Match irrigation minutes to plant demand accurately now. Convert flow and area into application depth. Reduce waste, prevent runoff, and keep roots thriving daily.
Tip: Use cycle & soak when the soil can’t absorb water quickly.
| Area | Flow | Target depth | Efficiency | Estimated runtime | Total water used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 120 m² | 18 L/min | 8 mm | 85% | 62.75 min | 1129.50 L |
| 500 ft² | 6 GPM | 0.30 inch | 80% | 52.06 min | 312.36 gal |
Overwatering wastes water, leaches nutrients, and promotes shallow roots. Underwatering stresses plants and reduces growth. A runtime plan links a known flow to a known area so each zone receives a measurable depth, instead of guessing minutes by habit. This improves uniformity between beds, simplifies maintenance, and supports consistent crop quality across the season with less effort.
Precipitation rate is the application depth delivered per hour. In practice, you should verify it: collect water in several straight-sided containers across the zone, run the system for a set time, and average the measured depth. Use that value to calibrate the calculator and catch clogged emitters or pressure problems. If pressure varies, add regulation or split long laterals to stabilize output.
Target depth reflects how much water you want stored in the root zone per event. Light, frequent irrigations suit seedlings and shallow-rooted greens, while deeper events support shrubs and trees. Many garden beds do well with 5–15 mm per event, adjusted for temperature and wind. Pair depth with soil type: sandy soils accept water quickly but hold less, while clay soils store more but infiltrate slowly.
Efficiency adjusts for wind drift, runoff, and distribution non-uniformity. If a zone applies 8 mm effectively at 80% efficiency, it must deliver 10 mm gross. Cycle-and-soak reduces runoff by splitting runtime into shorter cycles with pauses that allow infiltration, improving water placement on slopes and tight soils. For drip, cycle-and-soak also helps when soil crusting limits intake near emitters.
Save outputs as CSV or PDF to track seasonal changes. Increase runtime during hot, windy periods and reduce it after rain or cool spells. When plants show stress, compare total applied depth and precipitation rate before changing hardware. Review records monthly, clean filters, and recheck flow after repairs. Consistent notes help you tune each zone for healthier beds and better water efficiency.
Add emitter outputs for the zone, or use a bucket test: time how long it takes to fill a known volume, then convert to L/min or GPM.
Use 90–95% for well-designed drip, 75–85% for typical sprinklers, and lower values for windy sites or uneven coverage. Field catch-cans give the best estimate.
Because 1 liter spread over 1 m² equals 1 mm of depth. That makes precipitation rate and runtime calculations direct and easy to audit.
Enable it when you see runoff, puddling, or water moving off the target area. Shorter cycles with soak breaks improve infiltration on clay soils and slopes.
Yes. Different nozzles change flow and distribution, which changes precipitation rate. Recalculate after nozzle, pressure, or spacing changes, and confirm with a quick catch-cup test.
Not always. Deep watering helps, but only if water infiltrates without runoff. Use cycle and soak if needed, and match depth to root depth and soil storage.
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.