Plan clean paver borders with accurate restraint lengths for every layout today. See pieces, spikes, and totals fast; adjust waste, curves, corners, and openings.
| Scenario | Perimeter | Waste | Piece length | Pieces | Spikes | Material total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small patio rectangle | 18.0 m | 5% | 2.0 m | 10 | 40 | 85.00 |
| Curved garden path | 40.0 m | 8% | 2.0 m | 22 | 88 | 187.00 |
| Round firepit border | 12.6 m | 6% | 2.0 m | 7 | 28 | 59.50 |
Material total reflects piece pricing only in this example.
Edge restraint is the lateral “frame” that keeps pavers from creeping outward under foot traffic, wheel loads, and seasonal soil movement. A restrained border reduces joint widening and helps sand stay locked in place, especially along long straight runs.
Measure straight segments with a tape and curves with a measuring wheel or flexible line. For rectangles, perimeter equals 2(L+W). Circles use pi times diameter. Ovals can be approximated using a semi-axis formula, which is accurate enough for garden work.
Openings are places where edging is not installed: gates, drain channels, steps, or an intentional “soft edge” into turf. Subtract the opening length only if the paver edge truly remains unrestrained across that gap. If you bridge the gap with another rigid element, keep it included.
Corners often need overlaps, miters, or stakes set closer together. A small allowance per corner (for example, 0.05 m or 2 in) prevents shortfalls caused by trimming and joining. Complex patios with many turns should use a larger allowance and a higher waste factor.
Curves consume more edging because segments are cut shorter and overlapped to follow the radius. Many installers add 5% for gentle curves and 10% to 15% for tight curves. This calculator includes a curve extra percentage so your estimate matches real field behavior.
Waste covers offcuts, damaged pieces, and layout changes. Simple rectangles often land in the 3% to 6% range. Garden paths with frequent bends can justify 8% to 12%. If you are matching an existing border or working around plant beds, consider the upper end.
Anchors transfer loads into the base and resist frost heave and soil pressure. A common starting point is four spikes per section, then increase density on curves, slopes, or softer soils. If spikes are sold separately, budgeting them avoids surprise add-ons at checkout.
You can price edging by piece or by unit length. The calculator converts perimeter into total restraint length with allowances, then rounds up to whole pieces. Add spike cost, optional labor per meter or foot, and tax to get a total you can compare across suppliers.
Yes, subtract only if no rigid edging spans that gap. If a threshold, curb, or concrete edge restrains the pavers there, keep the length included so your total remains accurate.
Use 3% to 6% for simple rectangles. For curving paths or many corners, 8% to 12% is safer. Tight radii and many cuts justify the higher end.
Four spikes per section is a common baseline. Increase on curves, slopes, or soft soils where movement is more likely. Reduce only if your product spec recommends fewer anchors.
Edging is purchased in whole sections. Rounding up prevents under-ordering and ensures you have enough length after cuts, overlaps, and minor layout changes.
Use it whenever the border includes arcs or winding runs. Gentle curves often need 5%. Tight curves may need 10% to 15% due to overlaps and shorter cuts.
Yes. Select “Price per unit length” when the product is sold by the meter or foot. The calculator uses the total restraint length with allowances for the cost.
Enter your own labor scope. If your rate is edging-only, keep it focused on installation time. If you want full project labor, use a higher per-length value that includes prep.
Measure carefully, budget wisely, and enjoy cleaner paving edges.
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.