Fire Pit Paver Ring Calculator

Build a cozy ring that looks professional. Enter diameters and paver sizes, then calculate fast. Save results as CSV or PDF for planning later.

Tip: use the course method for more realistic ring counts.

Calculator

Large screens use three columns. Smaller screens adapt automatically.
cm
Clear opening inside the ring.
cm
Radial thickness from inner edge to outside.
cm
Length measured along the ring direction.
cm
Width across the ring thickness.
mm
Spacing between pavers (sand/polymeric).
%
Typical 5–12% depending on cutting.
cm
Compacted gravel under the ring.
cm
Thin leveling layer.
Enter your local price per unit.
Rate for compacted base material.
Rate for bedding sand.
Results appear above this form after submit.

Formula used

Geometry

  • Outer radius: Rout = Rin + W
  • Ring area: A = π(Rout² − Rin²)
  • Outer diameter: Dout = 2Rout

Paver counts

  • Effective paver size includes joint gap.
  • Area method: N ≈ A / (Leff·Weff)
  • Course method sums ceil(Circumference / Leff) per course.
  • Waste: Nfinal = ceil(N·(1 + waste%))

Course method usually predicts higher counts near larger radii, which is safer for real builds.

How to use this calculator

  1. Choose your unit system (metric or imperial).
  2. Enter the inner diameter of your fire pit opening.
  3. Enter the ring width you want for the pavers.
  4. Enter paver length, width, and joint gap.
  5. Add a waste percent for cuts and breakage.
  6. Optionally enter base and sand depths for volumes.
  7. Press Calculate to see results above the form.
  8. Download CSV or PDF to keep the plan.

Example data table

Units Inner diameter Ring width Paver size Joint Waste Estimated pavers + waste
Metric 90 cm 30 cm 20 × 10 cm 3 mm 7% ~260 (typical)
Metric 100 cm 25 cm 20 × 10 cm 4 mm 8% ~250 (typical)
Imperial 36 in 12 in 8 × 4 in 0.125 in 10% ~300 (typical)

Example outputs vary by joint gap and chosen paver orientation.

Ring sizing and comfort clearance

Plan the opening so flames stay centered and safe. Many backyard fire bowls fit 80–100 cm openings. Add 10–15 cm clearance from any steel liner to the first paver edge. A ring width of 25–40 cm provides stable seating and a neat border. The calculator outputs outer diameter so you can confirm it fits your space and walkways.

Paver layout and joint control

Pavers rarely touch edge-to-edge in a durable ring. A 3 mm joint is 0.3 cm, so a 20 × 10 cm unit behaves like 20.3 × 10.3 cm for estimating coverage. This “effective size” reflects spacing for sand or polymeric jointing and improves count accuracy. Keep joints consistent to prevent wobble and uneven settling.

Area estimate versus course estimate

Two methods are included because rings create cuts. The area method works when you expect mixed orientation or many partial pieces. The course method is closer to circular reality: it divides the ring into concentric courses based on paver width plus joint. Example: with 30 cm ring width and ~10.3 cm course pitch, you get 3 courses, with the outer course needing the most pieces.

Waste allowance and spares

Waste covers cutting, breakage, and future repairs. Straight-edged pavers around a circle often need wedge cuts, especially on tighter radii. Use 5–8% for large rings and gentle curves, 8–12% for most builds, and up to 15% when the inner diameter is small or the pavers are brittle. Saving a few extras helps match color and batch later.

Base, bedding, and cost planning

Material volumes depend on ring area and depth. For an inner diameter of 90 cm and ring width of 30 cm, ring area is about 1.13 m². With a 10 cm compacted base, you need roughly 0.113 m³ of base; a 3 cm bedding layer needs about 0.034 m³ of sand. Enter local rates to turn quantities into a quick budget.

FAQs

1) What inner diameter should I enter?

Measure the clear opening you want inside the paver ring. If you use a metal liner, measure its outside diameter and add 10–15 cm (or 4–6 in) for safe clearance.

2) Which method should I trust, area or course?

Use the course method for circular rings because it follows circumferences by course. Use the area method when you expect many cuts, mixed orientation, or an irregular ring shape.

3) What joint gap is typical for pavers?

Common joints are 2–4 mm for tight patterns, or 1/8 in for many pavers. Choose a gap that matches your jointing material and your ability to keep spacing consistent.

4) How do I choose a waste percentage?

Start with 7–10% for most projects. Increase toward 12–15% for tight curves, small inner diameters, or when you must cut many wedges and keep color matching.

5) Do I need base and sand for a fire pit ring?

For a durable ring, a compacted base plus a thin bedding layer helps leveling and drainage. If the ring sits on an existing slab, you can set base and sand depths to zero.

6) Can I mix paver sizes or patterns?

Yes. Enter the dominant paver size for a baseline estimate, then plan extras for transitions and cuts. For complex patterns, increase waste and consider using the area estimate as a cross-check.

Recent calculations

No saved results yet. Run a calculation to build history.

Related Calculators

Deck perimeter calculatorDeck board count calculatorDeck board length calculatorDeck joist count calculatorDeck beam sizing calculatorDeck post count calculatorDeck footing depth calculatorGravel base volume calculatorSand bed volume calculatorDeck stair stringer calculator

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.