Sidewalk Calculator: Concrete Yardage, Bags & Cost

Enter your sidewalk length, width, and thickness to get the exact cubic yards to order, bag counts for hand-mixing, and an installed cost range. Calculations follow ACI 332-10 §10.4 thickness minimums and include a PROWAG 2023 §R302.2 width check for public walks.

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Sidewalk Dimensions
Leave blank to use national range $7–$17/sq ft

Thickness Requirements at a Glance

Choose your slab depth based on what the sidewalk section will carry. Applying the wrong thickness to a driveway crossing is one of the most common field mistakes (see Common Calculation Errors below).

Sidewalk Thickness by Use Case
Use Case Thickness Notes Source
Foot traffic only 4 in (100 mm) Minimum for standard residential walk ACI 332-10 §10.4
Driveway crossing / apron 5 in (125 mm) Handles passenger vehicles; required at apron transitions Michigan Concrete Assoc.
Heavy vehicle / delivery zone 6 in (150 mm) Service trucks, refuse vehicles, fire apparatus paths Michigan Concrete Assoc.
Light residential path (low-load) 3.5 in Stepping stone or garden path only; not recommended for front walks General practice

Bag Yield Reference

These yields come from Quikrete and Sakrete published data. Hand-mixing more than 40–50 bags for a single pour is generally impractical; beyond that threshold, ready-mix delivery saves time and improves concrete consistency.

Bag Yield by Size
Bag Size Yield (cu ft) Bags per CY (no waste) Bags per CY (10% waste)
80 lb 0.60 cu ft 45 bags ~50 bags
60 lb 0.45 cu ft 60 bags ~66 bags
40 lb 0.30 cu ft 90 bags ~99 bags

How the Volume Calculation Works

Concrete volume is a straightforward rectangular solid: length times width times thickness. The unit conversion that trips people up is the final step from cubic feet to cubic yards, since there are 27 cubic feet in one cubic yard (3 ft × 3 ft × 3 ft = 27 ft³), not 9 or 3.

The formula this calculator uses:

  1. Convert thickness from inches to feet: T(ft) = T(in) ÷ 12
  2. Calculate volume in cubic feet: V(ft³) = Length × Width × T(ft)
  3. Convert to cubic yards: V(yd³) = V(ft³) ÷ 27
  4. Apply waste factor: Order = V(yd³) × (1 + waste%)
  5. Round up to nearest ¼ CY for ready-mix truck ordering

For bag counts, the calculator divides total cubic feet needed (including waste) by the published bag yield: 0.60 cu ft per 80 lb bag, 0.45 cu ft per 60 lb bag, and 0.30 cu ft per 40 lb bag, per Quikrete published specifications.

Width Standards for Public Walks

If you are building or altering a sidewalk that receives any federal funding (FHWA, CDBG, or similar programs), PROWAG 2023 §R302.2 requires a minimum continuous clear pedestrian access route width of 48 inches (4 ft). The cross slope across the walk must not exceed 2% (1:50 ratio) per §R302.5. These requirements took effect August 8, 2023.

Private residential walks to a front entrance are typically 3 to 4 ft wide per Quikrete project guidance. Choosing 4 ft (48 in) for a private walk costs very little extra concrete and provides full accessibility, which is worth considering for resale and visitor usability.

Sample Calculations

Scenario A — Standard Residential Front Walk

Dimensions: 40 ft × 4 ft × 4 inches thick

Thickness in feet4 ÷ 12 = 0.333 ft
Volume (cubic feet)40 × 4 × 0.333 = 53.33 ft³
Volume (cubic yards)53.33 ÷ 27 = 1.975 CY
With 10% waste, round up1.975 × 1.10 = 2.17 → order 2.25 CY
80 lb bags (with waste)2.17 × 27 ÷ 0.60 = 98 bags
Square footage40 × 4 = 160 sq ft
Installed cost range$1,120 – $2,720 ($7–$17/sq ft)

Scenario B — Sidewalk with Driveway Crossing

Main run: 60 ft × 4 ft × 4 in; Driveway crossing: 12 ft × 4 ft × 5 in

Main run volume60 × 4 × (4÷12) = 80.0 ft³
Crossing volume12 × 4 × (5÷12) = 20.0 ft³
Combined volume100.0 ft³ = 3.70 CY
With 10% waste3.70 × 1.10 = 4.07 → order 4.25 CY
NoteOrdering one uniform volume at 4-inch depth (3.33 CY) would under-design the crossing by 0.37 CY — enough to cause a thin, weak slab under vehicle load.

