Example Data Table
These examples show how pattern and edges change waste.
| Project | Size | Paver | Pattern | Total Waste | Order Qty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garden path | 10 m × 1.2 m | 200 mm × 100 mm | Running bond | 14% | 684 pavers |
| Patio pad | 5 m × 4 m | 300 mm × 300 mm | Basketweave | 18% | 262 pavers |
| Feature corner | 4 m × 3 m | 200 mm × 200 mm | Diagonal grid | 25% | 375 pavers |
Formula Used
- Area = Project Length × Project Width
- Module size = (Paver Length + Joint) × (Paver Width + Joint)
- Base pavers = Area ÷ Module size
- Total waste % = Pattern base % + Edge complexity % + Breakage %
- Total pavers needed = Base pavers × (1 + Total waste %)
- Pack-rounded order = Packs × Pack size (if provided)
How to Use This Calculator
- Measure your paved area length and width in one unit.
- Enter your paver face dimensions and joint width.
- Select the laying pattern closest to your design.
- Increase edge complexity for curves and tight borders.
- Add breakage for cut losses and future repairs.
- Optionally set pack size and unit price for budgeting.
- Click Calculate to view results above the form.
- Use Download CSV or Download PDF to save.
Waste Drivers by Pattern
Cutting waste rises when joints and angles create more offcuts. Straight running layouts often sit near 5% base waste, while basketweave trends around 7%. Modular blends commonly land near 10% because mixed sizes increase trimming. Diagonal and 45° herringbone can reach 12–15% because nearly every border requires a cut. The tool combines pattern, edge, and breakage into one waste percent for clearer ordering decisions.
Joint Width and Module Math
The calculator treats each paver plus its joint as one “module.” A 200×100 mm paver with a 3 mm joint becomes 203×103 mm. That change reduces pavers per square meter, especially with small units. If you widen joints from 3 mm to 6 mm, module area increases and the base count typically drops by about 1–3%. On a 10 m² area, that can shift orders by a handful of pavers.
Edge Complexity and Cutting Strategy
Edges decide how many partials you will cut and discard. Simple rectangles may only need a few straight rip cuts, so 2–5% edge allowance is usually enough. Curves, steps, drain openings, and tight corners push edge waste toward 10–20%. Use perimeter to sanity-check border cutting. Dry-laying a border row first helps confirm cut sizes before you commit to full field placement.
Pack Rounding and Budget Control
Suppliers sell by layer, bundle, or pallet. When you enter a pack size, the tool rounds the order up to full packs, then shows the extra pavers created by rounding. Add a unit price to translate that rounding into cost. For example, 18 extra pavers at 2.50 each adds 45.00 to the plan.
Quality Checks Before Ordering
Verify your measured length and width at multiple points, then confirm the paver face size from the product label, not the nominal name. If your project includes borders or soldier courses, account for them as separate areas. Keep 3–5% breakage for handling and future repairs, even on simple patios. For heavy cutting or angled borders, raise breakage to 6–8%.
FAQs
How do I choose an edge complexity percent?
Use 2–5% for straight rectangles, 6–10% for many corners or short runs, and 12–20% for curves, steps, tree rings, or drain cuts. When unsure, start at 8% and adjust after a dry layout check.
What if my paved area is not a perfect rectangle?
Break the space into rectangles, compute each separately, and add the results. For circles or curves, measure the bounding rectangle for base planning and increase edge complexity to reflect trimming around the shape.
Do I include border or soldier course pavers in the main area?
If borders use the same paver size and run inside the measured length and width, the main calculation may be enough. If borders change size or direction, calculate the border area separately for better accuracy.
Does joint width change cutting waste?
Joint width mostly changes the module size, which affects the base paver count. Waste percent is driven by pattern, edges, and breakage. Very wide joints can increase edge fitting variation, so consider a small edge bump.
Why does the order quantity increase when I enter pack size?
Many suppliers sell fixed pack quantities. The calculator rounds your required pavers up to the next full pack and shows the extra pieces created by rounding, helping you budget and avoid partial-pack ordering issues.
How many spare pavers should I keep after finishing?
Keep at least 2–3% of the installed count for future repairs and color matching. If your layout has heavy cuts or a special pattern, keep 4–5%. Store spares dry and shaded to preserve finish consistency.