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Bored Pile Concrete Calculator USA — Volume, Rebar & Cost

Instantly calculate concrete volume in cubic yards, rebar cage weight, and 2025 installation cost for bored pile (drilled shaft) foundations across the USA — per ACI 318-19, AASHTO LRFD, and IBC 2021 standards.

f'c 4k
Min Concrete Strength for Bored Piles (psi)
3 in
Min Concrete Cover to Rebar (ACI 318 USA)
1.5×
Typical Overbreak / Overpour Factor
F.S. 2.5
Typical Factor of Safety — Pile Capacity
🏗️ Drilled Shaft Foundation 🏢 Building Column Pile 🌉 Bridge Pier Foundation 🔩 Belled / Underreamed Pile 🏠 Residential Caisson 🛤️ Highway / FHWA Project
The bored pile concrete calculator for the USA estimates the concrete volume in cubic yards, rebar cage steel weight, and total installation cost for drilled shaft (bored pile) foundations on residential, commercial, and infrastructure projects. Bored piles — also called drilled shafts or caissons in US practice — are cast-in-place concrete piles formed by drilling a cylindrical hole into the soil or rock, placing a rebar cage, and filling with fresh concrete. They are designed per ACI 318-19, AASHTO LRFD Bridge Design Specifications, and the FHWA Drilled Shafts Manual (NHI-10-016). This calculator handles all volume, overpour, and cost conversions automatically using 2025 USA pricing data.

🏗️ Bored Pile Concrete Calculator — USA

Enter pile geometry, quantity, and project details to calculate concrete volume (yd³), rebar weight (lbs), and estimated 2025 installation cost.

Common USA sizes: 18, 24, 30, 36, 42, 48, 60, 72, 96 in

Measured from cut-off elevation to pile toe

Total pile count for this foundation group

Bell height is typically 1/3 of shaft diameter

ACI 318-19 minimum f'c = 4,000 psi for drilled shafts

Accounts for borehole overbreak and slurry displacement

Total Concrete Volume (All Piles)
Cubic yards including overpour · ACI 318-19

📦 Volume & Rebar Summary

    💲 USA Cost Estimate (2025)

      📐 Bored Pile (Drilled Shaft) — Cross-Section Diagram USA

      Straight Shaft
      Pile Cap / Grade Beam
      Concrete Shaft
      f'c ≥ 4,000 psi
      Rebar Cage
      Spiral Ties
      Pile Toe — End Bearing
      Bearing Stratum
      Rock / Dense Soil
      Belled Shaft
      Pile Cap / Grade Beam
      Concrete Shaft
      f'c ≥ 4,000 psi
      Rebar + Spiral
      3 in Cover Min.
      Bell / Underream
      1.5–2.5× Shaft Dia
      Enlarged Bearing Area
      Bearing Stratum
      Cased Shaft
      Pile Cap
      Steel Casing
      Permanent or Temp
      Wet / Caving Soil
      Socket Into Rock
      Rock Socket
      Bedrock
      π/4 × d²
      Pile cross-section area formula
      20%
      Typical overpour factor (soil)
      4,000
      ACI 318 min f'c (psi) — drilled shafts
      Concrete Shaft Longitudinal Rebar Bell Underream Bearing Stratum

      What Is a Bored Pile (Drilled Shaft) & When Is It Used in the USA?

      A bored pile — called a drilled shaft or caisson in standard US practice — is a deep foundation element formed by mechanically drilling a cylindrical excavation into soil or rock, inserting a steel reinforcement cage, and filling the hole with cast-in-place concrete. Unlike driven piles, bored piles are formed in-place without driving impact forces, making them the preferred deep foundation solution when vibration and noise restrictions apply, when large-diameter high-capacity piles are needed, or when soil and rock conditions prevent driven pile installation. The primary US design references are ACI 318-19, the FHWA Drilled Shafts Construction Procedures and Design Methods Manual (NHI-10-016), and AASHTO LRFD Bridge Design Specifications 9th Edition.

