Free renovation & construction calculators
Results (includes 10% waste)
Cubic Yards needed
Cubic Feet (exact)
80 lb bags (pre-mix)
60 lb bags (pre-mix)
Est. ready-mix cost

How to Calculate Concrete for a Slab

Concrete volume is calculated in cubic yards — the standard unit for ordering ready-mix. The formula is straightforward:

Always add at least 10% for waste — concrete can't be returned once it's mixed, and running short mid-pour forces a costly cold joint that weakens the slab.

Pre-mix bags vs. ready-mix truck

For small slabs under about 1 cubic yard (roughly a 10×10 at 4"), pre-mix bags are often more practical. Above that, a ready-mix truck is almost always cheaper per yard and saves hours of labor. The calculator gives you both options.

Bags per cubic yard

Bag sizeVolume per bagBags per cubic yard
60 lb0.45 cu ft≈ 60 bags
80 lb0.60 cu ft≈ 45 bags

Concrete Cost Estimates (2026)

Prices vary by region, season, and mix design. The ranges below are for standard 3,000–4,000 PSI concrete in the continental US.

OptionCostBest for
Ready-mix truck$125–$175 / cubic yardAny slab over 1 cu yd
Short-load fee$50–$200 extraOrders under ~5 yards
80 lb pre-mix bag$6–$8 / bagRepairs, small footings
60 lb pre-mix bag$5–$7 / bagSame as above
Fiber reinforcement$5–$10 / yard add-onDriveways, high-traffic slabs
🏗️ Contractor note

Always order 10% more than calculated — most ready-mix suppliers charge a significant fee for a second small load. If you're pouring a driveway or garage slab, call your local batch plant and ask about their minimum load and short-load surcharge before you finalize the order. In many markets, that surcharge alone is $150–$250, which changes the math on pre-mix vs. ready-mix at smaller volumes.

Choosing the Right Slab Thickness

ThicknessApplicationNotes
3–3.5 inchesSidewalks, overlaysMinimum for foot traffic only
4 inchesPatios, garage floors, interior slabsResidential standard
6 inchesDriveways, areas with vehicle trafficAdd rebar or wire mesh
8 inchesHeavy equipment pads, commercialRebar required, often fiber-reinforced
🏗️ Contractor note

If you're in a freeze-thaw climate and pouring a driveway, don't skip rebar just to save money — the savings will disappear the first winter the slab heaves and cracks. A standard grid of #4 rebar at 18" on center adds roughly $0.50–$1.00 per square foot but can double the slab's service life.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many bags of concrete do I need for a 10×10 slab at 4 inches?

A 10×10 slab at 4 inches is approximately 1.23 cubic yards (33.3 cubic feet). With 10% waste, you'd need about 37 cubic feet of concrete — roughly 62 bags of 80 lb pre-mix or 83 bags of 60 lb. At this volume a ready-mix truck is worth considering if available in your area.

How much does a yard of concrete cost?

Ready-mix concrete typically costs $125–$175 per cubic yard in 2026, depending on your region and mix design. Higher-strength mixes (5,000+ PSI) run $150–$200+. Most suppliers also charge a short-load fee for orders under 5–7 yards.

How thick should a concrete slab be?

For most residential applications — patios, garage floors, shed pads — 4 inches is the standard. Bump to 6 inches for driveways and anywhere passenger vehicles will park. Commercial or heavy-equipment pads typically require 8 inches with rebar.