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LouisianaConcrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & Cost

Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and LA-accurate ready-mix costs for any Louisiana project — driveways, elevated flood zone slabs, New Orleans metro foundations, coastal pads, garage floors, sidewalks & more.

$145
Avg LA Ready-Mix (per Cu Yd)
3,500
Min PSI — LA Exterior Flatwork
0 in.
Frost Depth — Subtropical Climate
ACI 305
Hot Weather — Required Jun–Sep
🚗 Driveway 🌊 Elevated / Flood Zone Slab 🛣 Patio / Garage Slab 🏗 Foundation / Pier & Beam 🪨 Footings 🌊 Coastal / Saltwater Pad
The Louisiana Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders estimate cubic yards, bag count, and ready-mix costs across the Pelican State. LA pricing typically runs $128–$175/yd — below the national average due to no freeze-thaw premium requirements, but coastal and remote areas carry delivery surcharges. Louisiana's subtropical climate means zero frost depth, no air entrainment requirement, and shallower footings — but introduces unique challenges: expansive clay soils, extreme heat and humidity, hurricane flood zone requirements, and coastal saltwater exposure. ACI 305 hot-weather procedures apply from June through September statewide. South Louisiana coastal areas require Type V sulfate-resistant cement and epoxy-coated rebar due to aggressive soil chemistry. Enter your dimensions below, or explore more tools at Concrete Toolkit.

Louisiana Concrete Calculator

🌶 LA-Accurate Pricing · Louisiana Building Code · Pelican State
Louisiana Concrete Calculator
Cubic yards, bags needed & LA ready-mix cost — instant results
🚗 Driveway 🌊 Flood Zone Slab 🛣 Patio / Slab 🏗 Foundation 🪨 Footings

Enter your project dimensions to calculate volume, bags needed, and estimated LA material cost.

Residential driveway: 4 in. min, 3,500 PSI standard, vapor barrier required. Louisiana State Licensing Board contractor required for most projects over $75,000. Local parish permit required.

Sidewalk 4 in · Driveway 4-5 in · Garage 4 in · Foundation 8-10 in · Footing 10-12 in

Cubic Yards Required
Including waste factor

📋 Project Summary

    💵 LA Cost Estimate

      📐 Louisiana Driveway Cross-Section — LA Hot-Climate Standard Layers

      Broom / Brushed Finish — LA Standard
      Concrete — 4 in. Min (LA Driveway)
      3,500 PSI Min · No Air Entrainment Required · W/C Ratio 0.50 Max
      ⬛ No. 3 or No. 4 Rebar 18 in. O.C. — Required LA Expansive Clay Soils
      6 Mil Polyethylene Vapor Barrier — Critical in LA High-Humidity Climate
      🪨 4 in. Compacted Crushed Stone / Limestone Base
      Compacted Subgrade / Louisiana Native Soil — No Frost Depth Required
      27
      Cu ft per cubic yard
      45
      80 lb bags per cu yd
      $145
      Avg LA ready-mix / yd
      Concrete Slab Rebar Vapor Barrier Crushed Stone Base Subgrade

      Louisiana Concrete Calculator — What You Need to Know

      Louisiana's concrete environment is essentially the opposite of the northern states — no freeze-thaw cycles, no frost depth, no air entrainment requirement — but introduces a completely different set of challenges. The state's subtropical climate, high humidity, extreme summer heat, expansive clay soils, coastal saltwater exposure, and hurricane flood zone requirements make Louisiana concrete work uniquely demanding. 3,500 PSI is the standard minimum for exterior flatwork, while coastal projects and flood zone elevated slabs require 4,000–4,500 PSI with Type V sulfate-resistant cement and epoxy-coated or stainless rebar. Louisiana Building Code is based on the IBC with Louisiana amendments, administered by the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC). Most projects over $75,000 require a licensed contractor — verify at lslbc.louisiana.gov.