      Bored piles transfer structural loads to competent bearing strata through a combination of skin friction (shaft resistance along the pile surface) and end bearing (resistance at the pile toe or bell). In cohesive soils like Chicago Blue Clay, skin friction often dominates — while in gravels, sands, and rock, end bearing is the primary load transfer mechanism. Pile diameter in US practice ranges from 18 inches for light residential caissons up to 10–12 feet for major bridge foundations, with shaft lengths commonly ranging from 15 to 150 feet depending on bearing stratum depth.

      🔵 Drilled Shaft vs Bored Pile — US Terminology

      In the United States, the terms drilled shaft, bored pile, drilled pier, and caisson are often used interchangeably for the same cast-in-place deep foundation element. "Drilled shaft" is the preferred term in FHWA and AASHTO publications. "Caisson" is the common term in Chicago and Midwest building practice. "Bored pile" is more common in geotechnical engineering publications and internationally. All refer to the same type of deep foundation: a drilled, reinforced, cast-in-place concrete element transferring load to competent bearing material.

      🏗️ Concrete Requirements — ACI 318-19

      ACI 318-19 Section 26.4.1 requires a minimum concrete compressive strength of f'c = 4,000 psi for cast-in-place concrete piles and drilled shafts in the USA. Concrete for drilled shafts must be highly workable (slump 7–9 inches or use SCC) to flow around the rebar cage and fill the borehole without segregation. Water/cement ratio should not exceed 0.45 for piles in aggressive soil environments (sulfates, chlorides).

      🔩 Rebar Cage Design

      Longitudinal reinforcement in US drilled shafts typically ranges from 0.5% to 3.0% of gross cross-sectional area per ACI 318-19 Section 10.6. Minimum cover is 3 inches to the spiral/hoop ties for piles in soil, and 3 inches for piles in permanent casing, per ACI 318-19 Table 20.6.1.4. Spirals or circular hoops are used rather than rectangular ties for circular pile cross-sections.

      💧 Overpour / Overbreak Factor

      Bored pile concrete quantities always exceed theoretical volume due to borehole overbreak (drilling beyond nominal diameter), slurry displacement, and soft-bottom concrete that is trimmed during quality control. A 20% overpour factor is standard for soil conditions; 30–50% may be needed in soft, caving, or water-bearing soils. FHWA recommends always ordering 15–25% more concrete than theoretical calculations indicate.

      How to Calculate Bored Pile Concrete Volume — USA Formula

      Calculating the concrete volume for bored piles requires computing the cylindrical shaft volume, adding the bell volume for underreamed piles, applying the overpour factor, and converting to cubic yards for ordering. The rebar cage steel weight is then estimated from the longitudinal rebar ratio and pile dimensions.

      📐 Bored Pile Concrete Volume Formulas (ACI 318 / FHWA — USA)

      Shaft Cross-Section Area: A = π × (D/2)² = π × D² / 4 [D = diameter in feet]
      Shaft Volume (ft³): V_shaft = A × L [L = pile length in feet]
      Bell Volume (ft³): V_bell = (π/12) × h_bell × (D_bell² + D_bell×D + D²)
      Bell height: h_bell ≈ D/3 | Bell diameter: D_bell = bell_factor × D
      Net Volume (ft³): V_net = V_shaft + V_bell
      Ordered Volume (yd³): V_order = (V_net × overpour_factor) / 27 × number_of_piles
      Rebar Weight (lbs): W_rebar = ρ_s × A_gross × pile_length × rebar_ratio × 490 lbs/ft³
      Example: 24-in dia × 30-ft pile × 6 piles × 1.2 overpour → 3.14 ft² × 30 ft × 1.2 / 27 × 6 = 25.1 yd³

      ⚠️ Always Include Cutoff / Overpour at the Pile Top

      In US drilled shaft construction, the concrete at the top of each pile is contaminated with drill cuttings and slurry and must be cut off and removed after the concrete hardens — typically 2–4 feet of concrete is wasted per pile. This "overpour" at the top is in addition to borehole overbreak and must be included in concrete quantity estimates. On a project with 10 piles at 24-inch diameter, the cutoff concrete alone represents approximately 2–4 cubic yards of wasted material that must be ordered and paid for.

