Brick Calculator

Brick Calculator | Estimate Bricks, Mortar, Sand & Cost
Brick Calculator • Bricks, Mortar, Waste & Cost

Brick Calculator

Estimate the number of bricks, wall area, mortar bags, cement, sand, waste allowance, and project cost for brick walls, garden walls, boundary walls, facades, fireplaces, patios, steps, and masonry repair projects.

Calculate Bricks Needed

Length in feet
Enter a valid length greater than 0.
Height in feet
Enter a valid height greater than 0.
Includes typical mortar joints
Price per brick
Enter a valid price of 0 or more.
Advanced Options
Windows/doors to subtract in sq ft
Sq ft of single-wythe wall per mortar bag
Cost per 60–80 lb masonry mortar bag
Labor allowance per sq ft
Ties, flashing, reinforcement, tools per sq ft

Your Brick Estimate

Bricks Needed0 bricks
Net Wall Area0 sq ft
Mortar Bags0 bags
Total Budget$0

Formula used:

Practical recommendation:

Quick Formula Box

Gross wall area = wall length × wall height

Net wall area = gross wall area - openings area

Wall factor = 1 for single wythe or veneer, 2 for double wythe

Base bricks = net wall area × bricks per square foot × wall factor

Bricks to buy = ceil(base bricks × (1 + waste percentage))

Mortar bags = ceil((net wall area × wall factor) ÷ mortar bag yield)

Total budget = brick cost + mortar cost + supplies + labor allowance

Brick Reference Table

Brick / Wall ItemTypical EstimateBest Used ForPlanning NotesCommon Mistake
Modular brickAbout 6.8 to 7 bricks per sq ftCommon residential brickworkOften used as a practical default for wall estimating with mortar joints.Using brick-only face size and forgetting mortar joint spacing.
Standard brickAbout 6.5 bricks per sq ftTraditional masonry wallsActual count varies by regional brick dimensions and joint thickness.Assuming every “standard” brick has the same size worldwide.
Queen brickAbout 5.7 to 5.8 bricks per sq ftFaster wall coverageLarger face area means fewer bricks per square foot.Ordering modular brick quantities for queen brick projects.
King brickAbout 5.3 bricks per sq ftLarge-format veneer and wallsCan reduce brick count but changes visual scale and detailing.Ignoring corner returns, cuts, and bond pattern.
Single wythe wall1 layer of brickGarden walls, partitions, veneer-type planningMay require reinforcement or backing depending on use.Using single-wythe quantities for structural double walls.
Double wythe wallAbout 2× brick face quantityThicker masonry wallsRequires more bricks, mortar, labor, and structural detailing.Forgetting to double the brick and mortar allowance.
OpeningsSubtract doors and windowsWalls with openingsSubtract large openings, but keep waste for cuts around edges.Subtracting openings and also reducing waste too much.
Waste allowance5% to 15%Cuts, breakage, corners, repairsUse more waste for complex layouts, patterns, and reclaimed brick.Ordering exact brick count with no breakage allowance.

How to Use the Brick Calculator

Enter the wall length and height in feet. Measure the total face area of the wall section you plan to build.
Choose the brick size. The calculator uses common bricks-per-square-foot values that include typical mortar joints.
Enter the price per brick. Use your supplier’s unit price before tax and delivery unless you want those included.
Select the wall type. Single wythe and veneer use one brick layer; double wythe roughly doubles the brick face quantity.
Open Advanced Options to subtract openings and adjust waste, mortar yield, mortar cost, labor, and supplies.
Click Calculate to estimate bricks, wall area, mortar bags, brick cost, mortar cost, supplies, labor, and total budget.

Brick Calculator Guide

A brick calculator helps estimate the number of bricks needed for a wall, veneer, garden wall, boundary wall, fireplace, column, patio edge, step, repair area, or masonry project. The basic calculation is simple: measure the wall area, subtract major openings, multiply by the number of bricks per square foot, adjust for wall thickness, and add a waste allowance. A good estimate should also include mortar, supplies, labor, and cost because brick count alone is rarely enough for a realistic project plan.

