Slab on Grade Calculator
Estimate concrete volume, gravel base, vapor barrier, reinforcement, formwork, excavation, labor, and total cost for a slab on grade foundation. Use it for garages, homes, sheds, patios, workshops, additions, and light commercial floor slabs.
Calculate Slab on Grade Materials
Your Slab on Grade Estimate
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Formula used:
Practical recommendation:
Quick Formula Box
Slab concrete volume = slab area × slab thickness
Extra thickened edge volume = perimeter × edge width × (edge depth − slab thickness)
Total concrete cubic yards = total concrete cubic feet ÷ 27
Gravel volume = slab area × gravel depth ÷ 27
Excavation volume = slab area × subgrade depth ÷ 27
Reinforcement weight = slab area × reinforcement allowance
Total cost = concrete + gravel + vapor barrier + reinforcement + forms + excavation + labor + tax
Slab on Grade Reference Table
| Slab Item | Common Planning Range | How It Affects Cost | Best Practice | Important Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slab area | Project footprint in sq ft | Main driver of concrete, base, vapor barrier, labor, and finish cost. | Measure actual outside slab dimensions. | Include attached garage, porch, and thickened areas separately if needed. |
| Slab thickness | 4–6 in common for many residential slabs | Directly changes concrete cubic yards. | Use approved plans or local code requirements. | Loads, soil, reinforcement, and use case affect thickness. |
| Thickened edge | 8–24 in wide and 8–30 in deep | Adds concrete around the perimeter. | Use structural details for edge width and depth. | Thickened edges may act as footings in some designs. |
| Integrated grade beam | Deeper edge or internal beam | Adds concrete, forms, excavation, and rebar. | Estimate separately if beams run inside the slab. | Grade beams require structural design. |
| Gravel base | 4–8 in common | Adds material and excavation depth. | Use compacted clean stone or specified base material. | Base quality affects drainage and slab support. |
| Vapor barrier | Usually priced per sq ft | Small cost with high moisture-control value. | Lap seams and tape penetrations. | Required thickness varies by project and code. |
| Reinforcement | Wire mesh, rebar, fibers, or post-tension | Improves performance and raises material/labor cost. | Follow engineering or slab specification. | Calculator uses a weight allowance, not a structural design. |
| Formwork | Perimeter forms and edge forms | Cost increases with perimeter and thickened edges. | Brace forms to maintain slab elevation and edge shape. | Poor forms can waste concrete. |
| Excavation | 4–18 in depending on prep | Affects hauling, grading, subbase, and labor. | Account for cut, fill, compaction, and drainage. | Poor soil or slope can increase cost greatly. |
| Concrete waste | 5–10% typical for planning | Adds safety margin to concrete order. | Use higher waste for irregular shapes or uneven subgrade. | Underordering can delay the pour. |
| Labor | Often estimated per sq ft | Includes setup, placing, screeding, finishing, joints, and cleanup. | Adjust for finish level and access. | Decorative or polished finishes cost more. |
| Control joints | Based on slab thickness and layout | Usually affects labor more than material. | Plan joint spacing before the pour. | Joints help manage shrinkage cracking. |
How to Use the Slab on Grade Calculator
Slab on Grade Calculator Guide
A slab on grade calculator helps estimate the materials and costs required to build a concrete slab placed directly on prepared ground. A slab on grade may be used for a house foundation, garage floor, shed base, workshop, basement floor, patio, addition, commercial floor, or light industrial slab. The basic idea is simple: calculate the concrete volume from slab area and thickness, then add base material, vapor barrier, reinforcement, forms, excavation, labor, waste, and cost allowances.
This calculator is built for fast planning and early estimating. It uses the minimum practical inputs: slab area, slab thickness, slab perimeter, concrete price, edge detail, and reinforcement level. Advanced inputs allow more detailed control over thickened edges, gravel base, excavation, rebar or mesh allowance, vapor barrier, formwork, labor, waste, and tax.
What the Slab on Grade Calculator Does
The calculator estimates slab concrete volume, extra concrete for thickened edges or integrated edge beams, concrete cubic yards, concrete cost, gravel base volume, gravel cost, vapor barrier area and cost, reinforcement weight and cost, excavation volume and cost, formwork cost, labor cost, material tax, total cost, and cost per square foot.
It is designed for preliminary planning, budget comparison, and material ordering conversations. It does not replace structural drawings, soil recommendations, code requirements, or contractor pricing. Final slab design should account for loads, subgrade quality, moisture, freeze-thaw exposure, drainage, reinforcement, control joints, and intended use.
Why Slab on Grade Estimating Matters
Concrete slabs look simple, but many estimates fail because they include only concrete. A real slab on grade project may include stripping topsoil, excavation, compacted subgrade, gravel base, vapor barrier, reinforcement, forms, concrete delivery, pumping or buggying, finishing, curing, control joints, cleanup, and sometimes thickened edges or grade beams.
