Plan driveways and paths with accurate material estimates fast for any site. Compare pricing by ton, yard, or meter, including waste, delivery, and tax.
These examples illustrate typical residential applications and approximate tonnage.
| Use case | Area | Depth | Price | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Driveway base | 600 sq ft | 4 in | 45 per ton | ≈ 3.9 tons |
| Garden path | 120 sq ft | 3 in | 55 per ton | ≈ 0.8 tons |
| Patio subbase | 300 sq ft | 6 in | 40 per ton | ≈ 4.0 tons |
The calculation converts all inputs to consistent base units, then applies volume, density, and pricing.
Gravel is ordered by tons, cubic yards, or cubic meters, but you install it by area and thickness. Small measurement mistakes can trigger an extra delivery or leave the base thin. Most residential bases fall around 2 to 6 inches, depending on traffic and subgrade strength.
The tool converts your inputs to a common set of units, then multiplies area by depth to get volume. As a quick check, 1 cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet, and 1 cubic meter is about 35.3147 cubic feet. Consistent units prevent costly ordering errors.
Job sites have edge losses, uneven grades, and spillage during spreading. A waste factor helps cover those realities. Use 5% to 10% for simple rectangles with good access, and 10% to 15% for irregular areas or hand work.
Compaction reduces loose thickness as particles interlock. If you need a 4-inch compacted layer, you typically place more loose material. Many projects use a 5% to 15% allowance based on gradation, moisture, and compaction method. Plate compactors and rollers achieve different results, so field checks with a ruler after compaction are recommended for consistent thickness.
Density varies with rock type and moisture. Many gravels fall near 95 to 110 lb per cubic foot (about 1520 to 1760 kg per cubic meter). The calculator converts density when needed and turns adjusted volume into weight for short tons and metric tonnes.
If you are billed per ton, weight drives cost. If you are billed per cubic yard or cubic meter, volume drives cost. Switching the price basis helps compare quotes across suppliers and reduces surprises at invoicing time.
Add delivery when it appears as a separate line item. Apply discounts before tax to mirror typical invoices. Separating material, delivery, discount, and tax creates a clean breakdown that is easier to justify to clients.
Smaller dump trucks often carry roughly 8 to 12 tons, but access limits can reduce payload. Enter truck capacity to estimate loads and staging needs. Before ordering, confirm thickness, drainage slope, and containment edges so the delivered quantity matches performance requirements.
Light residential driveways often use 4 to 6 inches of base, while paths may use 2 to 4 inches. Soil strength, drainage, and expected loads determine the best thickness.
Use the unit your supplier invoices. Tons depend on density and moisture; cubic yards depend on volume. This calculator shows both so you can compare quotes consistently.
For clean, rectangular areas, 5% to 10% is common. For irregular shapes, soft subgrade, or hand spreading, 10% to 15% may be safer to avoid shortages.
Compaction allowance adds extra loose material to achieve your target compacted thickness. If your gravel settles during compaction, the tool increases the required volume accordingly.
If available, use the supplier’s stated bulk density. Otherwise, 95 to 110 lb/ft3 is a practical range for many gravels, with heavier rock types trending higher.
Per-ton pricing follows weight, while per-yard pricing follows volume. Because density affects weight, switching the price basis can change the computed material cost even with the same project dimensions.
Yes. After calculation, use the CSV export for spreadsheets or the PDF export for a simple shareable report. Both include key inputs, quantities, and the cost breakdown.
Accurate estimates help you buy gravel with confidence always.
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.