Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Area | Depth | Flow | Efficiency | Losses | Zones | Adjusted Water | Total Run Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vegetable bed drip | 20 m² | 8 mm | 20 L/min | 90% | 5% | 1 | 186.7 L | 9.3 min |
| Lawn sprinkler | 60 m² | 10 mm | 25 L/min | 75% | 8% | 3 | 864.0 L | 34.6 min |
| Mixed beds soaker | 35 m² | 6 mm | 15 L/min | 85% | 5% | 2 | 259.4 L | 17.3 min |
Formula Used
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your garden area and desired irrigation depth.
- Enter measured pump flow at the output point.
- Select a method, or enter your own efficiency.
- Add extra losses if your system has leaks or drift.
- Set zones to estimate time per watering section.
- Optional: add tank size and pump power for extras.
- Click Calculate to see results above the form.
Water volume from depth and area
Uniform watering starts with a clear volume target. This calculator converts irrigation depth into liters using a practical rule: one millimeter across one square meter equals one liter. Entering area and depth produces a base demand that matches soil recharge goals. Because gardens vary by season, you can compare scenarios quickly, then adjust depth for sandy beds, raised planters, shaded lawns, and container mixes in spring.
Measuring flow where it matters
Pump flow rate determines how fast that target can be delivered. Use a measured value taken at the hose end or manifold, not a nameplate rating. The tool supports liters per minute and gallons per minute, so you can work with local units confidently every time. When the flow changes with pressure, run a short bucket test and update the input to keep runtime estimates realistic.
Efficiency and losses that change runtime
Delivery efficiency and extra losses capture real-world performance. Drip systems typically waste less than sprinklers, while wind, overspray, filter flushing, and small leaks can add avoidable loss. The calculator increases required pumped volume when efficiency drops or losses rise, so you see the true runtime impact immediately for planning. Small upgrades—better nozzles, pressure regulation, leak checks, and timer tuning—often save more time than simply adding depth.
Zoning for practical schedules
Zoning turns one total runtime into an actionable schedule. If you run multiple beds on separate valves, set the zone count to estimate minutes per zone for equal areas and flow. This helps prevent overwatering a single section while others stay dry across the yard evenly. For uneven zones, run the calculator per zone and keep notes in the example table format for repeatable weekly planning.
Energy and operating cost insights
Energy planning matters when irrigation is frequent. If you enter pump power and your electricity rate, the calculator estimates kilowatt-hours and cost for each watering cycle. This supports budgeting and helps compare options like shorter cycles, higher efficiency, or lower-flow emitters. Tracking runtime alongside energy use also highlights wear: longer runtimes increase heat and maintenance needs, especially on small pumps during summer heat waves each season.
FAQs
Run the system at normal pressure, then time how long it takes to fill a known container. Convert volume to liters per minute or gallons per minute. Repeat twice and average, especially if multiple outlets or filters are connected.
Use the method preset if unsure. Drip and emitters often perform around 85–95%, soaker hoses near 80–90%, and sprinklers commonly 65–80%. Adjust downward if you see misting, wind drift, or uneven coverage.
Base liters reflect depth and area only. The adjusted value accounts for delivery efficiency and extra losses like overspray, leaks, and flushing. Lower efficiency or higher losses means more pumped water is needed to deliver the same root-zone depth.
Run the calculator separately for each zone using that zone’s area and flow. Save the results as your zone schedule. If flow is shared, measure each valve’s output or estimate by nozzle/emitter totals, then refine after field observation.
No. Runtime is driven by required liters and flow rate. Pump power is used only to estimate energy consumption and cost during the calculated runtime. If power changes flow through pressure, update the measured flow value.
Yes. Select ft² for area, inches for depth, and GPM for flow. The calculator converts everything internally and shows run times in minutes and hours for easy scheduling.