      🔵 Louisiana Minimum Concrete Specifications — Statewide

      All exterior LA flatwork (driveways, patios, sidewalks): 3,500 PSI min, 4 in. min thickness, W/C 0.50 max, vapor barrier required · Coastal / saltwater zones (south LA, New Orleans, Lafayette coast): 4,000-4,500 PSI, Type V sulfate-resistant cement, epoxy-coated rebar, 2 in. min cover · Flood zone elevated slabs (FEMA Zone AE / VE): 4,000 PSI min, meet FEMA BFE requirements, parish building permit mandatory · Expansive clay soils (Baton Rouge, central LA): rebar required, post-tension option recommended, 4 in. base min · All LA foundations: 12-18 in. footing depth min (no frost depth), soil bearing capacity verification required.

      🌊 Flood Zone and Elevated Slabs

      Louisiana has more FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA) than nearly any other state. New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, and Lake Charles all contain extensive AE and VE flood zones where elevated concrete construction is mandatory. Elevated slabs must meet the Base Flood Elevation (BFE) plus freeboard requirements of local parish flood ordinances. Concrete fill placed below BFE in enclosed areas must use flood-resistant materials rated to 4,000 PSI minimum and the structure must be properly vented per FEMA guidelines.

      🏕 LA Expansive Clay Soil Warning

      Much of Louisiana — particularly the Baton Rouge area, central Louisiana, and the Mississippi River alluvial plain — sits on highly expansive Vertisol clay soils. These soils shrink dramatically in dry conditions and swell with moisture, causing slab upheaval and foundation movement. All LA concrete slabs on expansive clay require rebar reinforcement minimum, post-tensioning for larger slabs, a properly compacted base layer, and perimeter drainage. Budget 15% extra volume for irregular depth caused by soft subgrade spots.

      ☀ LA Hot-Weather Concrete — ACI 305

      Louisiana summers are brutal for concrete — ambient temperatures regularly exceed 95°F from June through September with humidity above 80%. ACI 305 hot-weather procedures are required when concrete or ambient temperature exceeds 90°F: use chilled mix water or ice, shade aggregates, pour at dawn or dusk, wet cure immediately, and never pour on surfaces hotter than 120°F. Without hot-weather precautions, rapid moisture evaporation causes surface cracking and reduced long-term strength. Summer pours in Louisiana add $3–$8/yd in chilling costs.

      How to Calculate Concrete Volume in Louisiana

      Measure your project length and width in feet and depth in inches. Multiply length x width x (depth / 12) for cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. Louisiana driveways typically use 4 inch minimum thickness (vs 5 inches in northern states) since there is no freeze-thaw stress — making LA volume estimates about 20% lower than equivalent northern state projects for the same surface area. For elevated flood zone slabs or irregular coastal lot footprints, divide the area into rectangles and sum the volumes. Always add 10% minimum waste — use 15-20% for soft coastal marsh or expansive clay subgrades where depth may vary.

      📐 Louisiana Concrete Formula

      Volume (cu ft) = Length (ft) x Width (ft) x [Depth (in) / 12]
      Volume (cu yd) = Volume (cu ft) / 27
      Order Qty = CEIL[ Volume (cu yd) x Waste Factor ]
      Example: 20 ft x 20 ft LA driveway x 4 in = 133.3 cu ft = 4.94 cu yd -- Order 5.5 cu yd

      ⚠ Louisiana Hot-Weather Concrete — ACI 305 Required Jun–Sep

      Louisiana's peak concrete season is restricted by extreme heat from June through September. ACI 305 hot-weather procedures apply whenever concrete temperature exceeds 90°F or ambient air exceeds 95°F — standard conditions in south Louisiana summer. Required measures: use chilled water or crushed ice in the mix, wet-cure aggregates, schedule pours before 8 AM or after 6 PM, apply evaporation retarder immediately after screeding, begin wet curing within 20 minutes of finishing, and maintain curing for minimum 7 days. Never pour on sun-baked concrete formwork or a dry hot subgrade without pre-wetting. LA summer concrete without ACI 305 compliance will crack, delaminate, and lose 15-25% of its design strength.

