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Texas Concrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & Cost

Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and Texas-accurate ready-mix costs for any concrete project — driveways, foundations, DFW Blackland Prairie slabs, Gulf Coast footings & more.

$128
Avg TX Ready-Mix (per Cu Yd)
3,500
Min PSI — TX Exposed Flatwork
10 in
Frost Depth — DFW / North TX
TDLR
TX Dept. of Licensing & Regulation
🚗 Driveway 🏗️ Foundation 🏙️ DFW / Houston Slab 🪨 Footings 🌊 Gulf Coast Slab 🤠 Panhandle Slab
The Texas Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders estimate cubic yards, bag count, and ready-mix costs for any concrete project across the Lone Star State. Pricing typically runs $118–$158/yd statewide — Texas's abundant aggregate resources and competitive market keep costs below the national average, though West Texas and rural areas run $10–$20/yd higher due to haul distances. Texas spans five distinct concrete environments: DFW and Central Texas Blackland Prairie (expansive black clay — the #1 concrete challenge in the state), the Gulf Coast (Houston, Corpus Christi — near-zero frost, high humidity, hurricane wind loading), East Texas (humid subtropical), West Texas (arid heat), and the Panhandle (Amarillo — the only Texas region with meaningful freeze-thaw cycles). Texas does not have a single statewide building code — most municipalities adopt the IBC, enforced by local city and county building departments. Enter your dimensions for instant, TX-accurate results.

⭐ Texas Concrete Calculator

⭐ TX-Accurate Pricing · IBC Compliant · Texas State
Texas Concrete Calculator
Cubic yards, bags needed & TX ready-mix cost — instant results
🚗 Driveway 🏗️ Foundation 🏙️ DFW Slab 🌊 Gulf Coast 🤠 Panhandle

Enter project dimensions to calculate volume, bags, and estimated Texas material cost.

Residential driveway: 4–6 in. depth, 3,500–4,000 PSI. TxDOT driveway permit required on state-maintained roads. Test for expansive clay in DFW and Central TX.

Patio/walkway 4 in · Driveway 4–6 in · DFW slab-on-grade 5–6 in · Footing 10–12 in · Foundation 8–10 in

Cubic Yards Required
Including waste factor

📋 Project Summary

    💵 Texas Cost Estimate

      📐 Texas Driveway / Slab Cross-Section — TX Standard Layers

      Broom Finish — TX Standard (Heat & Slip Resistant)
      Concrete — 4–6 in. (TX IBC / Local Building Code)
      3,500–4,000 PSI · Post-Tensioned / Rebar on Expansive Clay Sites · W/C ≤ 0.45
      ⬛ Rebar #4 / Wire Mesh / Post-Tension Cables (DFW Blackland Prairie)
      🪨 4–6 in. Compacted Flex Base / Crushed Limestone (Non-Expansive Fill)
      Compacted Subgrade — Frost: 0 in. (Houston) / 6 in. (Austin/SA) / 10 in. (DFW) / 18 in. (Amarillo)
      27
      Cu ft per cubic yard
      45
      80 lb bags per cu yd
      $128
      Avg TX ready-mix / yd
      Concrete Slab Rebar / PT Layer Flex Base Subgrade

      Texas Concrete Calculator — What You Need to Know

      Texas is the second-largest state in the US and presents five completely different concrete environments. The DFW Metroplex and Central Texas Blackland Prairie — covering Dallas, Fort Worth, Waco, and parts of Austin — sit on highly expansive black clay (montmorillonite) that is widely considered the most problematic soil type for concrete in the entire United States. Slabs and foundations in this region routinely crack, heave, and settle without proper design — post-tensioned slab-on-grade foundations are standard practice in DFW precisely because of this soil. The Gulf Coast (Houston, Corpus Christi, Galveston) has essentially zero frost risk but faces high humidity, salt-air exposure near the coast, and must comply with TBC Chapter 16 wind loading requirements for hurricane zones. The Texas Panhandle (Amarillo, Lubbock) is the only Texas region where freeze-thaw is a real concern — frost depth reaches 18 inches in Amarillo — requiring air-entrained mixes not typically needed elsewhere in the state. Texas permits are issued locally, with no statewide residential building permit authority.

