Ohio Concrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & Cost
Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and Ohio-accurate ready-mix costs for any concrete project — driveways, patios, foundations, garage floors, sidewalks & more.
🌰 Ohio Concrete Calculator
Enter project dimensions to calculate volume, bags, and estimated Ohio material cost.
Ohio OBC requires permits for structural concrete. Check with your local city or county building department before starting.
Patio 4 in · Driveway 6 in · Garage 4–6 in · Foundation 8–12 in · Footing 10–16 in
📋 Project Summary
💵 OH Cost Estimate
📐 Ohio Slab Cross-Section — OBC Standard Layers
4,000 PSI · Air-Entrained 5–7% · W/C Ratio ≤ 0.45
Ohio Concrete Calculator — What You Need to Know
Ohio sits in a demanding climate zone for concrete — experiencing 30–90 freeze-thaw cycles per year depending on location. Northern Ohio (Cleveland, Toledo, Akron) along Lake Erie sees the harshest winters and most freeze-thaw damage, requiring 4,000 PSI air-entrained mixes for all outdoor work. Central Ohio (Columbus) and Southern Ohio (Cincinnati, Dayton) are slightly milder but still require air entrainment for outdoor flatwork. The Ohio Building Code (OBC) adopts the International Building Code with state amendments, and permits are required for all structural concrete pours.
🔵 OBC Minimum Concrete Requirements
Residential flatwork (driveways, sidewalks): 4,000 PSI + 5–7% air entrainment · Garage floors: 4,000 PSI · Foundations: 3,000 PSI min, 4,000 PSI recommended · W/C ratio: max 0.45 for exposed-to-weather concrete. Verify requirements with the Ohio Division of Industrial Compliance.
🚗 Ohio Residential Driveway
A standard 10×20 ft driveway at 6 in. needs ~3.7 cubic yards. At Ohio pricing ($140–$162/yd for 4,000 PSI), material costs $518–$599. Northern Ohio driveways near Lake Erie face heavy road salt use — specify 4,000 PSI air-entrained mix with a low W/C ratio for maximum de-icing resistance.
🏢 Ohio Garage Floor
A standard 24×24 ft garage at 4 in. needs ~7.1 cubic yards, or ~10.7 cu yd at 6 in. At Ohio pricing, a 6 in. pour costs $1,400–$1,700 for materials. Use 4,000 PSI with fiber reinforcement and seal after 28-day cure for Ohio garage floor durability.
🏗️ OH Foundation / Basement
Most Ohio homes have full basements due to the 36 in. frost depth. A 1,200 sq ft basement typically needs 18–28 cubic yards for footings and walls. OBC requires licensed contractor and building permit for all foundation work in Ohio cities and townships.
How to Calculate Concrete Volume — Ohio
Multiply length × width × (depth in inches ÷ 12) to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. For L-shaped Ohio driveways and patios, split into two rectangles and add the volumes. Always order at least 10% extra — Ohio short-load fees of $100–$200 apply for orders under 3–5 cubic yards and re-orders can delay your project by a full day.
📐 Ohio Concrete Formula
⚠️ Ohio Winter Pour Warning — Lake Erie Effect
Northern Ohio (Cleveland, Toledo, Sandusky) receives heavy lake-effect snow and is exposed to road salt spray for 4–5 months per year. This aggressively attacks concrete surfaces. Always use 4,000 PSI air-entrained mix, W/C ≤ 0.45, and a penetrating sealer applied after 28-day cure for any concrete within 5 miles of Lake Erie. Avoid pouring when temps drop below 40°F without cold-weather protection measures.
Ohio Concrete Calculator — Pricing Reference
Ohio ready-mix pricing is competitive due to its dense network of Cemex, Vulcan, and Martin Marietta batch plants across the state. Columbus and Dayton offer the lowest pricing. Cleveland and Cincinnati run slightly higher due to urban delivery logistics. Compare with the Indiana Concrete Calculator for neighboring Midwest state pricing.
| Mix Type / PSI | OH Price / Cu Yd | National Avg | Best For | Air Entrained? | OH Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,000 PSI — Standard | $132–$152 | $130–$150 | Interior slabs, basement floors | Interior Only | Interior Only |
| 3,500 PSI — Residential | $138–$158 | $138–$158 | Protected garage, covered patio | Recommended | Acceptable |
| 4,000 PSI — OH Standard | $145–$165 | $145–$165 | Driveways, sidewalks, patios | Required | Compliant |
| 4,500 PSI — Structural | $155–$178 | $155–$175 | Foundations, heavy structural slabs | Required | Compliant |
| 5,000 PSI — High Strength | $165–$192 | $163–$185 | Commercial / heavy structural | Required | Compliant |
| Fiber / Stamped Decorative | $172–$225 | $155–$210 | Patios, pool decks, decorative OH | Required | Compliant |
3,000 PSI — Standard
3,500 PSI — Residential
4,000 PSI — OH Standard
4,500 PSI — Structural
5,000 PSI — High Strength
Ohio Concrete Project Tips
- Always use air-entrained mix outdoors — Ohio's 30–90 annual freeze-thaw cycles will destroy non-air-entrained concrete within a few seasons. Specify 5–7% air for all driveways, patios, sidewalks, and pool decks.
- Northern OH: seal against road salt — Cleveland, Toledo, and Akron areas use heavy road salt from November–March. Apply a penetrating concrete sealer every 2–3 years to prevent surface scaling and rebar corrosion.
- Footings must go below 36 in. — Ohio's maximum frost depth is 36 in. per OBC. Footings for decks, fences, and additions must reach below this depth to prevent frost heave.
- Add control joints every 10 ft — Ohio's temperature swings (from -10°F to 95°F) cause significant expansion and contraction. Control joints prevent random cracking in driveways and patios.
- Order 10% extra — always — Short-load fees of $100–$200 apply for second orders under 3–5 cubic yards. Over-ordering by 10% is always cheaper than a second truck delivery in Ohio.
- Permits required for structural work — Ohio cities (Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati) all require building permits for foundations, structural slabs, retaining walls, and driveway aprons at public roads. Apply through your local Ohio Building Department.
- Cure properly in Ohio summers — Columbus and Cincinnati reach 90°F+ in July and August. Use wet curing or a curing compound for at least 7 days to prevent early moisture loss and surface cracking.
✅ Columbus vs. Cleveland vs. Cincinnati — Pricing Snapshot
Columbus is Ohio's most competitive market at $132–$158/yd with multiple large plants along I-70/I-71 corridors. Cleveland averages $142–$168/yd — slightly higher due to urban logistics and lake-effect winter delays. Cincinnati runs $138–$162/yd, benefiting from proximity to Kentucky suppliers for competitive cross-border pricing.
Ohio Concrete Calculator — Frequently Asked Questions
Related State Concrete Calculators
Official Ohio Concrete Resources
OBC, ODOT, and industry references for compliant concrete work across Ohio.
Ohio Division of Industrial Compliance
Building Codes & PermitsAccess Ohio Building Code requirements, apply for structural concrete permits, and find licensed contractors for compliant foundation and flatwork projects statewide.
Visit OH Industrial ComplianceOhio Department of Transportation
ODOT StandardsAccess ODOT standard specifications for concrete construction, driveway access permits, and concrete standards for road-adjacent and public right-of-way projects across Ohio.
Visit ODOTNational Ready Mixed Concrete Assoc.
Industry ResourceFind NRMCA-certified ready-mix producers in Ohio, access ACI 318 mix design guides, and get expert cold-weather and freeze-thaw concrete recommendations for OH projects.
Visit NRMCA