      Louisiana Concrete Pricing — Current Reference

      Louisiana's ready-mix market is below the national average due to the absence of cold-weather mix premiums and air entrainment additives required in northern states. The New Orleans metro, Baton Rouge, and Lafayette have competitive multi-supplier markets. Lake Charles, Shreveport, and Alexandria are moderate. Remote coastal parishes (Plaquemines, Terrebonne, St. Mary) carry delivery surcharges due to limited plant access and barge or ferry requirements for the most remote sites.

      Mix Type / PSILA Price / Cu YdNational AvgBest ForSulfate Resistant?LA Use
      3,000 PSI — Interior / Light Duty$128–$145$138–$152Interior slabs, light-duty patios, walkwaysNot RequiredInterior OK
      3,500 PSI — LA Standard Exterior$138–$158$149–$162All LA exterior driveways, patios, sidewalksNot RequiredLA Standard
      4,000 PSI — Driveways / Flood Zone$148–$170$161–$173Heavy driveways, flood zone slabs, coastal areasCoastal: YesRecommended
      4,500 PSI — Coastal / Structural$162–$185$171–$181Saltwater zones, piers, pilings, seawallsType V RequiredCoastal Min
      5,000 PSI — Commercial / Industrial$175–$200$178–$193Commercial slabs, heavy equipment padsRecommendedCompliant
      Fiber-Reinforced / Stamped$165–$220$165–$210Decorative driveways, patios, pool decksSite-SpecificCompliant

      3,000 PSI — Interior / Light Duty

      LA Price / Cu Yd$128–$145
      LA UseInterior OK

      3,500 PSI — LA Standard Exterior

      LA Price / Cu Yd$138–$158
      LA UseLA Standard

      4,000 PSI — Driveways / Flood Zone

      LA Price / Cu Yd$148–$170
      LA UseRecommended

      4,500 PSI — Coastal / Structural

      LA Price / Cu Yd$162–$185
      LA UseCoastal Min

      5,000 PSI — Commercial

      LA Price / Cu Yd$175–$200
      LA UseCompliant

      Louisiana Concrete Cost by Region

      Louisiana pricing divides across six key regions. New Orleans metro and Baton Rouge offer the most competitive ready-mix pricing with the highest plant density. Lafayette and Lake Charles are moderate. Shreveport and northern LA carry a slight distance premium from Gulf Coast cement terminals. Remote coastal parishes — Plaquemines, Terrebonne, St. Mary, Cameron — are the most expensive in the state due to access challenges and delivery logistics.

      LA RegionKey Cities3,500 PSI / Cu YdFooting DepthSoil TypePermit
      New Orleans MetroNew Orleans, Metairie, Kenner, Slidell$138–$15812–18 in.Soft Clay / FillYes
      Baton Rouge MetroBaton Rouge, Gonzales, Denham Springs$140–$16012–18 in.Expansive ClayYes
      Lafayette / AcadianaLafayette, Houma, Morgan City, Thibodaux$142–$16212–18 in.Clay / MarshYes
      Lake Charles / SW LouisianaLake Charles, Sulphur, DeRidder$143–$16512–18 in.Sandy ClayYes
      Shreveport / North LouisianaShreveport, Bossier City, Monroe, Ruston$145–$16815–24 in.Red Clay / LoamYes
      Coastal ParishesPlaquemines, Terrebonne, St. Mary, Cameron$155–$17518–36 in.Soft Marsh / PeatVaries

      New Orleans Metro

      3,500 PSI Price$138–$158/yd
      Soil TypeSoft Clay / Fill

      Baton Rouge Metro

      3,500 PSI Price$140–$160/yd
      Soil TypeExpansive Clay

      Lafayette / Acadiana

      3,500 PSI Price$142–$162/yd
      Soil TypeClay / Marsh

      Lake Charles / SW Louisiana

      3,500 PSI Price$143–$165/yd
      Soil TypeSandy Clay

      Shreveport / North Louisiana

      3,500 PSI Price$145–$168/yd
      Soil TypeRed Clay / Loam

      Coastal Parishes

      3,500 PSI Price$155–$175/yd
      Soil TypeSoft Marsh / Peat

      ✓ Verify Your LA Contractor Before You Pour

      Louisiana requires contractors on projects over $75,000 to hold a license from the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC). Verify contractor license status, classification, and insurance at lslbc.louisiana.gov. Parish-level permits are required for virtually all structural concrete in Louisiana — always confirm with your local parish building department before breaking ground.