      🔵 Texas IBC — Minimum Concrete Requirements

      Exposed flatwork (driveways, patios, walkways): 3,500 PSI min statewide · Structural / foundations: 4,000–4,500 PSI · Air entrainment: Required in Panhandle (Amarillo/Lubbock) for freeze-thaw; not required elsewhere in TX · W/C ratio: max 0.45 · Frost depth: 0–2 in. (Houston/Gulf Coast) · 4–6 in. (Austin/San Antonio) · 10 in. (DFW/North TX) · 18 in. (Amarillo/Panhandle). Most Texas cities adopt the IBC — always verify requirements with your local municipality.

      🚗 Texas Driveway

      A standard 10×40 ft driveway at 4 inches needs ~4.9 cubic yards (at 6 in: ~7.4 yd). At TX pricing of $120–$145/yd, a 4-in driveway material cost runs $588–$713. Most Texas driveways use 4-inch thickness — Northern Texas (DFW) and Panhandle benefit from upgrading to 6 inches with rebar for expansive clay and freeze-thaw durability.

      🏙️ DFW Blackland Prairie

      Dallas-Fort Worth sits on highly expansive montmorillonite black clay — one of the most problematic soils for concrete in the US. Residential foundations in DFW are almost universally post-tensioned slab-on-grade (PT slab) for this reason. For driveways and patios, over-excavate 6–8 inches, replace with non-expansive crushed limestone flex base, and use rebar-reinforced 4,000 PSI concrete with control joints every 8–10 feet.

      🌊 Gulf Coast — Houston & Corpus Christi

      Houston, Corpus Christi, and Gulf Coast communities have essentially no frost risk but face high ambient humidity, potential salt-air chloride exposure within 1–2 miles of the Gulf, and TBC wind load requirements for hurricane zones. Use 4,000 PSI near the coast with a low W/C ratio of 0.40, epoxy-coated rebar in tidal zones, and a penetrating silane/siloxane sealer on all exterior flatwork.

      How to Calculate Concrete Volume for Texas Projects

      Measure your project length and width in feet, depth in inches. Convert depth to feet (divide by 12), multiply all three together for cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. Texas has abundant ready-mix suppliers in major metros — DFW, Houston, San Antonio, and Austin all have highly competitive markets. For rural West Texas and the Panhandle, add 15% waste to account for long haul distances and limited supplier availability. For regional comparisons, see the Oklahoma Concrete Calculator or the Louisiana Concrete Calculator.

      📐 Texas Concrete Volume Formula

      Volume (cu ft) = Length (ft) × Width (ft) × [Depth (in) ÷ 12]
      Volume (cu yd) = Volume (cu ft) ÷ 27
      Order Qty = CEIL[ Volume (cu yd) × Waste Factor ]
      Example: 20 ft × 10 ft driveway × 4 in = 66.7 cu ft = 2.47 cu yd → Order 2.8 cu yd (+10%)

      ⚠️ DFW Blackland Prairie — Post-Tension or Reinforce

      Dallas-Fort Worth's expansive black clay is notorious for destroying unreinforced concrete slabs and foundations. The clay expands up to 30% in volume when wet and shrinks dramatically when dry — Texas's boom-bust rainfall cycles make this especially damaging. For any slab in DFW or Central Texas, always use reinforced concrete with closely spaced control joints, replace expansive clay subgrade with crushed limestone flex base, and consider a geotechnical (soils) report for foundations and large slabs.

      Texas Concrete Pricing Reference

      Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio, and Austin have highly competitive ready-mix markets — multiple suppliers and abundant local aggregate keep prices below the national average. West Texas (Midland, Odessa, El Paso, Abilene) runs $10–$20/yd above the metro average due to haul costs. The Panhandle (Amarillo, Lubbock) is near the state average with decent supplier competition. Air-entrained mixes (required in Amarillo/Panhandle) add $5–$10/yd.

