Sand and Cement Calculator for Concrete Mix, Mortar, Bags and Cost
Estimate cement bags, sand quantity, dry mix volume, water allowance, and material cost for slabs, footings, mortar beds, patching work, and general site mixing. This calculator is built for U.S. field estimating using 94 lb cement bags, common nominal mix ratios, and practical waste allowances for planning material orders.
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Rebar Weight Chart
US Standard Rebar Sizes (#2–#18) with weight per foot, diameter, and cross-sectional area.
View Chart →How to Use This Sand and Cement Calculator
Enter the project dimensions
Select a slab, trench, post-hole, or direct-volume method. The tool converts your dimensions into wet concrete or mortar volume for the estimate.
Choose the mix ratio
Pick a standard concrete or mortar proportion, or enter a custom ratio if your job uses a different field mix. The calculator then allocates the dry volume by ratio.
Review cement bags and sand quantity
Results show cement in 94 lb bags, sand in cubic feet, cubic yards, and estimated tons, plus water allowance and waste-adjusted totals.
Check estimated cost
Add local bag and sand pricing to compare purchase scenarios. You can also include delivery and crew-rate inputs for basic job planning.
Field Reference Values for Sand and Cement Estimating
These planning values are commonly used when estimating nominal mixes in the field. They help explain the calculations shown in the tool and keep takeoff assumptions visible instead of hidden.
| Reference Item | Value | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 cubic yard | 27 cubic feet | Standard U.S. conversion for concrete quantity takeoff |
| 1 cement bag | 94 lb, approximately 1 cubic foot | Common U.S. field estimating convention for Portland cement |
| Dry-volume factor | 1.52 to 1.57, often 1.54 | Used to estimate dry ingredients from wet concrete volume |
| Mortar planning factor | About 1.33 | Often used for simpler cement-sand calculations |
| Sand density for estimating | 100 to 110 lb/cu ft | Converts volume to approximate tonnage for ordering |
| Standard slab depth | 4 to 6 inches for many residential flatwork jobs | Useful starting point for patios, walks, and pads |
If you already know your full concrete volume, use our concrete volume calculator first. If you need to compare field batches with premix bags, check the concrete bag calculator.
What This Calculator Measures
A sand and cement calculator estimates the dry ingredients needed to produce a target wet volume of mortar, screed, or nominal concrete. The core idea is simple, wet volume comes from the form dimensions, then the dry-volume factor adjusts for voids and shrinkage in the loose ingredients.
After that, the dry volume is split by the selected mix ratio. In a 1:2:4 concrete mix, the total ratio is 7 parts, so cement gets 1/7 of the dry volume and sand gets 2/7, while the remaining 4/7 belongs to coarse aggregate.
For mortar and screed, the calculation uses only cement and sand. If you are comparing different field proportions, the concrete mix ratio calculator and the 1:2:4 concrete mix calculator can help you review those proportions separately.
Sample Calculations
🧱 Patio base concrete, 1:2:4 mix
Dimensions: 10 ft × 8 ft × 4 in
Wet volume: 26.67 cubic feet
Dry factor: 1.54
Dry volume becomes 41.07 cubic feet. In a 1:2:4 mix, cement is 1/7 of that volume, about 5.87 cubic feet, or about 5.87 bags using the 94 lb per cubic foot field convention. Sand is 2/7, about 11.73 cubic feet. If you need a full three-material estimate, compare with the concrete aggregate calculator.
🪣 Bedding mortar, 1:4 mix
Wet volume: 8 cubic feet
Dry factor: 1.33
Total parts: 5
That means roughly 2.13 cement bags by the U.S. bag-volume convention, before waste. For masonry or bedding work, also compare with the mortar calculator if you need wall or joint-specific estimating.
📏 Floor screed, 1:3 mix
Area: 250 sq ft
Depth: 1.5 in
Wet volume: 31.25 cubic feet
Using a 1.33 dry factor gives 41.56 cubic feet dry volume. Cement at 1/4 is 10.39 cubic feet and sand at 3/4 is 31.17 cubic feet before waste. If you are also checking finish thickness and water demand, see the water-cement ratio calculator.