      Bored Pile Concrete Volume Reference Table — USA Standard Sizes

      The table below shows pre-calculated concrete volumes for common US drilled shaft sizes using a 20% overpour factor, for both straight-shaft and belled piles per ACI 318-19 and FHWA design practice.

      Pile Dia Length Pile Type Net Volume / Pile Ordered (20% OP) Approx. Cost (Midwest)
      18 in20 ftStraight0.73 yd³0.88 yd³$350–$700
      24 in30 ftStraight1.74 yd³2.09 yd³$835–$1,670
      24 in30 ftBelled (1.5×)2.26 yd³2.71 yd³$1,085–$2,170
      36 in40 ftStraight5.24 yd³6.28 yd³$2,510–$5,025
      36 in40 ftBelled (1.5×)6.60 yd³7.92 yd³$3,170–$6,340
      48 in50 ftStraight11.64 yd³13.97 yd³$5,590–$11,180
      60 in60 ftStraight21.82 yd³26.18 yd³$10,470–$20,940
      72 in80 ftStraight62.83 yd³75.40 yd³PE Stamp Required

      18 in Dia × 20 ft — Straight Shaft

      Net Volume / Pile0.73 yd³
      Ordered (20% OP)0.88 yd³
      Est. Cost (Midwest)$350–$700

      24 in Dia × 30 ft — Straight Shaft

      Net Volume / Pile1.74 yd³
      Ordered (20% OP)2.09 yd³
      Est. Cost (Midwest)$835–$1,670

      24 in Dia × 30 ft — Belled 1.5×

      Net Volume / Pile2.26 yd³
      Ordered (20% OP)2.71 yd³
      Est. Cost (Midwest)$1,085–$2,170

      36 in Dia × 40 ft — Straight Shaft

      Net Volume / Pile5.24 yd³
      Ordered (20% OP)6.28 yd³
      Est. Cost (Midwest)$2,510–$5,025

      48 in Dia × 50 ft — Straight Shaft

      Net Volume / Pile11.64 yd³
      Ordered (20% OP)13.97 yd³
      Est. Cost (Midwest)$5,590–$11,180

      60 in Dia × 60 ft — Straight Shaft

      Net Volume / Pile21.82 yd³
      Ordered (20% OP)26.18 yd³
      Est. Cost (Midwest)$10,470–$20,940

      Bored Pile Types Used in USA Construction

      The USA uses several bored pile configurations depending on soil conditions, load requirements, and project type. Here are the most common types encountered in US building, bridge, and infrastructure projects.

      🏗️

      Straight-Shaft Drilled Shaft

      The most common US bored pile type — a constant-diameter reinforced concrete shaft drilled into soil or rock. Used for building columns, bridge piers, retaining walls, and sign foundations. Designed per FHWA NHI-10-016 and ACI 318-19. Diameters range 18 in to 10+ ft. Both skin friction and end bearing contribute to capacity.

      🔔

      Belled / Underreamed Pile

      A straight shaft with an enlarged bell excavated at the base using a belling bucket — typically 1.5–2.5× the shaft diameter. Greatly increases end bearing area and uplift resistance without increasing shaft size. Common in Midwest USA (Chicago, Kansas City) where stiff clay and hardpan soils exist. Not feasible in cohesionless or water-bearing soils.

      🔧

      Cased Drilled Shaft

      A steel casing (temporary or permanent) is advanced ahead of or concurrently with drilling in caving, water-bearing, or contaminated soils. Temporary casing is recovered during concrete placement; permanent casing is left in place. Required in coastal areas, high water table conditions, and near existing structures where slurry cannot be used.