      Mix Type / PSI TX Price / Cu Yd National Avg Best For Air Entrained? TX Code
      3,000 PSI — Standard$105–$125$125–$145Interior slabs, protected flatworkOptionalInterior Only
      3,500 PSI — TX Standard$112–$135$133–$152Patios, walkways, garage floors, drivewaysRecommendedCompliant
      4,000 PSI — Structural$120–$145$140–$162Driveways, DFW slabs, Gulf Coast, foundationsPanhandle Req.Compliant
      4,500 PSI — High Structural$130–$155$150–$172PT foundations, commercial, Panhandle heavyRequiredCompliant
      5,000 PSI — Commercial$140–$165$158–$185Heavy industrial, tilt-wall, major commercialRequiredCompliant
      Fiber-Reinforced / Colored$148–$185$155–$200Decorative patios, stamped drivewaysRequiredCompliant

      3,000 PSI — Standard

      TX Price / Cu Yd$105–$125
      National Avg$125–$145
      Best ForInterior / protected slabs only

      3,500 PSI — TX Standard

      TX Price / Cu Yd$112–$135
      National Avg$133–$152
      Best ForPatios, walkways, garage floors, driveways

      4,000 PSI — Structural

      TX Price / Cu Yd$120–$145
      National Avg$140–$162
      Best ForDriveways, DFW slabs, Gulf Coast, foundations

      4,500 PSI — High Structural

      TX Price / Cu Yd$130–$155
      National Avg$150–$172
      Best ForPT foundations, commercial, Panhandle heavy

      5,000 PSI — Commercial

      TX Price / Cu Yd$140–$165
      National Avg$158–$185
      Best ForHeavy industrial, tilt-wall, major commercial

      ✅ Texas Panhandle (Amarillo / Lubbock) — Air Entrainment Required

      The Panhandle is the only Texas region where freeze-thaw cycles are a genuine concrete concern. Amarillo's frost depth reaches 18 inches — all footings must clear this depth. Specify 4,000 PSI with 4.5–6% air entrainment for any exposed flatwork in Amarillo, Lubbock, and surrounding Panhandle communities. Lubbock also sits on expansive red clay soils — test before pouring any slab or foundation in the area.

      Texas Concrete Project Tips

      • DFW and Central TX: test for expansive clay first — a geotechnical soils report ($300–$800) before any foundation or large slab pour in Dallas, Fort Worth, Waco, or Austin is the best investment you can make. Expansive black clay can destroy an unreinforced slab within 5 years.
      • Use post-tensioned slabs in DFW — PT slab-on-grade foundations are the standard for residential construction in the DFW metroplex for good reason. For driveways and patios, over-excavate 6–8 inches, replace with compacted crushed limestone flex base, and use rebar-reinforced 4,000 PSI concrete with control joints every 8–10 feet.
      • Gulf Coast: protect against salt-air and humidity — within 1–2 miles of the Gulf of Mexico, use 4,000 PSI with a W/C ratio of 0.40, epoxy-coated rebar, and a penetrating silane/siloxane sealer on all exposed surfaces. Chloride ions from salt air penetrate concrete and corrode rebar, causing spalling within 10–15 years if unprotected.
      • Schedule hot-weather pours before 8 AM — Texas summers regularly hit 100–110°F statewide. Follow ACI 305 hot-weather guidelines: pour in early morning, use chilled or iced mix water, pre-wet subgrade and forms, and apply evaporation retarder immediately after screeding. High Texas humidity in Houston and East Texas also slows drying — adjust finishing timing accordingly.
      • Panhandle only: specify air-entrained mix — Amarillo and Lubbock are the only Texas cities where air-entrained concrete is a practical requirement for outdoor flatwork. Specify 4,000 PSI with 4.5–6% air entrainment and clear footings below the 18-inch Amarillo frost line.
      • Get your TxDOT driveway permit before you pour — the Texas Department of Transportation requires a driveway access permit before constructing any approach on a state-maintained highway. Apply through your local TxDOT district office well in advance — processing takes 2–4 weeks in busy metros.
      • Install control joints every 8–10 feet — Texas heat and dramatic soil moisture swings cause more concrete cracking than in most states. Control joints saw-cut or tooled into slabs at 8–10 ft intervals (or 2–3× the slab thickness in feet) give the concrete a place to crack in a controlled line rather than randomly across the surface.
      • Cure slowly — Texas heat is the enemy of fresh concrete — apply curing compound within 20 minutes of final finishing, or wet-cure with burlap and polyethylene sheeting for 7 days. In summer months, consider white-pigmented curing compound to reflect solar heat and reduce slab surface temperatures by up to 20°F.

