How much base material do I need?
Measure the patio, walkway, pad, or paver area and enter the base depth in inches. A 240 sq ft area at 4 inches deep is about 2.96 cubic yards before waste.
Base layer vs leveling sand
Paver base and leveling sand are separate layers. Estimate compacted base material separately from the thinner bedding or leveling sand layer.
Compaction changes the order
Base rock is usually compacted in lifts. Loose delivered material, compacted depth, and supplier units may not match exactly, so keep waste visible.
Paver base example estimates
Examples are before waste. Keep base material and leveling sand as separate estimates.
| Project example | Area and base depth | Cubic yards |
|---|---|---|
| Small walkway | 120 sq ft at 4 in | 1.48 cu yd |
| Patio | 240 sq ft at 4 in | 2.96 cu yd |
| Large patio | 400 sq ft at 4 in | 4.94 cu yd |
| Thicker base area | 240 sq ft at 6 in | 4.44 cu yd |
Paver base coverage by depth
Coverage assumes 1 cubic yard, which is 27 cubic feet. Waste, compaction, settling, and irregular grade are not included.
| Depth | Coverage from 1 cu yd | Coverage from 2 cu yd |
|---|---|---|
| 1 in | 324 sq ft | 648 sq ft |
| 2 in | 162 sq ft | 324 sq ft |
| 3 in | 108 sq ft | 216 sq ft |
| 4 in | 81 sq ft | 162 sq ft |
| 6 in | 54 sq ft | 108 sq ft |
| 12 in | 27 sq ft | 54 sq ft |
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
cubic yards = (area * (depth / 12) / 27) * (1 + wastePercent / 100)
Assumptions
- Depth, compaction, moisture, product size, and delivery minimums can change final quantity.
- Measure each bed, pad, path, drain, and border separately when material or depth changes.
- Round up to full bags, tons, cubic yards, rolls, or delivery increments before ordering.
Example
Estimated tool rental shed gravel base needed (cubic yards): 2.44 cubic yards
How to calculate tool rental shed gravel base cubic yards
- Measure the target coverage area in square feet.
- Enter the planned finished depth in inches.
- Convert depth to feet, multiply by area, then divide cubic feet by 27 to get cubic yards.
- Add waste for uneven grade, compaction, spreading loss, or ordering increments.
- Confirm supplier units before buying, because bulk material may be sold by cubic yard, ton, or bag.
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
What is the example tool rental shed gravel base cubic-yard result?
Use area, installed depth, cubic-foot to cubic-yard conversion, and waste, then calculate the planning result. In the default example, the result is 2.44 cubic yards.
What formula calculates base material?
Use cubic yards = area x (base depth inches / 12) / 27, then add waste.
Is paver base the same as leveling sand?
No. Base material is the structural layer below the pavers. Leveling sand is a separate, thinner bedding layer.
Should I include compaction?
Yes. Compacted base layers can require more loose material than a simple finished-depth calculation.
Can I use this for a driveway paver base?
Use the calculator for quantity planning, but verify required depth and base specification for the actual load and site conditions.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.