Calculate raft (mat) foundation concrete volume, slab thickness, reinforcement quantity, soil bearing pressure, and total material cost for any US residential or commercial project — per ACI 318, ASCE 7, and IBC 2021 standards.
Enter raft dimensions, loads, soil data, and material costs to get full volume, rebar, bearing pressure, and cost estimate.
Overall length of the raft slab footprint. Matches or extends beyond building footprint.
Overall width of the raft slab footprint.
Uniform raft slab thickness. ACI 318 minimum: 12 in for residential, 18–36 in for commercial. Consult your structural engineer.
Select shape for automatic area adjustment, or choose Custom to enter exact area.
Enter the exact plan area of your raft slab in square feet.
Unfactored dead load on raft including structure self-weight. Typical: 80–150 psf for 1–3 story buildings.
Unfactored live load per ASCE 7-22. Residential: 40 psf; office: 50 psf; storage: 125+ psf.
Used to estimate total factored column load contribution per ACI 318 load combinations.
From geotechnical report (required per IBC 2021 Sec. 1803). Use a geotech report for final design.
Both top and bottom mats use the same size in this estimator. Actual design may vary.
ACI 318 Section 13.3: max spacing = 3h or 18 in. Both layers (top + bottom) calculated automatically.
ACI 318 Section 20.6.1.3: Minimum 3 in cover for concrete cast against soil for raft foundations.
US average: $145–$210/CY for 4,000 psi structural mix. Varies by region.
US average: $900–$1,400/ton for ASTM A615 Grade 60 rebar (2025 pricing).
ACI 318 Section 19.3.3: f'c ≥ 2,500 psi for structural concrete; 3,500 psi recommended for foundations exposed to soil.
A concrete raft foundation (also called a mat foundation in US engineering practice) is a large, thick reinforced concrete slab that covers the entire footprint of a building and distributes the total structural load over a wide soil area. Unlike individual spread footings or strip footings beneath each column or wall, a raft foundation acts as a single continuous structural element that bridges weak or variable soil zones and prevents differential settlement. ACI 318-19 and the ASCE 7-22 minimum design loads standard govern raft foundation design on all US projects submitted for building permit.
The standard US rule per ACI 318 Chapter 13 and geotechnical practice: if individual spread footings would cover more than 50% of the building footprint due to low soil bearing capacity, a raft foundation is more economical and structurally superior. Raft foundations are also required when soil conditions are highly variable across the site, when the structure must bridge over soft zones, when basement waterproofing requires a continuous structural slab, or when building loads are high relative to available soil capacity — such as in multi-story residential, industrial warehouses, and tank foundations.
ACI 318 Section 13.3 specifies that raft slab thickness must satisfy both flexural strength and two-way punching shear requirements at all column locations. For US residential construction on medium soils, typical raft thickness ranges from 12–18 inches. Commercial buildings typically require 18–36 inches. A minimum thickness of 12 inches is widely enforced by US building departments as the practical lower limit for a mat foundation regardless of structural calculations.
US raft foundations require two-way reinforcement (top and bottom mats, each running in both directions) per ACI 318 Section 13.3. The minimum reinforcement ratio for temperature and shrinkage is 0.0018 x b x h per ACI 318 Section 24.4.3.2, but structural design for bending typically requires significantly more. Common US raft designs use #6 to #8 bars at 9–12 inches on center in both mats, with ASTM A615 Grade 60 rebar as the standard material.
The critical geotechnical check for any raft foundation is verifying that the applied bearing pressure (total unfactored service load divided by raft area) does not exceed the allowable soil bearing capacity from the geotechnical report. IBC 2021 Section 1806.2 requires a geotechnical report for all structures over two stories or when soil conditions are uncertain. Typical US allowable bearing values range from 1,000 psf (soft clay) to 6,000 psf (dense gravel), with most residential sites at 1,500–3,000 psf.
The raft foundation volume calculation starts with the plan area multiplied by the slab thickness, converted to cubic yards. Reinforcement is estimated based on the two-way grid (top and bottom mats) using bar weight per foot multiplied by total bar length in both directions. The soil bearing pressure check divides the total service load by the raft plan area and compares it to the allowable bearing capacity from the geotechnical report.
Raft foundation design involves complex structural analysis including punching shear at columns, two-way flexure across the mat, differential settlement analysis, soil-structure interaction, and seismic design per ASCE 7-22. This calculator provides a preliminary volume and reinforcement estimate for budgeting and planning purposes. All raft foundations in the USA require design and stamping by a licensed Professional Engineer (PE) per IBC 2021 and state professional engineering statutes before a building permit can be issued. Always engage a geotechnical engineer for soil bearing capacity values and a structural PE for final reinforcement design.
The table below provides reference thickness and reinforcement guidelines for common US raft foundation applications, based on ACI 318-19 Chapter 13, ASCE 7-22, and standard US structural engineering practice. All values are for preliminary estimation purposes and require PE review for final construction use.
| Building Type | Stories | Min. Slab Thickness | Typical Rebar | f'c Min. | Soil Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-Family Residential | 1–2 | 12–16 in | #5–#6 @ 12 in e.w. | 3,500 psi | Soft to medium soil, ≤ 2,000 psf |
| Multi-Family / Apartment | 2–4 | 16–24 in | #6–#7 @ 10–12 in e.w. | 4,000 psi | Medium soil, 1,500–3,000 psf |
| Commercial / Office | 2–5 | 20–30 in | #7–#8 @ 9–12 in e.w. | 4,000 psi | Medium to stiff soil, 2,000–4,000 psf |
| Industrial / Warehouse | 1–2 | 18–30 in | #7–#9 @ 9–12 in e.w. | 4,000 psi | Variable, heavy equipment loads |
| High-Rise Core Mat | 6+ | 30–72 in+ | #9–#11 @ 6–9 in e.w. | 5,000–6,000 psi | Requires detailed geotech + PE design |
| Tank / Silo Foundation | N/A | 18–36 in | #7–#10 @ 8–12 in e.w. | 4,000–5,000 psi | Variable load; seismic check per ASCE 7 |
Official codes and authoritative references used in this concrete raft foundation calculator.
ACI 318-19 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete, Chapter 13, governs the design of two-way slabs including mat foundations — covering minimum thickness, punching shear, flexural reinforcement, concrete cover, and concrete strength requirements used in this calculator.
Visit ACIASCE 7-22 provides the minimum dead load, live load, wind, and seismic load combinations used to determine total factored loads on raft foundations across all US occupancy categories and soil/seismic site classes — required for all US building permit submissions.
Visit ASCEIBC 2021 Chapter 18 governs soil and foundation investigation requirements, allowable bearing pressures, foundation design criteria, and geotechnical report requirements for all commercial and residential raft foundations submitted for building permit in the USA.
Visit ICC