Plan thresholds for garden sheds and patio entries. Add clearances, end caps, and seam spacing. Download totals as CSV or PDF for installers now.
| Scenario | Inputs (summary) | Output (summary) |
|---|---|---|
| Shed door | Opening 36 in, clearances 0.125/0.125, end caps 0.25 each, 1 piece, waste 7% | Cut each ≈ 36.75 in; total with waste ≈ 39.32 in |
| Wide patio entry | Opening 72 in, 2 pieces, seam gap 0.06, end caps 0.25, waste 10% | Cut each ≈ 36.78 in; total with waste ≈ 80.99 in |
| Mitered ends | Slab 35.75 in, miter allowance 0.5 each end, waste 8% | Cut each ≈ 37.13 in; total with waste ≈ 40.11 in |
Outdoor doorways often vary because slabs swell, jambs shift, and flooring transitions are uneven. Measure at the left, center, and right, then use the largest value to avoid short cuts. Record your selected unit, because mixing inches and millimeters creates costly errors. When working on garden sheds, potting rooms, or patio entries, also note weather exposure, since moisture can change the final fit after installation.
Clearance allowances cover expansion gaps and minor framing irregularities. End-cap allowance adds length for caps, wrapped trims, or slightly overhanging profiles. If the threshold has decorative returns or mitered ends, the miter allowance accounts for the extra material needed to form clean corners without undercutting. These options let you build a realistic cut plan before you open packaging or cut metal and hardwood stock.
Wide openings sometimes require joined pieces when stock lengths are limited. The seam gap setting helps you plan movement space between sections, especially across long spans exposed to sun. This calculator adds seam gaps to the total run and distributes that run across the selected number of pieces, producing a practical cut length for each segment while keeping the full doorway coverage intact.
A waste factor compensates for trimming, test fitting, and small mistakes. Typical values range from 5% to 12%, but increase it for mitered work or rough openings. The stock length suggestion helps you choose common retail lengths that exceed your required cut length, reducing the risk of coming up short and limiting unnecessary offcuts on site.
CSV and PDF exports capture inputs and outputs for repeatable work. Keep them with your materials list to match thresholds to door locations, sealant choices, and fastener patterns. This documentation supports consistent results across multiple doors, simplifies handoffs to installers, and makes it easier to re-order the same profile for future garden upgrades.
Use the opening when you want full coverage between jamb faces. Use the slab width when the threshold aligns to the door edge and the opening varies due to trim or casing.
Many installs use 1/8 inch per side for minor movement and fitting. Outdoor projects may need slightly more if wood expands or the floor transition is irregular.
Add it when your threshold has end caps, wrap trims, or you want a small overhang beyond the jamb line. If ends are flush, set it to zero.
Seam gaps increase the total run length for a multi-piece threshold. The calculator then divides the run across pieces, giving a cut length that preserves doorway coverage with planned separation.
Mitered ends and returns consume extra material for the angled cut and clean corner. The allowance helps prevent a short final piece after trimming to the exact fit.
Use 5% for simple square cuts and consistent openings. Use 8–12% for multiple doors, miters, or unfamiliar materials. Increase it when access and re-cuts are difficult.
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.