      💧

      Slurry Drilling (Wet Method)

      In soft or water-bearing soils, the borehole is stabilized with mineral slurry (bentonite or polymer) instead of casing. The rebar cage is lowered into the slurry-filled hole and concrete is placed by tremie pipe from the bottom up, displacing the slurry. The wet method is standard practice for large-diameter drilled shafts in US coastal, delta, and alluvial deposits.

      🪨

      Rock Socket

      A drilled shaft socketed into competent bedrock to develop high end bearing and socket friction capacity. The rock socket depth is typically 1–5× the shaft diameter, depending on rock quality (RQD). Rock socket design follows FHWA NHI-10-016 Chapter 13 and uses rock mass strength parameters from geotechnical investigation. Common in Northeast USA, Appalachia, and mountainous terrain.

      🏠

      Residential Caisson (Chicago-Style)

      Small-diameter (18–24 in) hand-excavated or machine-drilled bored piles used for residential foundations in Midwest cities, particularly Chicago, where deep bearing clays require foundations extending 20–30 ft below grade. Typically 4,000 psi concrete, 4 longitudinal #8 bars, spiral ties at 6 in pitch. Designed by a licensed Structural PE in Illinois, Wisconsin, and other Midwest states.

      Bored Pile Concrete Best Practices — USA Projects

      Proper concrete placement and quality control in bored piles is critical — defects are difficult to detect and extremely expensive to remediate. Here are the most important best practices from FHWA Drilled Shafts Manual and ACI 318 commentary for US contractors and engineers.

      ✅ Use Tremie Placement for All Wet-Method Shafts

      Concrete in slurry-drilled or water-bearing bored piles must be placed using a tremie pipe (minimum 8-inch diameter) extending to within 6 inches of the bottom. The tremie must be kept embedded in the fresh concrete at all times during placement — a minimum of 5–10 feet — to prevent slurry or water from entering the concrete. Never free-fall concrete into a wet borehole. Tremie placement is required by FHWA NHI-10-016 and is considered the most critical quality control step for wet-method drilled shafts in the USA.

      • Use Self-Consolidating Concrete (SCC) when available — SCC mixes (7–9 inch slump flow) fill around congested rebar cages more effectively than conventional concrete in large-diameter or heavily reinforced drilled shafts. ACI 237R provides guidance on SCC mix design for US drilled shaft applications.
      • Clean the bottom before placing concrete — sediment accumulation at the bottom of the borehole reduces end bearing capacity dramatically. FHWA requires bottom cleanliness inspection with a cleanout bucket or airlift prior to rebar cage insertion — maximum 1/2 inch of sediment in the bottom of an end-bearing pile per standard US specifications.
      • Specify non-shrink concrete for belled piles — the bell zone is particularly susceptible to cracking from concrete shrinkage and thermal gradients. Many US specifications require expansive cement (Type K per ASTM C845) or non-shrink admixtures for the bell pour in heavily loaded belled caissons.
      • Plan Crosshole Sonic Logging (CSL) for critical piles — FHWA and AASHTO require CSL testing for access tubes installed in large-diameter bridge drilled shafts in the USA. CSL detects concrete voids, inclusions, and construction defects that cannot be detected from the surface. Specify CSL access tubes (2-inch diameter steel) during rebar cage fabrication — they cannot be added after the cage is placed.
      • Verify bearing stratum before each pile — soil conditions vary from boring to boring and can change significantly across a small site. Confirm the target bearing stratum by visual inspection of drill cuttings, rock core, or field SPT/CPT data at each pile location before finalizing pile length. Premature termination of piles is one of the most common and costly defects on US drilled shaft projects.
      • Document concrete mix design approval — ACI 318-19 and IBC 2021 require the concrete mix design to be submitted and approved by the Engineer of Record (EOR) before placement begins. For piles in aggressive soil environments (pH < 5.5, sulfates > 150 ppm, or chlorides), use Type V or Type II/V cement and ensure w/cm ≤ 0.40 per ACI 318-19 Table 19.3.3.

