Estimate drying time for concrete, paint, and coatings. Adjust for temperature, humidity, airflow, and thickness. Plan work safely, reduce rework, and meet deadlines today.
| Material | Thickness (mm) | Temp (°C) | RH (%) | Airflow | Target | Estimated (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete slab | 50 | 25 | 60 | Normal | Foot traffic | ~2.2 |
| Cement mortar / plaster | 15 | 20 | 70 | Low | Floor covering / coating | ~2.0 |
| Paint (water-based) | 0.2 | 30 | 55 | High | Light loading | ~0.2 |
| Tile adhesive | 6 | 25 | 80 | Normal | Foot traffic | ~1.0 |
The estimator starts with a base drying time for the selected material and thickness at reference conditions (25°C, 60% RH, normal airflow). It then applies adjustment factors for environment and finish conditions.
Drying is the loss of free water from a fresh layer until the surface and near‑surface reach a stable moisture state. In concrete and mortars, part of the time is also governed by hydration, which consumes water while building strength. This estimator focuses on practical “ready-for-next-step” time, not full design curing. Materials with high water‑cement ratios, poor finishing, or limited bleed paths can hold moisture longer than expected.
Air temperature controls evaporation potential, while relative humidity sets the moisture gradient between the surface and surrounding air. Warm, drier air generally speeds drying; cold air and high humidity slow it sharply. Use a dehumidifier when RH stays above 80%, and avoid forced heat that causes surface skinning. A stable indoor climate is usually better than short, aggressive drying cycles.
Thickness is the biggest driver because water must travel farther to escape. Dense slabs dry more slowly than thin skim coats, and self‑leveling products may dry quickly but still retain internal moisture. For coatings and paints, film thickness behaves differently; a small increase can double the time to reach recoat or traffic limits. When in doubt, base thickness on the thickest area, not the average.
Airflow sweeps away saturated boundary air at the surface and keeps evaporation active. Direct sun can warm the surface and shorten time, but it may increase shrinkage risk on cementitious mixes. Sealers, membranes, and primers reduce vapor escape, so allow extra time before applying floor coverings or impermeable finishes. Non‑porous substrates also slow drying because moisture cannot migrate downward.
Treat results as planning guidance. Confirm manufacturer data sheets for specific products, then verify moisture with the method required on your project, especially before vinyl, epoxy, or timber flooring. Add a safety factor for weather swings, and document assumptions using the CSV or PDF report. If deadlines are tight, plan sequencing, temporary protection, and ventilation equipment early properly.
No. It estimates practical drying readiness for the next activity. Concrete strength gain depends on curing and mix design. For structural decisions, follow your specifications, curing plan, and test results.
Use the maximum thickness where the material is slowest to dry. Local low spots, feather edges, and patch builds can trap moisture. Measuring the thickest section gives a safer schedule for finishing.
Use the typical or worst sustained humidity for the drying period. Large swings can slow drying overnight. Increase the safety factor, improve ventilation, or use dehumidification to keep conditions stable.
Usually yes, because they reduce vapor escape. If a finish is impermeable, trapped moisture can cause blistering or bond failure. Allow additional time and confirm moisture limits before installing coatings or coverings.
Projects track drying in different ways. The tool calculates hours internally, then converts to days and weeks for planning, sequencing, and reporting. You can select the display unit without losing detail.
Accuracy depends on product, mixing water, substrate, and site control. Use the result to plan resources, then confirm with manufacturer guidance and moisture testing where required. Add a safety factor when risk is high.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.