Concrete Footer Bag Calculator

Updated 2026-05-13

Estimate concrete volume for concrete footer bags from length, width, thickness, and waste.

Quick estimate: 1.44 cubic yards for 40 ft by 1.33 ft slab, 8 in thick, with 10% waste.

How many bags of concrete do I need?

Bag count depends on total cubic feet and the yield per bag. Enter project area, thickness, and the yield printed on the bag. The calculator rounds up because concrete bags are bought as whole units.

60 lb vs 80 lb concrete bags

A common planning yield is about 0.45 cubic feet for a 60 lb bag and about 0.60 cubic feet for an 80 lb bag. Product yield can vary, so use the label for final ordering.

When bagged concrete makes sense

Bagged concrete is often practical for small pads, post holes, repairs, and short pours. For larger projects, compare the bag count with ready-mix delivery, labor, and minimum order rules.

Concrete bag planning table

Uses common planning yields: 0.60 cu ft per 80 lb bag and 0.45 cu ft per 60 lb bag. Verify the product label.

Concrete volumeCubic feet80 lb bags60 lb bags
0.25 cu yd6.75 cu ft12 bags15 bags
0.50 cu yd13.5 cu ft23 bags30 bags
1.00 cu yd27 cu ft45 bags60 bags
2.00 cu yd54 cu ft90 bags120 bags

Before you calculate

  • Use the yield printed on the bag you plan to buy, because 40 lb, 50 lb, 60 lb, and 80 lb products can differ.
  • Measure project area and thickness before converting the volume into bags.
  • Keep waste visible for over-excavation, uneven base, mixing loss, and final top-off.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming every bag yields the same cubic feet.
  • Buying by bag weight without checking volume yield.
  • Forgetting that the final answer must round up to whole bags.

Formula

cubic yards = (length * width * (thickness / 12) / 27) * (1 + wastePercent / 100)

Assumptions

  • Defaults represent concrete footer bags.
  • Thickness is entered in inches; adjust it to match the actual planned pour.
  • Base prep, forms, reinforcement, joints, finishing, delivery, permits, and local requirements are separate planning items.

Example

Estimated concrete needed (cubic yards): 1.44 cubic yards

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter length in ft.
  2. Enter width in ft.
  3. Enter thickness in in.
  4. Enter waste in %.
  5. Review the live estimate and compare it with the example result.
  6. Check the formula, assumptions, product labels, and site conditions before using the Concrete Footer Bag Calculator result to plan materials.

Before you buy materials

  • Round up to full bags and compare the total bag count with ready-mix if the quantity gets large.
  • Check the product label for yield, water instructions, working time, and intended use.

FAQ

What is the example concrete footer bag cubic-yard result?

Use length, width, thickness or depth, and waste, then calculate the planning result. In the default example, the result is 1.44 cubic yards.

How do I calculate concrete bags?

Find project volume in cubic feet, add waste if needed, then divide by yield per bag. Round up to the next whole bag.

How many 80 lb bags make a cubic yard?

Using a common 0.60 cubic foot yield, one cubic yard takes about 45 bags of 80 lb concrete. Always verify the actual bag yield.

How many 60 lb bags make a cubic yard?

Using a common 0.45 cubic foot yield, one cubic yard takes about 60 bags of 60 lb concrete. Check the product label before buying.

Should I include waste when buying concrete bags?

Usually yes. A small waste buffer helps cover uneven base, over-excavation, mixing loss, and final top-off.

Related calculators

This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.