What affects concrete slab cost?
Slab cost begins with area, thickness, waste, and price per cubic yard. Real project budgets can also include base prep, forms, reinforcement, vapor barrier, finish, saw cuts, access, and labor.
Slab material cost vs installed slab price
This calculator estimates concrete material only. Installed slab quotes can include excavation, compaction, forms, base stone, reinforcement, finishing, cleanup, and local labor conditions.
Thickness changes cost quickly
A thicker slab uses more volume across the same footprint. Moving from 4 inches to 6 inches increases concrete quantity and material cost by 50%.
Linear concrete run examples
Examples are before waste. Measure changed-width sections, returns, corners, and transitions separately.
| Project example | Run x width x depth | Cubic yards |
|---|---|---|
| Narrow curb or mow strip | 50 ft x 0.5 ft x 6 in | 0.46 cu yd |
| Standard curb run | 100 ft x 0.5 ft x 6 in | 0.93 cu yd |
| Curb and gutter pan | 100 ft x 1.5 ft x 6 in | 2.78 cu yd |
| Trench or channel fill | 40 ft x 1 ft x 12 in | 1.48 cu yd |
Before you calculate
- Measure the total run length in feet and calculate separate runs when width or depth changes.
- Enter the formed width and thickness instead of using the visible top surface only.
- Keep waste visible for over-excavation, uneven subgrade, short forms, corners, and transitions.
Common mistakes
- Treating a curb or trench like a broad slab and forgetting depth changes along the run.
- Combining straight runs, returns, radiused corners, and driveway transitions without measuring them separately.
- Using a quantity calculator as drainage, reinforcement, slope, or code design.
Formula
cost = (length * width * (thickness / 12) / 27) * (1 + wastePercent / 100) * pricePerCubicYard
Assumptions
- Concrete quantity is a planning estimate, not structural design.
- Thickness, forms, subgrade, reinforcement, drainage, slopes, and local requirements should be checked separately.
- Round ready-mix, bags, forms, sealers, and accessories up before ordering.
Example
Estimated concrete cost: 73 USD
How to estimate concrete pad cost
- Measure the concrete pad cost area using slab length and width in feet, then enter the planned concrete thickness in inches.
- Convert the slab volume to cubic yards so the price per cubic yard input matches ready-mix pricing.
- Add waste for form variation, subgrade unevenness, ordering minimums, and final top-off.
- Multiply cubic yards with waste by the editable price per cubic yard to estimate material cost.
- Treat the result as material cost unless labor, delivery, forms, reinforcement, base prep, finishing, and permits are included separately.
Before you buy materials
- Use the result as a ready-mix or bagged-concrete planning number, then round by supplier rules.
- Plan forms, stakes, base, reinforcement, drainage slope, joints, finishing, and cleanup as separate lines.
FAQ
How do I estimate concrete slab cost?
Calculate slab cubic yards from length, width, and thickness, add waste, then multiply by price per cubic yard.
Does this include labor?
No. It estimates material cost only unless your entered price already includes labor or delivery.
Does slab thickness affect price?
Yes. More thickness means more cubic yards, which increases material cost.
Should I include waste in slab cost?
Usually yes. Waste helps cover uneven base, form variation, spillage, and ordering variance.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.