Common Calculation Mistakes to Avoid

1. Entering thickness in inches without converting to feet

Typing "4" for thickness and treating it as feet inflates your volume by 12×. A 40 ft × 4 ft sidewalk at 4 feet thick calculates to 640 cubic feet instead of the correct 53 cubic feet. Always divide inch values by 12 before multiplying dimensions.

2. Ordering exactly the calculated volume

Ready-mix trucks cannot pour a partial yard cleanly at the end of a run. Uneven subgrade also consumes more concrete than the flat-plane formula predicts. Add 5–10% waste and round up to the nearest quarter-yard before calling the plant.

3. Dividing cubic feet by 9 instead of 27

Because 3 feet = 1 yard, people often divide by 3 twice (or once by 9). One cubic yard is 3 ft × 3 ft × 3 ft = 27 cubic feet. Dividing 53.33 by 9 gives 5.9 CY -- nearly three times the correct answer.

4. Using 4-inch thickness at driveway crossings

A sidewalk running across a driveway apron must be at least 5 inches thick to handle vehicle weight, per Michigan Concrete Association guidelines. Pouring the whole run at 4 inches installs an under-designed crossing that can crack under the first vehicle pass.

5. Ignoring subgrade compaction

Soft or recently disturbed soil can drop 0.5–1 inch over the project area after forms are set. This increases concrete depth and volume consumed beyond what the formula predicts. Compact and proof-roll the subgrade before forming to avoid a short pour.

Planning and Code Considerations

Freeze-Thaw and Cold Climates

In USDA hardiness zones 1–6 and northern US states, exterior concrete exposed to freeze-thaw cycles and deicing salts requires air entrainment of 6% ± 1.5% for a ¾-inch maximum aggregate size, a maximum water-to-cement ratio of 0.45, and a minimum compressive strength of 4,500 psi per ACI 332-10 requirements. Standard 80 lb bags deliver 4,000 psi; specify a higher-strength ready-mix if your climate warrants it.

Ready-Mix vs. Bagged Concrete

For projects under 1 CY (about 45 bags of 80 lb mix), bagged concrete is feasible with a rented mixer. From 1 to 2 CY, the cost difference narrows. Above 2 CY (roughly 90 bags), ready-mix delivery costs less per yard, reduces labor significantly, and produces more consistent slump and air content than sequential bag mixing. Ready-mix trucks require a discharge path and typically deliver within 90 minutes of water addition per ASTM C94/C94M-25a.

Permits

Most US municipalities require a permit for any new concrete sidewalk that connects to or runs adjacent to a public right-of-way. Check your local building department before forming. Permitted work may also require inspection before the pour. This calculator produces estimates for material planning; it does not substitute for permit drawings or engineering review.

For cost estimation broken down by line item, see the concrete cost calculator or the concrete cost per square foot calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

How thick should a concrete sidewalk be? +

4 inches (100 mm) is the minimum for foot-traffic-only walks, per ACI 332-10 §10.4. Sections crossing a driveway need 5 inches minimum. Heavy vehicle zones require 6 inches. Going thinner than 4 inches is not recommended for any permanent exterior walk.

How many cubic yards do I need for a 100 sq ft sidewalk at 4 inches? +

100 sq ft × (4 ÷ 12 ft) = 33.33 cu ft ÷ 27 = 1.23 CY. Add 10% waste: 1.35 CY. Order 1.5 CY (round up to nearest ¼ yard).

