How to Estimate Cubic Yards for Any Landscaping or Concrete Project
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Bulk materials live in a frustrating gap between how you measure and how you buy. You pace out a flower bed in feet and inches, but the garden center sells mulch by the cubic yard and the ready-mix plant quotes concrete the same way. Cubic yards are simply the standard unit for material that arrives by the truckload, because a cubic yard is a manageable, deliverable chunk: a cube three feet on every side. Getting comfortable with that single unit lets you plan any fill job confidently, whether you are dressing a garden, pouring a slab, or building a gravel drive.
Start with three measurements: length, width, and depth. Length and width are usually easy to take in feet. Depth is where most people slip, because it is often shallow and naturally measured in inches. A typical mulch bed runs 3 to 4 inches deep, a decorative gravel layer 1 to 2 inches, and a standard concrete slab 4 inches. Whatever you use, convert depth to feet before you calculate by dividing inches by 12. Keeping every dimension in the same unit is the single most important habit for getting a correct answer.
With consistent units, the conversion is one short formula: length times width times depth gives cubic feet, and dividing by 27 gives cubic yards. The number 27 is not arbitrary; it is how many cubic feet fit inside that three-by-three-by-three-foot cube. So a 20-by-15-foot patio poured 4 inches thick works out to 20 x 15 x 0.333, about 100 cubic feet, which divided by 27 is roughly 3.7 cubic yards. Awkwardly shaped yards are easy too: split them into rectangles, calculate each piece, and add the results together at the end.
Geometry tells you the exact volume of the hole, but it does not tell you how much to order, and those are different numbers. Ground is rarely perfectly level, material compacts as it settles, and some always spills during placement. A common rule is to add about 10 percent for landscaping materials and 10 to 15 percent for concrete, rounding concrete up to the nearest quarter yard since you usually cannot buy a precise fraction. Suppliers sometimes price by the ton rather than the yard, so remember most gravel weighs roughly 1.4 to 1.7 tons per cubic yard if you need to cross-check a quote.
Run a quick sanity check before you commit. Coverage figures are an easy gut test: one cubic yard spreads over about 162 square feet at 2 inches deep or 108 square feet at 3 inches, so if your project area is far off from what your yardage implies, recheck your depth conversion first. For shallow four-inch slabs there is a handy shortcut contractors use: divide the total square footage by 81 to get cubic yards directly. Once your inputs are clean and a margin is added, the order you place should match the space you measured.
Quick tips
- Always convert depth from inches to feet (divide by 12) before multiplying; a forgotten conversion is the most common reason an estimate comes out wildly wrong.
- Break irregular spaces into simple rectangles or circles, calculate each separately, and sum the cubic yards rather than trying to average odd shapes.
- Add roughly 10 percent extra for soil, mulch, and gravel and 10 to 15 percent for concrete, then round concrete up to the nearest quarter yard.
- If a supplier quotes by the ton, remember most gravel runs about 1.4 to 1.7 tons per cubic yard, so you can translate between their price and your measured volume.
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