Hollow Block Calculator

Plan walls confidently with hollow block takeoffs. See mortar, cement bags, and sand quantities instantly. Export results for bids, budgets, and smoother site control.

Inputs

Openings area uses the same unit system.
Overall wall length (no deduction).
Overall wall height.
Total area to subtract from the wall.
Face dimensions are used for block count.
Used for wall volume and mortar estimate.
Typical range: 8–12 mm.
Covers cutting, breakage, and handling losses.
Common range: 8–12% for blockwork.
Converts wet mortar to dry ingredients volume.
Used to split dry mortar into cement and sand.
Reset

Tip: If you need a more conservative estimate, increase wastage or mortar factor.

Example Data Table

Scenario Length (m) Height (m) Openings (m²) Block Face (mm) Joint (mm) Wastage (%)
Boundary wall 10 3 1.5 400×200 10 5
Internal partition 6 2.7 2.1 400×150 10 7
Warehouse bay 18 4 6.0 450×225 12 6

Use these examples to sanity-check your own inputs.

Formula Used

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Choose units, then enter wall length, height, and openings area.
  2. Select a block face preset or use custom dimensions.
  3. Set joint thickness and a realistic wastage allowance.
  4. Adjust mortar factor, dry factor, and mix ratio for your spec.
  5. Add unit prices to estimate material cost for budgeting.
  6. Click Calculate to view results above the form.
  7. Use the download buttons to export your CSV or PDF.

Quantity takeoff with consistent measurement rules

Start with gross wall area from length and height, then deduct openings measured at clear sizes. Using net area keeps ordering aligned with what is actually built and reduces surplus blocks. Where wall height changes, split the wall into segments and sum net areas for better control.

Block module sizing improves accuracy

Hollow blocks are placed with mortar joints, so counting should use the block face plus joint thickness. The module approach converts workmanship assumptions into repeatable math: blocks per square meter equals one divided by module length times module height. This is more reliable than using block face only.

Wastage reflects handling and cutting realities

Even with good supervision, breakage occurs during transport, stacking, cutting around openings, and corner detailing. A wastage allowance typically ranges from 3% to 10% depending on access and crew skill. Setting wastage explicitly supports procurement planning and prevents last‑minute shortages.

Mortar and materials derived from wall volume

Mortar is estimated as a percentage of net wall volume based on thickness, then converted to dry ingredients using a dry factor to account for bulking and voids. The chosen mix ratio splits dry mortar into cement and sand, producing cement bag counts and sand volume that can be priced consistently across projects.

Costing supports bids, budgets, and control

Pricing blocks, cement, and sand separately lets you compare suppliers and run quick sensitivity checks. If costs fluctuate, update unit prices and recalculate instead of rebuilding spreadsheets. Track your actual consumption by zone, then adjust mortar factor and wastage for future estimates and better accuracy.

Example data (computed)
InputValueOutputValue
Length10 m Net wall area28.50 m²
Height3 m Blocks incl. 5% wastage349 blocks
Openings1.5 m² Mortar wet (10% factor)0.57 m³
Block face400×200 mm Cement bags (50kg)4 bags
Joint10 mm Sand0.63 m³

The example uses 200 mm thickness, dry factor 1.33, and mix ratio 1:5.

FAQs

1) Should I measure openings as frame size or clear size?

Use clear opening sizes for deductions. If you expect extra cutting or lintel detailing, increase wastage slightly rather than inflating openings.

2) Why does joint thickness affect block quantity?

Blocks are laid with mortar joints, so the effective module is larger than the block face. Using the module prevents undercounting and aligns with site layout dimensions.

3) What mortar factor should I use?

Typical values are around 8% to 12% of net wall volume, depending on workmanship and joint size. For rough surfaces or thicker joints, choose a higher factor.

4) What does the dry factor represent?

Dry factor converts wet mortar volume to dry ingredient volume. It accounts for bulking, voids, and handling losses during mixing. A common range is about 1.25 to 1.40.

5) How accurate is the cement bag conversion?

It uses an approximate bag volume of 0.035 m³ for a 50kg bag. Bag density and moisture vary, so treat it as an estimating value and verify with local material data.

6) Can this handle multiple wall segments?

Yes. Calculate each segment separately and add net areas or totals. This is best for stepped walls, varying heights, or projects with different block sizes.

7) How do I make the estimate more conservative?

Increase wastage and mortar factor slightly, especially for complex corners, many openings, or tight access. Conservative inputs reduce the risk of shortages during execution.

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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.