Eavestrough Calculator

Updated 2026-05-13

Estimate eavestrough by dividing total run length by section length, then round up with waste for cuts.

Quick estimate: 18 sections for 160 ft length with 10 ft pieces and 10% waste.

How much eavestrough do I need?

Add the straight runs around the roof edge, divide by the selected section or piece length, and round up. Corners, outlets, elbows, hangers, end caps, and fittings are separate parts.

Measure each run separately

Long roof edges, inside corners, porch returns, and separate downspout or eavestrough runs can change the final parts list. Estimate each straight run before combining totals.

Quantity is not the full drainage design

This page estimates sections, pieces, or drop only. Drainage location, fascia condition, hangers, elbows, outlets, downspout capacity, and local rainfall are separate decisions.

Roof area to roofing squares

One roofing square equals 100 sq ft. Examples include 10% waste and do not include accessories.

Roof areaSquares before wasteSquares with 10% waste
1,200 sq ft12 squares13.2 squares
2,000 sq ft20 squares22 squares
2,500 sq ft25 squares27.5 squares
3,000 sq ft30 squares33 squares

Before you calculate

  • Measure each edge, ridge, valley, wall, penetration, or accessory run separately.
  • Use usable piece length or required spacing from the actual product.
  • Track corners, end caps, overlaps, sealant, fasteners, and special transitions outside the main count.

Common mistakes

  • Using broad roof area when the product is ordered by linear run or spacing.
  • Ignoring overlaps, end details, miters, penetrations, and damaged pieces.
  • Treating accessory quantity as roof-system design or snow-retention engineering.

Formula

pieces = ceil((length * (1 + wastePercent / 100)) / pieceLength)

Assumptions

  • Measure each straight run separately when profiles or lengths change.
  • Waste covers overlaps, cuts, damaged pieces, and layout changes.
  • Fasteners, sealants, corners, outlets, caps, and roof-system details are separate.

Example

Estimated eavestrough needed: 18 sections

How to calculate eavestrough sections

  1. Measure the total run length in feet.
  2. Enter the usable length per piece, roll, board, strip, or section.
  3. Add waste for cuts, overlaps, corners, and damaged pieces.
  4. Divide adjusted length by usable piece length and round up to whole units.
  5. Keep fasteners, connectors, corners, end caps, and layout hardware as separate checks.

Before you buy materials

  • Round up to full sticks, rolls, tubes, clips, or boxes as sold.
  • Verify compatibility with the roof material and manufacturer installation details.

FAQ

What is the example eavestrough sections result?

Use total run length, usable unit length, and waste, then calculate the planning result. In the default example, the result is 18 sections.

How do I calculate gutter sections?

Use sections = ceiling(total gutter run / section length). Add waste or extra sections for cuts, returns, and damaged pieces.

How much does a 40 ft gutter run drop at 1 inch per 16.67 ft?

A 40 ft run divided by 16.67 ft per inch is about 2.4 inches of drop.

Does this include downspouts?

No. Gutter sections, downspouts, elbows, outlets, hangers, and end caps should be planned separately.

Should every gutter run use the same slope?

Not always. Long runs, drainage layout, fascia, and downspout locations can change the slope plan.

Related calculators

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