We build free, state-accurate concrete calculators trusted by homeowners, contractors, and builders across all 50 US states — no login, no ads, no paywalls.
Concrete work is one of the most common and costly construction tasks in America — yet most online calculators ignore regional pricing, local code requirements, and project-specific variables. We set out to fix that. ConcreteToolkit.com provides calculators built around real US market data: state-by-state ready-mix pricing, local PSI standards, frost-depth requirements, ACI code references, and code-compliant waste factors. Every tool is reviewed against current ACI 301, ACI 305, and local building code guidelines to keep your estimates accurate and your projects compliant.
Our calculators are used daily by a wide range of concrete professionals and property owners across the United States. Whether you're a licensed contractor estimating a bid, a homeowner planning a weekend project, or a student studying construction management, our tools are designed for you.
Plan patios, driveways, garage slabs, and sidewalks with confidence. Know your cubic yards and bag count before you buy a single bag of Quikrete.
Fast material estimates with state-accurate ready-mix pricing. Produce client-ready cost breakdowns in seconds — from residential foundations to commercial pours.
Quick sanity-check calculations for footing volumes, slab thickness verification, and PSI selection aligned with ACI 318 structural requirements.
Learn concrete math with clear formulas, step-by-step results, and real-world examples covering every major project type used in US construction courses.
There are plenty of basic concrete calculators on the internet — most just multiply length × width × depth. ConcreteToolkit goes further. Here's what separates our library from generic tools:
Ready-mix concrete prices vary from $130/yd in rural Mississippi to over $220/yd in California and New England. Our calculators use region-accurate pricing ranges — not a single national average that misleads half the country.
Frost depth, air entrainment requirements, and PSI minimums differ dramatically by state. A slab in Minnesota needs 4,000 PSI with 6% air entrainment. A slab in Arizona needs none. Our tools reflect these real differences.
Every calculator references current ACI 301, ACI 305, and IBC code requirements for mix design, placement, curing, and finishing — so your estimates meet real-world structural and inspection standards.
More than 60% of our users are on a phone at a job site. Every calculator, table, and formula on ConcreteToolkit is fully responsive — fast and readable on any device with no zooming, no sideways scrolling, no frustration.
We don't just give you a number — we explain why. Every calculator page includes formulas, diagrams, local code notes, hot/cold weather tips, and material comparison tables so you understand what you're building.
Every tool on ConcreteToolkit is 100% free with no registration required. We believe construction knowledge should be accessible to everyone — the first-time homeowner and the 30-year veteran alike.
ConcreteToolkit.com was built by a team of construction professionals, engineers, and web developers who were tired of seeing contractors and homeowners make costly mistakes because the tools available online were either too simple, too generic, or buried behind paywalls. The idea was straightforward: build a comprehensive, state-accurate, always-free concrete calculator library — and keep improving it.
A contractor over-orders two full truckloads of ready-mix for a residential driveway because an online calculator didn't account for the correct waste factor or the regional short-load surcharge. That $600 mistake was the spark that started ConcreteToolkit — a calculator that actually reflects how concrete is bought and poured in the real world.
We researched ready-mix pricing, frost-depth maps, and building code requirements state by state across all 50 states. We interviewed contractors in Florida, Minnesota, Texas, and California to understand how local conditions affect real concrete jobs — and built those differences directly into each state's calculator.
We rebuilt every calculator from scratch with a mobile-first design after realizing that over half our users were contractors accessing the site from a phone on site. Fast-loading, thumb-friendly inputs, and instant results — no pinching, no zooming, no frustration on a dusty job site screen.
ConcreteToolkit.com now hosts over 200 free calculators covering every US state, every major project type, and every common concrete calculation — from a simple bag estimate to a full commercial slab takeoff. We update pricing data and code references regularly to keep every tool accurate and useful.
Our calculators are used by concrete professionals and property owners across all 50 states. Here's a snapshot of what ConcreteToolkit represents as a resource for American construction today.
ConcreteToolkit pricing data is sourced from regional ready-mix suppliers, NRMCA market reports, and contractor surveys across all US states. PSI standards and environmental requirements are cross-referenced against ACI 301 (Specifications for Structural Concrete), ACI 305R (Hot Weather Concreting), ACI 306R (Cold Weather Concreting), and local IBC amendments. All data is reviewed and updated on a regular basis. For project-specific decisions, always verify current pricing with your local supplier and consult a licensed engineer for structural applications. Reference resources at the American Concrete Institute (concrete.org) and NRMCA (nrmca.org).
ConcreteToolkit.com organizes its library by state and by project type so you can find exactly the right calculator in seconds. Every state page includes the following core calculators:
| Project Type | What It Calculates | Typical US Range | Code Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🚗 Driveway | Cubic yards, bags, ready-mix cost, PSI recommendation | 4–5 in. thick · 3,500–4,000 PSI | ACI 301 · Local IRC |
| 🏊 Pool Deck | Surround area volume, decorative finish options, slip-resistance note | 4 in. · 4,000 PSI · Broom finish | ACI 301 · ANSI A112 |
| 🛤️ Patio / Slab | Volume, bag count, cost comparison (DIY vs. ready-mix) | 3.5–4 in. · 3,000–3,500 PSI | ACI 301 · IBC |
| 🏗️ Foundation | Cubic yards, rebar estimate, structural cost range | 8–12 in. · 4,000–5,000 PSI | ACI 318 · IBC |
| 🪨 Footings | Strip/spread footing volume, frost depth reference | 12–24 in. deep · 3,500–4,000 PSI | ACI 318 · IRC R403 |
| 🏢 Commercial Slab | Large-volume yardage, fiber reinforcement cost, finishing area | 5–8 in. · 4,000–5,000 PSI · Fiber | ACI 360 · IBC |
| 🪵 Post Holes | Cylindrical volume, 60/80 lb bag count per hole | 6–12 in. dia · Quikrete 3,500 PSI | Local IRC |
| 🏛️ Columns / Piers | Cylindrical volume, round form sizing, ready-mix vs. bag cost | 8–24 in. dia · 4,000–5,000 PSI | ACI 318 |
Ready-mix concrete prices fluctuate with fuel costs, cement supply, and regional demand. ConcreteToolkit.com reviews and refreshes pricing ranges across all state calculators on a regular schedule. For any active project bid, always confirm the final ready-mix price directly with your local plant. Find a certified NRMCA member plant near you at nrmca.org — the industry's national association for ready-mix producers.
We reference these authoritative US organizations for code standards, pricing benchmarks, and best practices.
The ACI is the primary standards body for concrete design in the US. Their publications — ACI 301, 305, 306, 318, and 360 — are the backbone of the code references used in every ConcreteToolkit calculator.
Visit concrete.orgThe National Ready Mixed Concrete Association represents over 1,100 ready-mix producers across the US. Their market data is the primary source for the regional pricing ranges used in our state-by-state calculators.
Visit nrmca.orgThe International Code Council publishes the IBC and IRC adopted by most US states. Our calculators reference ICC standards for minimum slab thickness, footing depth, and permit requirements by project type.
Visit iccsafe.org