Tonnage Calculator for Gravel, Stone, Sand, and Base Material

Estimate material weight from project dimensions, depth, and density. This tonnage calculator converts area and thickness into cubic feet, cubic yards, pounds, and U.S. tons so you can plan gravel, crushed stone, road base, sand, fill, and similar bulk materials with fewer ordering mistakes.

Updated June 2026 Free, No Signup Required Sources Cited No Data Stored or Transmitted Last Reviewed: June 26, 2026

Calculate Material Tonnage

Project Shape

ft
Enter the project length in feet.
ft
Enter the project width in feet.

Depth and Material

in
Most decorative stone is 2 to 3 inches. Many base layers are 4 to 8 inches.
Material presets load a planning density in lb/ft³.
lb/ft³
Use supplier density if available. This directly controls the tonnage result.
$
Optional. Leave blank if you only need quantity.

How This Calculator Works

The calculator first finds project area from the shape you choose, then multiplies that area by depth to get volume. After that, it converts volume into cubic yards and applies bulk density to estimate pounds and U.S. short tons.

In U.S. construction estimating, one cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet, and one short ton equals 2,000 pounds. That means the core formula is simple: tons = cubic yards × 27 × density in lb/ft³ ÷ 2000.

  • Rectangle area = length × width
  • Circle area = \( \pi r^2 \)
  • Triangle area = 0.5 × base × height
  • Volume = area × depth in feet
  • Tonnage = weight in pounds ÷ 2,000

Material Density Reference

Tonnage estimates depend on bulk density, not just volume. Supplier values are always better than generic numbers, but the lookup table below works well for planning and bid-stage estimating.

Material Typical Density (lb/ft³) Approx. Tons per Cubic Yard Planning Notes
Pea Gravel 100 1.35 Good for drainage and decorative surfacing.
Gravel 105 1.42 Common planning value for mixed gravel products.
Sand 106 1.43 Moisture can shift delivered weight noticeably.
Road Base 120 1.62 Compaction and fines content matter.
Fill Dirt 95 1.28 Varies widely by moisture and soil type.
Crushed Stone 145 1.96 Heavy planning value often used for angular aggregate.
Rip Rap 140 1.89 Void space and rock size can change field yield.

If you also need volume-focused estimates, use the gravel calculator, crushed stone calculator, or road base calculator for more material-specific planning.

Why Tonnage Matters on Site

Suppliers often sell aggregate by the ton, while field measurements are usually taken in feet and inches. That mismatch is where ordering errors happen, especially on driveways, trenches, subbase layers, and drainage zones.

A volume-only estimate may look correct and still miss the delivered weight if the material is denser, wetter, or more compactable than expected. Tonnage is what affects haul planning, truck count, invoice totals, and equipment staging.

For driveway work, trench backfill, and base preparation, related tools such as the base material calculator, backfill calculator, and drain rock calculator can help you compare alternate materials and layer thicknesses.

Sample Calculation Scenarios

Driveway Base Scenario

Area: 24 ft × 12 ft

Depth: 4 in

Material: Road base at 120 lb/ft³

Waste: 8%

Area = 288 ft², volume = 96 ft³, volume = 3.56 yd³, base tonnage = 5.76 tons, adjusted tonnage = 6.22 tons.

This is the kind of job where a rounded order of 6.25 tons may be more practical than ordering exactly 6.22 tons, depending on supplier increments and grading conditions.

Decorative Stone Bed

Area: Circle, 16 ft diameter

Depth: 3 in

Material: Pea gravel at 100 lb/ft³

Waste: 5%

Area = 201.06 ft², volume = 50.27 ft³, volume = 1.86 yd³, base tonnage = 2.51 tons, adjusted tonnage = 2.64 tons.

Decorative work often needs a little extra because irregular edges and planting cutouts rarely match a perfect circle in the field.

Triangular Fill Area

Area: Triangle, 18 ft base × 10 ft height

Depth: 6 in

Material: Fill dirt at 95 lb/ft³

Waste: 10%

Area = 90 ft², volume = 45 ft³, volume = 1.67 yd³, base tonnage = 2.14 tons, adjusted tonnage = 2.35 tons.

On fill work, moisture and compaction often shift the delivered quantity more than the raw geometry does, so field verification matters.

Common Tonnage Estimating Mistakes

Using the wrong density

This is the biggest source of error. The same cubic yard count can produce very different tonnage results if you switch from decorative gravel to dense crushed stone or wet sand.

Mixing loose and compacted quantities

Some suppliers quote loose tons, while plans may call for a compacted finished depth. If the spec is for compacted placement, account for compaction before ordering.

Forgetting waste and grade variation

Edge feathering, subgrade irregularity, and cleanup all consume material. A zero-waste estimate is usually too tight for real field conditions.

Assuming every truck carries the same tonnage

Legal payload varies by truck type, route, moisture, and local hauling practice. Confirm capacity before translating tons into delivery loads.

Ordering and Project Context

Bulk aggregate is commonly sold by U.S. short ton in the United States. A short ton equals 2,000 pounds, which is different from a long ton at 2,240 pounds and a metric tonne at 2,204.62 pounds.

If you are building a gravel driveway or base section, material quantity is only one part of the plan. Cost, hauling, excavation, and section thickness matter too, so it can help to compare results with the gravel driveway cost calculator, excavation cost calculator, and fill dirt calculator.

Ordering tip

Ask your supplier for the material’s delivered bulk density, the minimum billable load, and the truck’s practical payload. Those three numbers usually matter more than a generic online density table.

Tonnage Calculator FAQs

How do I convert cubic yards to tons? +

Multiply cubic yards by 27 to convert to cubic feet, multiply by density in lb/ft³, then divide by 2,000 to convert pounds to U.S. short tons. If you already know tons per cubic yard for the material, you can multiply cubic yards directly by that value.

What is the difference between ton, tonne, and long ton? +

In U.S. construction, a ton usually means a short ton of 2,000 pounds. A metric tonne is 2,204.62 pounds, and a long ton is 2,240 pounds. This calculator uses the U.S. short ton because that is the standard purchasing unit for most American bulk material suppliers.

Can I use this calculator for topsoil or fill dirt? +

Yes, but density matters even more for soils than for stone. Moisture content, organic content, and degree of compaction can shift weight noticeably, so use actual supplier or geotechnical values whenever possible.

How much waste should I add for aggregate? +

For many residential and light site jobs, 5% to 10% is a reasonable planning range. Irregular site grades, poorly defined edges, and hand spreading can justify a larger allowance.

Why does my supplier quote a different tons-per-yard number? +

Supplier values may reflect actual quarry gradation, moisture, and local handling conditions. Generic tables are planning tools only, so a quarry or yard ticket value should take priority when you are placing an order.

Is this enough for engineered fill design? +

No. Engineered fill, bearing soils, retaining systems, and permitted structural work require project-specific design and verification. This tool is for estimating material quantity, not replacing geotechnical or structural design documents.

Sources and Method

Built by Muhammad Ramzan Babar, physics researcher (PhD candidate). Reviewed by site author.

Last reviewed: June 26, 2026

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.

Calculations run in your browser. No data is stored or transmitted.