      Frequently Asked Questions — Texas Concrete Calculator

      How much does concrete cost per yard in Texas?+
      Expect $118–$158 per cubic yard for standard 3,500–4,000 PSI ready-mix across Texas. Houston, DFW, San Antonio, and Austin are the most competitive markets at $118–$145/yd. West Texas (Midland, Odessa, El Paso) and rural areas run $10–$20/yd higher due to haul distances. Short-load fees of $125–$250 apply for orders under 5 yards in most Texas markets.
      What PSI concrete do I need for a Texas driveway?+
      Use 3,500 PSI minimum statewide — this is the Texas IBC standard for exposed flatwork. For DFW and Central Texas (expansive clay areas), upgrade to 4,000 PSI with rebar. In the Panhandle (Amarillo, Lubbock), specify 4,000 PSI with air entrainment. In Gulf Coast zones within a mile of salt water, use 4,000 PSI with a low W/C ratio and epoxy rebar.
      How deep do footings need to be in Texas?+
      Frost depth varies widely: 0–2 inches on the Gulf Coast (Houston, Corpus Christi, Galveston) · 4–6 inches in Austin and San Antonio · 10 inches in DFW and North Texas · 18 inches in Amarillo and the Panhandle. However in DFW, footings are often deeper not for frost but for expansive soil stability — a structural engineer's recommendation takes priority over the frost depth alone.
      Why do DFW foundations crack so often?+
      DFW and Central Texas sit on montmorillonite black clay (Blackland Prairie) that expands up to 30% in volume when wet and shrinks dramatically when dry. Texas's boom-bust rainfall cycles — heavy spring rains followed by summer droughts — create extreme annual soil movement. This is why post-tensioned slab-on-grade (PT slab) foundations are standard in DFW. Homeowners can reduce movement by maintaining consistent soil moisture around the foundation perimeter year-round.
      Do I need a permit for concrete work in Texas?+
      Texas has no statewide residential permitting authority — permits are issued by local city and county building departments under the IBC. Foundations, structural slabs, and retaining walls over 4 ft typically require permits. Driveways on private property may not, but any approach connecting to a TxDOT-maintained state highway requires a TxDOT access permit. Always confirm with your city or county before breaking ground.
      How many cubic yards for a Texas garage floor?+
      A standard 20×24 ft two-car garage at 4 inches needs approximately 5.93 cubic yards (6.5 yd with 10% waste). At TX pricing of $120–$145/yd, material cost runs roughly $780–$943. In DFW, upgrade to 6 inches with rebar on expansive clay sites — the extra cost is minimal compared to repairing a cracked garage floor in 5 years.
      How long does concrete take to cure in Texas heat?+
      24 hrs for light foot traffic · 7 days for vehicles · 28 days for full design strength. In Texas summer heat (100°F+), the hydration reaction accelerates but surface moisture evaporates rapidly — this can cause plastic shrinkage cracking within 30 minutes if the surface is unprotected. Apply curing compound immediately after finishing and avoid troweling a dry surface. Wet-curing under burlap for 7 days produces the strongest, most crack-resistant results.

      Official Texas Concrete Resources

      Texas TDLR contractor licensing, TxDOT access permits, and industry standards for compliant concrete work.

      🏛️

      TDLR — Texas Contractor Licensing

      State Authority

      The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) oversees contractor licensing statewide. Individual construction permits are issued by local city and county building departments — contact your municipality before starting any foundation, slab, or structural concrete work. TDLR also enforces accessibility standards under the Texas Architectural Barriers Act for commercial projects.

      Visit Texas TDLR
      🛤️

      TxDOT — Driveway Access Permits

      Texas Dept. of Transportation

      The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) requires a driveway access permit before constructing any approach on a state-maintained highway or FM road in Texas. Apply through your local TxDOT district office before pouring any driveway apron or entrance slab that connects to a TxDOT route — required statewide for all 25 TxDOT districts.

      Visit TxDOT Permits
      📘

      ACI 318 & ACI 305 — Concrete Standards

      Industry Standards

      ACI 318 (structural concrete) and ACI 305 (hot-weather concreting) are the key national standards adopted by Texas's IBC-based building codes. ACI 305 is especially critical across Texas — it defines mix temperature limits, evaporation thresholds, retarder use, and curing procedures essential for any concrete placed in Texas's intense summer heat statewide.

      Visit ACI Standards