Common Estimating Mistakes
⚠️ Using wet volume directly for ingredient ordering
If you skip the dry-volume factor, your cement and sand estimate will come out low. That usually leads to a partial batch at the end of the pour or an extra supplier trip.
⚠️ Mixing up bagged concrete with bagged cement
A 94 lb cement bag is not the same thing as a premixed concrete bag. If you are ordering premix instead of raw ingredients, use the concrete ready mix bags calculator instead.
⚠️ Applying one ratio to every project
A bedding mortar ratio, a nominal concrete ratio, and a screed ratio are not interchangeable. Match the ratio to the application and the project specification before ordering materials.
⚠️ Forgetting waste on hand-mixed jobs
Field mixing, small wheelbarrow batches, and uneven forms often create more loss than large organized pours. A standard 10% waste factor is often safer than trying to order exact theoretical quantities.
Ordering, Mixing, and Job Planning Notes
Small concrete and mortar jobs are often limited more by logistics than by the math. Bag handling, mixing speed, water control, and delivery access can all affect the final order quantity and the time needed to complete the work.
For larger pours, hand-mixing cement and sand may not be practical even if the quantity looks manageable on paper. If your estimate is approaching ready-mix territory, compare the result with the concrete yardage calculator and the concrete cubic yard calculator before committing to site mixing.
💡 Material handling note
Portland cement must stay dry from delivery through batching. Sand stockpiles also change moisture condition quickly, which changes the water needed to reach the same workability. The calculator gives planning values, not a laboratory mix design.
Sand and Cement Calculator FAQ
The exact number depends on the selected mix ratio and the dry-volume factor. One cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet, then the dry volume is increased, commonly to about 41.58 cubic feet when a 1.54 factor is used, and the cement share is taken from that total according to the ratio.
No. It is a common planning factor for nominal concrete estimates, but published estimating methods also show a range around 1.52 to 1.57. Mortar-style calculations may use a lower factor such as 1.33 depending on the method and the material combination.
Yes, for planning estimates. Choose a mortar-style ratio and enter the target volume. For masonry-specific quantity checks, compare results with the brick calculator or the concrete block calculator.
The main output emphasizes cement and sand, but concrete-mode calculations also account for aggregate ratio in the total mix proportion. That keeps the cement and sand shares accurate when using mixes such as 1:2:4 or 1:1.5:3.
Use it for planning and preliminary takeoff only. Structural work should follow the approved mix design, drawings, specifications, and code-required verification for the project.
Multiply area by thickness to get volume, then enter that into the calculator. If you want a separate volume check first, use the how to calculate concrete guide or the site’s dedicated volume tools.
Sources and Methodology
This tool uses standard estimating relationships for nominal concrete and mortar planning. Source references are listed so the assumptions are visible and can be checked against the project requirement.
- Civil Engineering Calculators, Cement Concrete Calculator, notes one cement bag = 0.035 m³, sand density = 1550 kg/m³, aggregate density = 1350 kg/m³, and shows wet-to-dry adjustment used in nominal concrete estimating.
- Omni Calculator, Cement Calculator, states that dry volume is commonly approximated by multiplying wet volume by a factor ranging from 1.52 to 1.57.
- Answers.com engineering reference, notes the U.S. convention that a 94-pound cement bag is approximately 1 cubic foot.
- Answers.com explanation of the 94 lb cement bag, explains the historical field relationship between a bag and roughly one cubic foot of Portland cement.
- Civil Engineering Calculators concrete-ratio table, lists nominal ratios such as 1:3:6, 1:2:4, 1:1.5:3, and 1:1:2 for planning reference.
Method used in this calculator: wet volume is calculated from the entered dimensions, dry volume is found using the chosen dry-volume factor, then the selected ratio splits that dry volume into cement, sand, and where applicable aggregate parts. Cement is converted to 94 lb bags for U.S. field estimating, sand is converted to cubic yards and approximate tons using the selected density, and costs are added from the optional price inputs.
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.
Privacy Note
This calculator runs in your browser for estimation purposes. No signup is required, and no project data is intentionally stored or transmitted by the tool itself.
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