How to estimate drip edge cost
Measure the actual run in linear feet, enter material cost per foot, labor cost per foot, and a buffer for cuts or layout changes. The calculator multiplies the adjusted length by the combined per-foot price.
Linear roof items need separate runs
Flashing, drip edge, gutters, sealant, ridge, valley, and trim often follow different roof lines. Measure each run separately when material, profile, or access changes.
What is not included
Corners, miters, end caps, tear-off, repairs, access setup, disposal, specialty transitions, and minimum service charges may be separate from the simple per-foot estimate.
Roof area to roofing squares
One roofing square equals 100 sq ft. Examples include 10% waste and do not include accessories.
| Roof area | Squares before waste | Squares with 10% waste |
|---|---|---|
| 1,200 sq ft | 12 squares | 13.2 squares |
| 2,000 sq ft | 20 squares | 22 squares |
| 2,500 sq ft | 25 squares | 27.5 squares |
| 3,000 sq ft | 30 squares | 33 squares |
Before you calculate
- Measure each linear run separately before combining totals.
- Use material and labor prices per linear foot for the selected roof detail.
- Add buffer for overlaps, cuts, corners, access difficulty, and uncertain field measurements.
Common mistakes
- Pricing linear roof details from roof area instead of measured run length.
- Forgetting corners, end caps, transitions, repairs, disposal, and minimum service charges.
- Using default costs as if they were local contractor quotes.
Formula
cost = length * (1 + wastePercent / 100) * (materialCostPerFt + laborCostPerFt)
Assumptions
- Costs are editable planning inputs.
- Corners, terminations, accessories, access, removal, disposal, repairs, and minimum charges may be separate.
- Use local material and labor pricing before final budgeting.
Example
Estimated drip edge cost: 880 USD
How to estimate drip edge cost
- Measure the total run length in feet.
- Enter editable material cost per foot and labor cost per foot.
- Add waste or planning buffer for cuts, overlaps, corners, access, and minimum charges.
- Multiply adjusted length by the combined per-foot price to estimate cost.
- Confirm local prices, scope, accessories, and installation conditions before using the result as a budget.
Before you buy materials
- Use the estimate to compare early scenarios before requesting quotes.
- Replace default rates with local material and installer pricing before budgeting.
FAQ
How do I estimate drip edge cost?
Multiply measured linear feet by material and labor cost per foot, then add a buffer for waste, overlaps, cuts, and layout uncertainty.
How much does 160 ft cost in this example?
At $5/ft with 10% waste, the example estimate is about $880.
Should I measure each roof line separately?
Yes. Eaves, rakes, valleys, chimneys, skylights, wall transitions, and gutter runs can use different material and labor assumptions.
Does this include roof repair or access charges?
No. Repairs, access, disposal, minimum charges, and specialty details should be added separately if they apply.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.