Even small design changes can affect cost. Increasing a 1,200 square foot slab from 4 inches to 6 inches increases the concrete volume by 50%. Adding a thickened perimeter edge can add several cubic yards of concrete. Increasing gravel base depth adds material and excavation. Adding reinforcement increases material and labor.
Concrete Volume Formula
The standard slab concrete formula is:
Slab concrete volume = slab area × slab thickness
Because slab thickness is usually measured in inches, the calculator converts inches to feet before multiplying by square feet. The result is cubic feet. It then converts cubic feet to cubic yards:
Cubic yards = cubic feet ÷ 27
If a thickened edge is selected, the calculator adds extra perimeter concrete using this formula:
Extra edge concrete = perimeter × edge width × (edge depth − slab thickness)
This avoids double-counting the portion of the edge already included in the slab thickness. A concrete waste factor is applied to the total concrete volume to account for uneven subgrade, form variation, placement loss, and real-world ordering margin.
Gravel Base and Subgrade Preparation
A slab on grade performs best when placed over a properly prepared subgrade. The subgrade should be compacted, stable, and shaped to the correct elevation. Many slabs also use a gravel or crushed stone base to improve drainage, leveling, and support. The calculator estimates gravel volume from slab area and base depth:
Gravel volume = slab area × gravel depth ÷ 27
Subgrade excavation is estimated separately using the selected excavation depth. This gives a planning number for removing soil or preparing the slab area. Actual excavation can vary depending on slope, soft soil, topsoil depth, drainage requirements, and whether fill must be imported or hauled away.
Vapor Barrier and Moisture Control
A vapor barrier is often placed under slabs to reduce moisture migration from the ground into the concrete and interior space. This is especially important for homes, garages, workshops, finished floors, and slabs that will receive flooring. The calculator estimates vapor barrier cost by multiplying slab area by the selected price per square foot.
Vapor barrier details matter. Seams should be lapped and taped, penetrations should be sealed, and the product should match the project specification. Local code, climate, flooring type, and building use may affect vapor barrier requirements.
Reinforcement Options
Slab reinforcement may include welded wire mesh, rebar, fiber reinforcement, or post-tension cables. The calculator uses a simple steel weight allowance per square foot for preliminary estimating. This is useful for budget planning, but it is not a structural design. Actual reinforcement depends on slab thickness, loads, joint spacing, soil support, crack-control goals, and engineering requirements.
For light residential slabs, a wire mesh or light rebar allowance may be enough for early estimating. For heavier slabs, workshops, vehicle areas, commercial floors, or structural slabs, the reinforcement assumption should be based on approved plans.
Thickened Edge vs Flat Slab
A flat slab has a relatively uniform thickness across its area. A thickened edge adds extra concrete around the perimeter and may function as a footing or frost-protected edge in some designs. An integrated grade beam is a deeper, reinforced edge or beam that may support walls or transfer loads.
The calculator allows three edge settings: flat slab only, thickened edge, and integrated grade beam. These are estimating categories. Final edge dimensions, reinforcement, frost protection, and bearing requirements must follow local code and structural details.
Practical Applications
Homeowner Uses
Contractor and Estimator Uses
Common Mistakes to Avoid
One common mistake is estimating only the slab thickness and ignoring thickened edges. If a slab has a perimeter footing, turned-down edge, or integrated grade beam, the concrete quantity can be much higher than a flat slab estimate.
Another mistake is forgetting base material and subgrade preparation. Gravel, excavation, compaction, and drainage may not be visible in the finished slab, but they strongly affect performance. A slab placed on weak or poorly prepared soil may crack, settle, or hold moisture.
Do not ignore joints and curing. Control joints help manage shrinkage cracking, and curing helps concrete gain strength. These details affect long-term slab performance even though they are not always major material quantities.
Expert Recommendations
Measure slab area and perimeter carefully. Use approved plans when available. Confirm slab thickness, edge detail, reinforcement, vapor barrier, base depth, and finish requirements before ordering materials. Use a 5% to 10% concrete waste factor for most simple slabs and a higher allowance for irregular shapes, rough subgrade, or complex forms.
If the slab will support load-bearing walls, vehicles, heavy equipment, masonry, columns, or structural framing, do not rely on a generic thickness assumption. Confirm design requirements with a qualified professional. Soil conditions, drainage, frost depth, expansive clay, and local code can all change the slab specification.
Conclusion
This slab on grade calculator estimates concrete volume, thickened edge concrete, gravel base, vapor barrier, reinforcement, excavation, formwork, labor, total cost, and cost per square foot. It is useful for early planning, budgeting, and material conversations. Final slab dimensions, reinforcement, subgrade preparation, joint layout, concrete strength, vapor barrier, frost protection, and code compliance should always follow local requirements, approved plans, and professional guidance.