How many fence pickets do I need?
Use picket width plus gap as the spacing input. For example, 0.5 ft spacing means about 2 pickets per linear foot before waste.
Measure fence runs separately
Straight runs, gate openings, corners, slopes, stepped sections, and property-line changes can create different material needs. Measure each run before combining totals.
Fence material is more than the main count
Posts, rails, pickets, panels, gates, hinges, latches, concrete, fasteners, caps, trim, and stain or paint can be separate estimates.
Fence material planning reference
Examples are simple straight-run checks before gates, corners, slope changes, and custom end sections.
| Fence item | Example input | Planning result |
|---|---|---|
| Posts | 120 ft at 8 ft spacing | About 15 spaces before end, corner, and gate posts |
| Rails | 120 ft with 8 ft rails, one rail run | 15 rails before waste |
| Pickets | 120 ft at 0.5 ft picket plus gap | 240 pickets before waste |
| Sections | 120 ft with 8 ft panels | 15 sections before gates |
Before you calculate
- Use installed picket width plus gap, not just board width.
- Calculate gates, returns, shadowbox overlap, and horizontal layouts separately.
- Add waste for cuts, defects, and layout changes.
Common mistakes
- Using nominal board width instead of installed spacing.
- Forgetting overlap in board-on-board or shadowbox layouts.
- Not separating gates and custom end sections.
Formula
pieces = ceil((length * (1 + wastePercent / 100)) / pieceLength)
Assumptions
- Piece length means installed picket width plus gap in feet.
- Gates, corners, overlap, shadowbox layouts, and end cuts can change the count.
- Posts, rails, fasteners, caps, and finish are separate.
Example
Estimated picket fence spacing needed: 264 pickets
How to calculate fence pickets
- Measure fence length or run length in feet, then convert the run to inches when spacing is based on picket width.
- Enter picket width plus the planned gap, exposure, or board spacing for the fence layout.
- Add waste for partial bays, cuts, overlap, damaged pickets, gates, corners, and grade changes.
- Divide adjusted run length by picket spacing and round up to whole pickets; the default example returns 264 pickets.
- Estimate posts, rails, fasteners, gates, caps, concrete, stain, and labor separately.
Before you buy materials
- Round up to full boards or bundles.
- Estimate posts, rails, fasteners, caps, stain, and paint separately.
FAQ
How many fence posts for 120 ft at 8 ft spacing?
A simple 120 ft run divided by 8 ft spacing gives 15 spaces. End posts, corners, and gates can add posts depending on layout.
How do I calculate fence pickets?
Use pickets = fence length / (picket width plus gap), then add waste and round up to whole pickets.
Does this include gates?
No. Gates, gate posts, hinges, latches, and custom openings should be planned separately.
Should I add waste for fencing?
Yes for rails, pickets, and sections. Waste covers cuts, damaged boards, slope changes, and layout adjustments.
What is the example fence pickets result?
Using the default inputs, the example result is 264 pickets. Estimate fence pickets from fence length, picket width plus gap, and waste, then round up to whole pickets.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.