      🚨 Bored Pile Defects — Most Common & Costliest USA Construction Issues

      The most common costly defects in US bored pile construction are: (1) Neck formation — concrete diameter reduces below nominal due to caving soil squeezing into the shaft before concrete hardens; (2) Soil/slurry inclusions — contaminated concrete zones caused by improper tremie procedure; (3) Soft bottom — inadequate base cleaning leaving loose debris that reduces end bearing; (4) Rebar cage float — rebar cage rises during concrete placement due to buoyancy in fresh concrete. All are preventable with proper construction methods per FHWA NHI-10-016.

      Frequently Asked Questions — Bored Pile Concrete Calculator USA

      How do I calculate the concrete volume for a bored pile in the USA?+
      Calculate the theoretical volume of the cylindrical pile shaft: V = π × (D/2)² × L, where D is the diameter in feet and L is the pile length in feet. Add bell volume for underreamed piles. Divide by 27 to convert cubic feet to cubic yards. Then multiply by the overpour factor — typically 1.20 (20% overpour) for standard soil conditions. Example: a 24-inch (2-ft) diameter × 30-ft pile: V = π × 1² × 30 = 94.25 ft³ = 3.49 yd³ × 1.20 = 4.19 yd³ per pile. For a group of 6 piles: 6 × 4.19 = 25.1 yd³ total concrete order.
      What is the minimum concrete strength for bored piles in the USA?+
      Per ACI 318-19 Section 26.4.1.1, the minimum specified compressive strength for cast-in-place concrete piles and drilled shafts in the USA is f'c = 4,000 psi (28 MPa). Most US commercial and bridge drilled shaft specifications call for 4,000–5,000 psi concrete. For piles in aggressive environments (sulfates, chlorides), ACI 318-19 Table 19.3.3 requires f'c ≥ 4,500–5,000 psi and w/cm ≤ 0.40–0.45. Self-consolidating concrete (SCC) mixes with 28-day strengths of 5,000–6,000 psi are increasingly common for large-diameter US drilled shafts to improve cage flowability.
      What is the difference between a bored pile and a drilled shaft in the USA?+
      In US practice, bored pile and drilled shaft refer to the same type of deep foundation — a cylindrical excavation drilled by rotary equipment, filled with reinforced cast-in-place concrete. "Drilled shaft" is the preferred term in FHWA and AASHTO literature. "Caisson" is the common Midwest building industry term (especially Chicago). "Bored pile" is more common in geotechnical literature and internationally. The term "pier" is also used regionally. The key distinction from driven piles is that no driving energy is used — the shaft is formed by drilling and filled with fresh concrete in place.
      Why do bored piles require more concrete than the theoretical volume?+
      Bored piles always require more concrete than theoretical calculations due to several factors:
      • Borehole overbreak — drilling creates a hole 10–20% larger than the nominal bit diameter in most soils
      • Top cutoff — 2–4 feet of contaminated concrete at each pile top must be removed and wasted
      • Slump loss — some concrete volume is lost filling voids and irregularities in the borehole wall
      • Soft bottom displacement — concrete displaces loose sediment at the pile toe
      FHWA recommends a 15–20% overpour factor for competent soil in uncased boreholes, and 30–50% for caving soils or slurry-drilled shafts. Always order extra concrete — running short mid-pour requires emergency batching and can compromise pile integrity.
      What rebar is used in bored piles in the USA?+
      US drilled shaft rebar cages typically use:
      • Longitudinal bars: ASTM A615 Grade 60 or A706 Grade 60 deformed bars, typically #8 through #18 depending on pile diameter and load
      • Transverse reinforcement: Circular hoops or continuous spirals of #4 or #5 bars at 6-inch pitch, transitioning to 3-inch pitch in the top 2× diameter zone per ACI 318-19 seismic provisions
