Number 3 Rebar Volume Calculator

Updated 2026-05-17

Estimate displaced concrete volume for #3 rebar from bar count, bar length, diameter, and waste.

Quick estimate: 0.64 cubic feet for 40 bars, 20 ft long, 0.375 in diameter, and 5% waste.

How much rebar do I need?

A basic rebar grid estimate uses slab or footing dimensions, bar spacing, bar length, and waste. The calculator estimates count for a simple rectangular layout.

Spacing, laps, and waste

Closer spacing increases bar count. Lap lengths, bends, chairs, hooks, edge offsets, and cuts can change the real order and should be planned separately.

Rebar quantity is not reinforcement design

This calculator is a material planner. Required bar size, spacing, cover, laps, and layout depend on plans, loads, and local requirements.

Before you calculate

  • Enter slab, wall, or footing dimensions in feet and bar spacing in inches.
  • Use the actual stock bar length you expect to buy.
  • Adjust waste for laps, cuts, edge clearances, and layout changes.

Common mistakes

  • Using center spacing without allowing for edges and bar layout.
  • Forgetting overlap, chairs, ties, or code requirements.
  • Treating a quantity estimate as an engineering reinforcement design.

Formula

cubic feet = barCount * barLength * pi * (barDiameter / 24)^2 * (1 + wastePercent / 100)

Assumptions

  • Defaults represent #3 rebar.
  • This is a volume allowance helper, not reinforcement design.
  • Lap length, bends, chairs, cover, and structural approval are separate.

Example

Estimated rebar volume: 0.64 cubic feet

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter bars in count.
  2. Enter bar length in ft.
  3. Enter bar diameter 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 Number 3 Rebar Volume Calculator result to plan materials.

Before you buy materials

  • Confirm reinforcement requirements with plans, code guidance, or a qualified professional.
  • Use this result only for rough quantity planning.

FAQ

What is the example number 3 rebar volume cubic-foot result?

Use rebar length, bar size, count, and volume conversion, then calculate the planning result. In the default example, the result is 0.64 cubic feet.

How do I calculate rebar for a slab?

Estimate bars in each direction from slab dimensions and spacing, then account for bar length, laps, cuts, and waste.

Does this include lap length?

No. Add lap lengths and cut waste separately based on your plans or qualified guidance.

Can this choose rebar size or spacing?

No. It estimates quantity from the spacing you enter; it does not design reinforcement.

Should I include chairs, ties, or mesh?

Those materials are not included in the rebar count. Plan them separately.

Related calculators

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