This tool is designed for homeowners, masons, builders, contractors, estimators, landscapers, DIY users, property managers, and remodelers who need a fast planning estimate. It uses common real-world estimating methods and keeps the main calculator simple. The default workflow asks for wall length, wall height, brick size, and brick price. More detailed settings are available in Advanced Options.

What This Brick Calculator Does

The calculator estimates net wall area, base brick count, waste-adjusted brick quantity, mortar bags, brick cost, mortar cost, supply allowance, labor allowance, and total project budget. It supports common brick sizes such as modular, standard, queen, king, and utility brick. It also supports single-wythe, double-wythe, and veneer-style estimating.

For first-time users, the most important inputs are the wall dimensions and brick type. The calculator includes typical mortar joint spacing in the bricks-per-square-foot estimate. This is important because brick masonry is not calculated from raw brick size alone. Mortar joints add height and width to each unit, reducing the number of bricks required per square foot compared with measuring only the brick body.

Why Brick Estimating Matters

Ordering too few bricks can delay a masonry job, especially when the brick is a special color, texture, size, or batch. Brick colors can vary between production runs, so buying short may create a visible mismatch if extra bricks are ordered later. Ordering too many bricks increases cost, delivery weight, storage needs, and cleanup. A reasonable waste allowance helps protect the project without excessive overbuying.

Waste is important because brick projects involve cuts, breakage, corners, bond patterns, damaged pieces, chipped faces, and layout adjustments. A simple straight wall may need only 5% to 10% waste. Walls with corners, returns, openings, decorative patterns, arches, or reclaimed brick may need 12% to 20% waste. If the wall uses a running bond, stack bond, Flemish bond, soldier courses, or special details, the actual count may change.

Key takeaway: a reliable brick estimate uses net wall area, bricks per square foot, wall thickness, waste allowance, mortar needs, and project-specific details like openings and corners.

Brick Formula Explained

The basic wall area formula is:

Gross wall area = wall length × wall height

For a wall 20 feet long and 6 feet high:

20 × 6 = 120 square feet

If the wall has a 20-square-foot door or window opening:

Net wall area = 120 – 20 = 100 square feet

If the selected brick uses about 6.86 bricks per square foot:

Base bricks = 100 × 6.86 = 686 bricks

With a 10% waste allowance:

Bricks to buy = 686 × 1.10 = 754.6

Since bricks are purchased as whole units, round up:

Bricks to buy = 755 bricks

For a double-wythe wall, the brick quantity is approximately doubled because the wall has two layers of brick. The calculator applies a wall factor of 2 for double-wythe estimating.

Mortar Estimating

Mortar needs vary by brick size, joint thickness, wall thickness, laying style, and waste. This calculator uses a simplified mortar bag yield method. The default assumes one mortar bag covers a certain number of square feet of single-wythe brick wall. For double-wythe walls, the calculator applies the wall factor. If your mortar product provides a specific yield on the bag or data sheet, enter that value in Advanced Options.

Mortar is not just a filler. It bonds masonry units, supports load transfer, seals joints, and affects the final appearance. Mortar color, joint profile, joint thickness, and tooling can change the look of the wall. For structural or exterior masonry, mortar type and installation should follow code, engineering, climate, exposure, and manufacturer requirements.

Brick Size and Mortar Joints

Brick sizes vary by region and product line. A “standard brick” in one market may not match a standard brick in another. Modular brick is common in many residential projects and is often estimated around 6.8 to 7 bricks per square foot when typical mortar joints are included. Queen and king bricks cover more area per unit, so fewer are needed per square foot.

Mortar joint thickness also matters. A thicker joint reduces brick count slightly, while a thinner joint increases brick count. Most estimates use typical joint assumptions, but premium architectural work, restoration, thin brick veneer, handmade brick, or historic masonry may require custom calculations.

Did you know? If brick color matters, order enough brick from the same batch and blend from multiple pallets during installation to avoid visible shade bands.

