Measure wall area, pick system type, and compute required stucco volume quickly. See cement, lime, sand, water, and cost totals instantly with clear outputs.
| Wall area (ft²) | Thickness/coat (in) | Coats | Waste (%) | Mix (c:s:l) | Stucco volume (ft³, with waste) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 400 | 0.375 | 2 | 10 | 1:3:0.5 | 27.50 |
| 800 | 0.375 | 3 | 10 | 1:3:0.5 | 82.50 |
| 1200 | 0.250 | 2 | 12 | 1:4:0.5 | 56.00 |
Measure wall lengths and heights, subtract large openings, and total the net area in square feet. For multi‑story facades, keep a simple sketch and list each panel. Accurate area is the foundation for reliable volume, bag counts, and delivery scheduling.
Stucco quantity depends on total thickness, not just surface area. A common traditional build uses three coats, often around 3/8 inch per coat, creating roughly 1.125 inches total. Changing thickness by 1/8 inch can shift volume noticeably on larger walls.
This calculator converts inches to feet, then multiplies by wall area to estimate wet stucco volume in cubic feet. It also shows cubic yards for bulk delivery planning, using 27 cubic feet per cubic yard. These unit conversions help align field needs with supplier quotes.
Waste is not a guess; it reflects texture, trims, mixing loss, and wall irregularities. Straight walls with minimal details may use 8–10%, while heavy reveals and frequent stops can push 12–15%. Using a realistic waste factor reduces emergency reorders and downtime.
Material split is calculated from the cement:sand:lime parts you select. A 1:3:0.5 mix means cement is 1 part of the total, sand is 3 parts, and lime is 0.5 parts. The calculator allocates the waste‑adjusted volume across these parts.
Cement and lime are converted to bags using your chosen bag yield in cubic feet per bag. If your products list different yields, update those fields for accuracy. Sand is converted to cubic yards for truck scheduling and stockpile space planning on site.
Water demand varies by sand moisture and desired workability, so the calculator offers a practical estimate based on gallons per cement bag. Many field batches fall within 5–7 gallons per bag. Treat this as a planning number, then fine‑tune during test batches.
If lath is included, the sheet count is estimated using about 18.2 square feet per sheet, then rounded up for purchasing. Costs are optional: enter unit prices for cement, lime, sand, lath, and a misc line for beads and fasteners to get an instant budget view.
Use net wall area after subtracting large doors and windows. Keeping small penetrations included is usually fine, because your waste factor covers minor cutouts and trimming.
Use the thickness you plan to apply in the field. Traditional systems often target roughly 1/4 to 1/2 inch per coat depending on substrate, straightness, and specification requirements.
Field stucco batching is commonly measured by volume (shovels, buckets, boxes). Volume parts provide a practical way to allocate cement, sand, and lime from the computed stucco volume.
Start with 10% for typical walls. Increase to 12–15% for deep textures, many corners, reveals, and frequent stops. Reduce only when conditions are simple and crews are consistent.
Yes. Cement and lime products can have different packaging volumes. Enter the yield shown on your supplier’s data sheet so the bag estimates align with what you actually purchase.
No. It is a planning estimate. Sand moisture, weather, and desired workability change water demand. Use the estimate to stock water and plan batching, then adjust during test mixes.
You can estimate volumes, but engineered one-coat products may require proprietary base coats and additives. Always confirm coverage and mixing rules from the manufacturer before ordering materials.
Accurate quantities reduce waste, delays, and costly reorders today.
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.