      Louisiana Concrete Project Tips

      • Always install a vapor barrier under all LA slabs — Louisiana's extreme humidity means ground moisture vapor will continuously migrate upward through any slab without a proper 6 mil polyethylene vapor barrier. This causes efflorescence, mold, floor covering failures, and long-term concrete deterioration. Never skip the vapor barrier on any Louisiana slab on grade, interior or exterior.
      • Use rebar on all LA slabs over expansive clay soils — Baton Rouge, central Louisiana, and the Mississippi alluvial plain have highly expansive Vertisol clays that swell and shrink with moisture changes. No. 3 or No. 4 rebar at 18 in. O.C. is the minimum for any slab on these soils. Consider post-tensioning for large garage floors or driveways over problematic clay.
      • Coastal and south LA projects require Type V sulfate-resistant cement — Louisiana's coastal soils contain sulfates and chlorides from seawater intrusion that aggressively attack standard Portland cement. All concrete within 1 mile of tidal water or in known sulfate soil zones (check parish soil maps) must use Type V cement or equivalent sulfate-resistant blended cement, plus epoxy-coated rebar and 2 in. minimum concrete cover.
      • Schedule summer pours before 8 AM or after 6 PM — midday summer temperatures in Louisiana regularly hit 95–105F with heat index above 110F. Concrete placed in direct midday sun loses moisture too rapidly, causing plastic shrinkage cracking before the surface can even be finished. Pre-wet forms and subgrade, use chilled water in the mix, and begin wet curing within 20 minutes of finishing.
      • Flood zone projects must meet FEMA BFE plus local parish freeboard — if your project is in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area (Zone AE, AO, or VE), all structural concrete must be placed at or above the Base Flood Elevation plus any additional freeboard required by your parish (typically 1-2 ft above BFE). Verify your flood zone, BFE, and parish requirements before any design or pour in south Louisiana.
      • Install control joints every 8-10 feet in both directions — Louisiana's temperature swing from 25F in north LA winters to 105F summer heat creates significant thermal cycling. Saw-cut or tooled control joints at 8-10 ft spacing in both directions prevent random shrinkage cracking. Saw-cut within 4-8 hours of pour completion during LA summer before rapid surface drying causes cracking ahead of the saw.
      • Soft coastal marsh subgrade requires additional base or pilings — many south Louisiana coastal parishes have organic peat or very soft marsh soils with bearing capacities below 500 psf. These soils cannot support a standard slab on grade without significant base improvement. Options include deep compacted fill, lime-stabilized subgrade, grade beams on pilings, or elevated concrete on driven piles. Always commission a soil bearing test before pouring any slab in coastal Plaquemines, Terrebonne, or Cameron parishes.
      • Cure Louisiana concrete for minimum 7 days with wet curing — Louisiana's heat causes rapid moisture loss from fresh concrete surfaces. Wet curing — using burlap kept continuously moist or a curing compound applied immediately after finishing — maintains the moisture needed for proper cement hydration. Without adequate curing, Louisiana summer concrete loses up to 25% of its potential compressive strength and becomes surface-soft and dusty.