Practical Applications

Homeowner and DIY Uses

Estimate bricks for garden walls, small retaining edges, fireplaces, planters, and repairs.
Compare modular, standard, queen, king, and utility brick quantities.
Plan brick cost, mortar bags, supplies, and labor before buying materials.
Account for windows, doors, openings, cuts, corners, and waste.

Contractor and Masonry Uses

Create quick takeoffs for walls, veneers, boundary walls, and repair sections.
Adjust waste for bond pattern, wall type, openings, and project complexity.
Estimate mortar bag quantities and supply allowances for budgeting.
Use related masonry calculators for block, mortar, concrete, and wall planning.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

A common mistake is calculating bricks from wall area without including mortar joints. Another mistake is forgetting to subtract large openings such as doors and windows. However, small openings or many cut areas may not reduce the brick order as much as expected because cuts and waste increase. For precise jobs, measure each wall section separately and calculate special details separately.

Another mistake is using single-wythe quantities for thicker walls. A double-wythe wall can require roughly twice as many bricks and more mortar. Veneer walls may also require ties, flashing, weep holes, air space, drainage mats, lintels, and structural backing. A brick veneer is not the same as a freestanding structural wall.

Users also forget delivery weight and site handling. Bricks are heavy, mortar is heavy, and masonry work requires staging space. Confirm access, storage, weather protection, water source, mixing area, scaffolding, and cleanup before delivery. For structural walls, retaining walls, chimneys, fireplaces, and load-bearing masonry, consult a qualified professional.

Expert Recommendations

Measure carefully, then add a realistic waste allowance. For simple walls, 10% is often a practical planning value. For complex walls, corners, patterned brickwork, repairs, or color-sensitive projects, consider 12% to 20%. Confirm the exact brick size, unit coverage, pallet count, delivery minimum, and color batch with your supplier.

Choose the correct mortar type for the project. Exterior walls, foundations, fireplaces, historic repairs, and structural masonry may require specific mortar properties. Use compatible masonry practices for flashing, drainage, reinforcement, control joints, expansion joints, and weather exposure. Protect fresh masonry from freezing, rapid drying, heavy rain, and excessive heat.

Conclusion

This brick calculator estimates bricks needed, wall area, mortar bags, brick cost, mortar cost, labor allowance, supplies, and total masonry budget. It is useful for brick walls, brick veneer, garden walls, boundary walls, fireplaces, patios, steps, columns, and repair projects. Final quantities should be verified with exact brick dimensions, mortar joint thickness, wall type, openings, bond pattern, waste, supplier packaging, local prices, delivery, labor rates, structural requirements, and jobsite conditions.

Brick Calculator FAQ

Multiply wall length by wall height, subtract large openings, multiply by bricks per square foot, adjust for wall thickness, add waste, and round up.
Modular brick is often estimated at about 6.8 to 7 bricks per square foot with typical mortar joints, but the exact number depends on brick size and joint thickness.
Use 5% to 10% for simple straight walls and 12% to 20% for cuts, corners, complex patterns, repairs, or reclaimed brick.
Yes, subtract large openings. Keep a reasonable waste allowance because brick cuts around openings still create waste.
As a planning estimate, a double-wythe wall uses roughly twice the brick quantity of a single-wythe wall with the same face area.
Thicker mortar joints reduce brick count slightly, while thinner joints increase it. This calculator uses typical bricks-per-square-foot values that include mortar joints.
Mortar bag quantity depends on wall area, wall thickness, joint size, brick size, and bag yield. Use the product yield when available.
Brick face quantity may be similar for a single layer, but veneer also needs backing, ties, flashing, weep holes, drainage, and code-compliant detailing.
Use caution. Thin brick coverage depends on the product face size and spacing. Enter a custom bricks-per-square-foot value if your product provides one.
Extra bricks cover breakage, cuts, color matching, future repairs, and layout changes. Ordering later may result in a color batch mismatch.
Yes. Advanced Options include an adjustable labor allowance per square foot. Actual labor depends on location, wall type, access, pattern, and complexity.
No. It provides planning estimates only. Structural walls, retaining walls, chimneys, fireplaces, and code-regulated work should be reviewed by qualified professionals.