How much does gravel cost?
Enter the measured project area, material cost per square foot, labor cost per square foot, and waste. Set labor to 0 for a material-only planning number.
Square-foot pricing vs supplier units
This page starts with square-foot material and labor inputs. If your supplier quotes by cubic yard or ton, use a volume or ton calculator first, then translate that quote into the editable cost fields.
Depth, compaction, and waste
Decorative rock, paths, driveways, and base layers use different depths. Compacted base material may need more loose material than the finished compacted depth suggests.
What affects gravel cost?
Material type, haul distance, delivery minimums, density, compaction, and base prep all affect final cost. The calculator focuses on material math, not a contractor quote.
Gravel cost example checks
Examples use editable square-foot material and labor planning inputs. Replace them with local supplier and labor pricing before budgeting.
| Project example | Area | Material + labor | Waste | Planning cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small pad | 50 sq ft | $1.25/sq ft + $1.95/sq ft | 5% | about $168 |
| Walkway or utility area | 100 sq ft | $1.25/sq ft + $1.95/sq ft | 5% | about $336 |
| Larger service pad | 250 sq ft | $1.25/sq ft + $1.95/sq ft | 5% | about $840 |
Before you calculate
- Measure the area to be covered, then choose the compacted depth you actually need.
- Calculate driveways, paths, drains, and base layers separately when depths differ.
- Use density inputs only when converting volume into tons or weight.
Common mistakes
- Ordering by tons without checking the supplier's density assumption.
- Forgetting compaction for base layers.
- Combining decorative top rock and structural base rock into one estimate.
Formula
cost = area * (1 + wastePercent / 100) * (materialCostPerSqFt + laborCostPerSqFt)
Assumptions
- Depth, compaction, moisture, product size, and delivery minimums can change final quantity.
- Measure each pad, bench zone, kiosk base, and walkway section separately when material or depth changes.
- Round up to full bags, rolls, cubic yards, tons, or delivery minimums before ordering.
Example
Estimated outdoor storage workshop annex supply label board gravel cost: 641 USD
How to estimate outdoor storage workshop annex supply label board gravel cost
- Measure the project area in square feet.
- Enter editable material cost and labor cost per square foot.
- Add waste or planning buffer when material quantity changes with cuts or layout.
- Multiply adjusted area by the combined cost rate.
- Use local quotes and project scope notes before treating the result as a budget.
Before you buy materials
- Ask whether the supplier sells by cubic yard, ton, scoop, or bag.
- For compacted base, plan for placement and compaction rather than loose depth alone.
FAQ
How do I estimate gravel cost for this project?
Multiply the measured gravel area by material cost per square foot and labor cost per square foot, then add the waste percentage. The default example shows the estimated USD total for the current inputs.
Does this gravel cost include labor?
Yes, when you enter a labor cost per square foot. Set labor to 0 if you want a material-only planning number.
Should I price gravel by square foot, cubic yard, or ton?
Use the unit your supplier quotes. This page starts with area-based material and labor inputs; use a volume or ton calculator first when your quote is by cubic yard or ton.
What can change the final gravel cost?
Depth, compaction, delivery minimums, base prep, access, local labor, and supplier density can all change the real cost.
Does this replace a contractor quote?
No. It is a planning calculator. Site prep, grading, hauling, drainage, edging, permits, and minimum charges may be separate.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.