      Frequently Asked Questions — Louisiana Concrete Calculator

      How much does concrete cost per yard in Louisiana?+
      $138–$158 per cubic yard for 3,500 PSI ready-mix in the New Orleans and Baton Rouge metros — below the national average. Lafayette and Lake Charles run $142–$165/yd. Shreveport and north Louisiana are $145–$168/yd. Remote coastal parishes command $155–$175/yd plus delivery surcharges of $15–$40/yd. Short-load fees of $75–$150 apply for orders under 3 cubic yards.
      What PSI concrete is required for Louisiana driveways?+
      3,500 PSI is the standard minimum for Louisiana exterior driveways. Unlike northern states, Louisiana does not require freeze-thaw air entrainment, making 3,500 PSI the practical standard. For heavy vehicle traffic, coastal locations, or flood zone areas, 4,000 PSI is strongly recommended. Minimum thickness is 4 inches for residential driveways — use 5 inches for driveways that will see heavy trucks or RVs regularly.
      How deep are concrete footings in Louisiana?+
      Louisiana has no frost depth requirement — the subtropical climate means ground never freezes. Standard footing depth is 12–18 inches below grade for most residential projects, with deeper footings of 18–36 inches required in coastal parishes with soft marsh or peat soils to reach adequate bearing capacity. North Louisiana (Shreveport, Monroe) uses 15–24 inch depths due to occasional light frost. Always confirm required depth with your local parish building department.
      Do I need sulfate-resistant concrete in Louisiana?+
      Yes, for all coastal and south Louisiana projects within tidal influence zones. Louisiana's coastal soils contain sulfates and chlorides that attack standard Portland cement, causing expansion, cracking, and eventual disintegration of the concrete matrix. Use Type V sulfate-resistant cement (or equivalent Type IP or IS blended cement with low C3A content) for any project in Plaquemines, Terrebonne, Lafourche, St. Mary, Vermilion, Cameron, or similar coastal parishes. Always pair with epoxy-coated rebar and minimum 2 in. concrete cover.
      Do Louisiana flood zone properties need special concrete specs?+
      Yes — all FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA) projects require elevated concrete meeting BFE requirements. In Zone AE (most of south Louisiana), the finished floor elevation must be at or above the Base Flood Elevation plus local freeboard. In Zone VE (coastal high-velocity zones), the structure must be elevated on open foundations such as pilings or piers — solid concrete fill walls below BFE are not permitted in VE zones. Verify your flood zone and BFE at msc.fema.gov before any south Louisiana concrete design.
      Can I pour concrete in Louisiana summer heat?+
      Yes, but only with full ACI 305 hot-weather procedures June through September. Use chilled water or crushed ice in the mix, schedule pours before 8 AM or after 6 PM, pre-wet all forms and subgrade, apply evaporation retarder immediately after screeding, and begin wet curing within 20 minutes of finishing. Hot-weather pours without these precautions will crack on the surface within hours and lose significant compressive strength over time.
      Do I need a licensed contractor for concrete work in Louisiana?+
      Yes for projects over $75,000 — a Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC) license is required. Below $75,000, parish-level registration may still apply. Many parishes (Orleans, East Baton Rouge, Jefferson, Lafayette) also require local permits for driveways, retaining walls, and foundation work regardless of project value. Always verify both state licensing at lslbc.louisiana.gov and your local parish permit requirements before any concrete work begins.

      Official Louisiana Concrete Resources

      LSLBC, LADOTD, FEMA, and ACI references for compliant concrete work across the Pelican State.

      🏛

      Louisiana LSLBC — Contractor Licensing

      Licensing and Registration

      Verify Louisiana contractor license status, classification, and insurance for any concrete contractor on your property. The Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors administers licensing for all contractors on projects over $75,000 statewide. Always confirm your contractor holds the correct LSLBC classification for concrete and foundation work before any pour.

      Visit LA LSLBC
      🌊

      FEMA Flood Map Service Center

      Flood Zone Compliance

      Louisiana has more FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area acreage than almost any other state. Before designing or pouring any concrete in south Louisiana, verify your flood zone designation (AE, VE, or X) and Base Flood Elevation at the FEMA Flood Map Service Center. BFE and freeboard requirements directly determine your slab elevation and foundation design for all flood zone parishes.

      Visit FEMA MSC

      ACI 305 Hot-Weather Concreting

      ACI Standard

      ACI 305 is the essential standard for every Louisiana concrete contractor working June through September. It covers chilled mix water, ice substitution, scheduling, evaporation retarders, immediate wet curing, and temperature monitoring for hot-weather pours. Louisiana's 95–105F summer conditions with extreme humidity make ACI 305 compliance non-negotiable for any professional concrete contractor in the Pelican State.

      Visit ACI