What is the minimum width for a public sidewalk? +

PROWAG 2023 §R302.2 sets a minimum continuous clear width of 48 inches (4 ft) for any pedestrian access route on a federally funded project. Private residential walks have no federal minimum but 3–4 ft is standard practice. Choosing at least 48 inches provides full accessibility for mobility devices.

How much does a concrete sidewalk cost in 2025? +

National average installed cost is $7–$17 per square foot, with most residential projects landing between $1,400 and $3,400 total, per HomeGuide 2025 data. Stamped or decorative concrete runs $8–$20 per square foot per Angi data updated November 2025. Labor rates vary significantly by region.

Can I hand-mix a full cubic yard of concrete in bags? +

Technically yes, but it takes about 45 bags of 80 lb mix per cubic yard. Mixing more than 40–50 bags by hand or with a small drum mixer is physically demanding and risks inconsistent water-to-cement ratios between batches, which affects strength. For 1 CY or more, ready-mix delivery is worth the added cost.

What compressive strength do I need for an outdoor sidewalk? +

Standard 4,000 psi concrete (available in 80 lb bags) works for most residential sidewalks in mild climates. In freeze-thaw regions, specify 4,500 psi minimum with air entrainment and a maximum water-to-cement ratio of 0.45 per ACI 332-10 requirements. Avoid applying deicers during the first winter after the pour.

Why does this calculator add a waste factor? +

Sidewalk calculations assume a perfectly flat, uniformly thick slab. Real conditions -- uneven subgrade, settlement before the pour, minor form misalignment -- always consume more concrete than the formula predicts. A 5–10% overage prevents running short mid-pour, which forces a cold joint and weakens the slab. Quikrete's own calculator applies the same buffer.

Sources and Methodology

All numerical values in this calculator come from the following primary sources. Section numbers are cited where applicable.

  • ACI 332-10, §10.4 — Code Requirements for Residential Concrete
    Minimum 4-inch (100 mm) slab-on-ground thickness for residential concrete including sidewalks and walks. ACI 332-10 preview (Accuris)
  • PROWAG 2023 Final Rule, §R302.2 — Pedestrian Access Route Width
    48-inch minimum continuous clear width. Published 88 Fed. Reg. 151, effective August 8, 2023. Federal Register PDF, US Access Board
  • PROWAG 2023, §R302.5 — Maximum Cross Slope
    2% (1:50) maximum transverse slope for pedestrian access routes. Access Board Technical Requirements
  • Michigan Concrete Association — Driveway and Sidewalk Guidelines
    5-inch minimum at driveway crossings; 6-inch for heavy vehicle access. Michigan Concrete Association PDF
  • Quikrete — Concrete Sidewalks & Small Slabs Project Guide
    4-inch minimum thickness; 5–6 inches at driveway aprons; private walk widths 3–4 ft. Quikrete Project PDF
  • Quikrete — Bag yield: 0.60 cu ft per 80 lb bag
    Quikrete Calculator; cross-verified at VolumeConcrete.com
  • ASTM C94/C94M-25a — Standard Specification for Ready-Mixed Concrete
    90-minute maximum discharge window from water addition; slump, air content, and strength requirements. ASTM C94 specification reference
  • HomeGuide — Concrete Sidewalk Cost (2025)
    $7–$17 per sq ft installed; $1,400–$3,400 typical project range. HomeGuide 2025
  • Angi — Concrete Walkway Cost (Updated November 2025)
    $6–$12/sq ft standard; $8–$20/sq ft stamped or decorative. Angi cost guide

Engineering Disclaimer

This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes. For permitted structural work, foundations, multi-story construction, retaining walls over 4 feet, and commercial projects, calculations must be verified by a licensed structural engineer per IBC 2024 §1604. ConcreteCalculate.com is not liable for structural decisions made from these estimates.

Built by Muhammad Ramzan Babar, physics researcher (PhD candidate). Last reviewed: May 2026.

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