hardwood, rough lumber, sawmill boards, slabs, furniture projects, cabinetry, trim, and DIY woodworking. For best results, measure actual dimensions, choose the correct length unit, add realistic waste, and verify your cut list before buying lumber.