Radius Curve Pavers Calculator

Plan curved paving with confident quantities today. Adjust inner radius, path width, and segment angle. Choose paver dimensions, include joints, and reduce surprises onsite.

Calculator Inputs
Use meters for radii and width. Pavers and joints use millimeters.
Angle range: 0–360 degrees.
Choose your most reliable field measurement.
Measured to the inner edge of the paved band.
Used to compute outer radius automatically.
Measured to the outer edge of the paved band.
Example: 90 for a quarter turn.
Nominal length of one paver.
Nominal width of one paver.
Average joint gap you plan to maintain.
Typical planning range: 5–12%.
Reset
Example Data Table
These sample values show typical curved garden path planning.
Inner radius (m) Path width (m) Angle (deg) Paver (mm) Joint (mm) Waste (%) Estimated pavers
1.500.5060200×1003747
2.000.6090200×10037111
3.000.80120225×112410236
Formula Used
The paved band is treated as a ring sector.
  • Outer radius: Rout = Rin + Width (when using width mode).
  • Ring sector area: A = (θ / 360) × π × (Rout2 − Rin2).
  • Effective module area: Am = ((L + J)/1000) × ((W + J)/1000).
  • Base pavers: Nbase = A / Am.
  • Include waste: N = Nbase × (1 + Waste%/100), rounded up.
  • Arc lengths: s = (θ / 360) × 2πR for inner and outer edges.
How to Use This Calculator
  1. Measure the inner radius to the inside edge of the curve.
  2. Choose Inner radius + path width or Inner radius + outer radius.
  3. Enter the central angle of the curve segment in degrees.
  4. Enter your paver length, paver width, and joint width.
  5. Set a waste factor for cuts, breakage, and pattern loss.
  6. Press Calculate to see results above the form.
  7. Use the download buttons to export your results as CSV or PDF.
Tip: Tight curves and herringbone patterns often need more waste.

Purpose of Curved Paver Takeoff

Curved paths behave differently than straight runs because the inner edge shortens while the outer edge stretches. This calculator treats the paved band as a ring sector, so quantities scale with radius, width, and turning angle. Using geometry avoids under-ordering on broad curves and over-ordering on tight arcs. It also outputs arc lengths so you can plan edge restraints and edging cuts. If you are matching an existing curve, keep units consistent and recheck measurements before ordering.

Measuring Radius and Angle Reliably

Mark the curve center with a stake, then measure to the inner edge at several points to confirm a consistent radius. If the curve is part of a circle, measure the central angle using layout strings or chord points. When field conditions prevent measuring width, capture both inner and outer radii and let the tool compute the band width.

Joint Allowance and Effective Coverage

Pavers rarely touch edge to edge, so the calculator expands each unit by the planned joint width. The effective module area equals (length plus joint) multiplied by (width plus joint), converted to square meters. This approach matches real coverage for consistent joints and helps prevent small shortages caused by spacing.

Waste Planning for Cuts and Patterns

Curves typically require trimming along one edge, and patterned layouts can increase offcuts. A practical waste factor for simple running bond is often 5–8%, while tighter radii or herringbone may push 10–15%. The cut estimate shown is a heuristic to flag curves that may need extra full units for clean edges. For permeable joints, consider extra jointing aggregate and bedding adjustments.

Quality Checks Before Ordering

Review the computed curve area, the inner and outer arc lengths, and the rounded paver count. If your supplier sells by pallet, convert the total into pallets and add one partial pack for repairs. For projects with multiple arcs, repeat calculations per segment and sum the rounded totals to preserve contingency. Verify lead times.

FAQs

How do I choose between width mode and outer radius mode?

Use width mode when you know the paved band width. Use outer radius mode when you can measure both edges of the curve accurately in the field.

What angle should I enter for a gentle bend?

Enter the turn angle of the segment you are paving. A quarter circle is 90 degrees, a half circle is 180 degrees, and a full circle is 360 degrees.

Does joint width really change the paver count?

Yes. Wider joints reduce pavers per square meter because each paver occupies more effective area. Small joint changes can matter on larger curved areas.

What waste factor is reasonable for curved edging?

For simple layouts, start at 7%. Increase to 10–15% for tight radii, complex patterns, or when you expect more trimming and breakage.

Can I use this for mixed paver sizes?

Use one size at a time for the most reliable estimate. If you mix sizes, run separate calculations per size and combine counts according to your pattern plan.

Why is there an estimated cut pavers value?

It is a planning indicator based on arc length versus module size. Actual cuts depend on pattern, starting line, and how you finish the inner and outer edges.

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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.