      • Rebar ratio: Typically 1.0–2.0% of gross pile area for compression-dominant piles; up to 3.0% in high-seismic zones (SDC D, E, F)
      • Cover: Minimum 3 inches from spiral/hoop to borehole face per ACI 318-19 Table 20.6.1.4
      For seismic Design Categories D through F, AASHTO and ACI 318-19 Chapter 18 require enhanced confinement (closer hoop spacing) throughout the pile length.
      How much does a bored pile / drilled shaft cost in the USA in 2025?+
      Drilled shaft installation costs in the USA vary widely by diameter, depth, soil conditions, and region. Typical 2025 cost ranges:
      • 18–24 in residential caissons: $350–$900 per pile (20–30 ft depth)
      • 24–36 in commercial shafts: $800–$3,000 per pile (30–50 ft)
      • 36–48 in medium shafts: $2,500–$8,000 per pile (40–60 ft)
      • 48–72 in large shafts: $8,000–$30,000 per pile (50–80 ft)
      • 72 in+ bridge/major structures: $25,000–$100,000+ per shaft
      Unit costs include drilling, rebar cage, concrete placement, and mobilization. Rock drilling adds $150–$500/ft to cost. Pacific Coast and Northeast US are typically 20–40% higher than Midwest pricing.
      When should I use a belled (underreamed) pile vs a straight shaft in the USA?+
      Use a belled pile when:
      • The bearing stratum is stiff clay, hardpan, or weathered rock that can maintain the bell shape without caving
      • High end-bearing capacity is needed to reduce pile length or count
      • Significant uplift (tension) resistance is required — the bell acts like an anchor
      • The pile is in the Midwest (Chicago, Kansas City) where glacial till and stiff clays are common
      Use a straight shaft when:
      • Soil is sandy, gravelly, loose, or water-bearing (bell would cave)
      • The pile is drilled using slurry or in a cased borehole
      • Rock socket capacity is sufficient without a bell
      • The project is in coastal areas or the South where cohesionless soils predominate
      What is the FHWA Drilled Shafts Manual and where can I find it?+
      The FHWA Drilled Shafts: Construction Procedures and LRFD Design Methods Manual (FHWA NHI-10-016), published by the Federal Highway Administration in 2010, is the authoritative US reference for drilled shaft design and construction. It covers soil and rock capacity methods (alpha, beta, and tip resistance), construction methods (dry, cased, slurry), quality control (CSL testing, static load testing), and AASHTO LRFD design procedures. The manual is available as a free PDF download from the FHWA website (fhwa.dot.gov) and is required reading for any US engineer designing drilled shaft foundations for transportation projects.

      Bored Pile & Drilled Shaft Resources — USA

      Official design manuals, standards, and technical resources for US drilled shaft projects.

      🏛️

      FHWA Drilled Shafts Manual (NHI-10-016)

      Federal Design Manual

      The Federal Highway Administration's Drilled Shafts Manual is the primary US reference for drilled shaft design and construction — covering LRFD capacity methods, construction procedures, quality control testing (CSL), and inspection requirements for highway and bridge drilled shaft foundations.

      FHWA Drilled Shafts
      🏗️

      ACI 318-19 — Building Code for Concrete

      ACI Standard

      ACI 318-19 governs the structural design and concrete material requirements for cast-in-place concrete piles and drilled shafts in US building construction — including minimum f'c, rebar requirements, cover, and confinement reinforcement for seismic applications.

      Visit ACI
      🔩

      DFI — Deep Foundations Institute

      Industry Association

      The Deep Foundations Institute (DFI) is the primary US industry association for drilled shaft, driven pile, and deep foundation contractors and engineers — providing technical publications, inspection guidelines, training courses, and contractor directories for all US deep foundation types including bored piles.

      Visit DFI