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San Francisco CA Concrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & SF Bay Cost

Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and San Francisco-accurate Bay Area ready-mix costs for driveways, seismic foundations, retaining walls, patios & more — SF Building Code compliant, CSLB licensed, DBI permit.

$192
Avg San Francisco CA Ready-Mix (per Cu Yd)
3,000
Min PSI — SF CA Exterior Flatwork
SDC D
Seismic — San Andreas + Hayward Faults
CBSP
SF Concrete Building Safety Program 2025
🚗 Driveway 🏠 Seismic Foundation 🛤️ Patio / Deck 🌿 Retaining Wall 🏢 Commercial / Seismic Retrofit 🔧 Pump Truck Required
The San Francisco CA Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders estimate cubic yards, bag count, and ready-mix costs for any concrete project in San Francisco, California — the most densely populated city in California with a population of approximately 874,000 in San Francisco County. San Francisco ready-mix pricing typically runs $178–$210/yd, among the highest in the United States, reflecting the city's extreme construction costs, dense urban access challenges, and stringent SF Building Code requirements. San Francisco's concrete environment is uniquely demanding in four ways: Seismic Design Category D — with the San Andreas Fault running directly through the western Peninsula (Daly City, ~5 miles south) and the Hayward Fault across the Bay, both capable of catastrophic earthquakes; Marina District, SoMa, and Mission Bay liquefaction zones — proven in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, where Marina District Bay fill liquefied and caused building collapse and fire; the San Francisco Concrete Building Safety Program (CBSP) — a 2025 SF Board of Supervisors ordinance (April 2025) requiring seismic screening of approximately 4,000 concrete buildings by June 2027; and an ultra-dense urban environment with narrow streets, steep hills, and restricted lot access that makes pump trucks virtually mandatory for most pours. No frost depth applies — zero frost depth in SF's mild oceanic climate. All CA contractors must hold a valid CSLB license — verify at cslb.ca.gov. Permits are issued by the SF Department of Building Inspection (DBI) at (628) 652-3200. Explore more at Concrete Toolkit.

🌁 San Francisco CA Concrete Calculator

🌁 SF-Accurate Pricing · SF Building Code · DBI Permit · Seismic SDC D · CBSP 2025 · Pump Truck Urban Access
San Francisco CA Concrete Calculator
Cubic yards, bags needed & San Francisco CA Bay Area ready-mix cost — instant results
🚗 Driveway 🏠 Seismic Foundation 🛤️ Patio / Deck 🌿 Retaining Wall 🏢 Commercial / Retrofit

Enter your project dimensions to calculate volume, bags needed, and estimated San Francisco CA Bay Area material cost.

Driveway / garage apron: 4–5 in., 3,000–3,500 PSI, #3/#4 rebar at 18 in. OC, 6 in. Class 2 aggregate base. SF DBI permit required — (628) 652-3200. CSLB B or C-8 contractor mandatory. Seismic SDC D. Pump truck almost always required — SF street access. No frost depth concern.

Sidewalk 3–4 in · Driveway apron 4–5 in · Patio/Deck 4 in · Seismic Foundation 5–6 in · Footing 12–24 in · Seismic Retrofit per SE design

Cubic Yards Required
Including waste factor

📋 Project Summary

    💵 San Francisco CA Cost Estimate

      📐 San Francisco CA Driveway / Slab — Fully Annotated Cross-Section

      🌁 SF Building Code · Seismic SDC D ⚠ Marina / SoMa / Mission Bay Liquefaction ⚠ Bay Fill Soils — 1906 + 1989 EQ Damage 0 in. Frost Depth · Pump Truck Required
      1
      SURFACE FINISH — Broom, Exposed Aggregate, Brushed or Colored Non-slip broom required on all driveways and steps · Exposed aggregate and colored finishes popular in SF Victorian/Edwardian streetscapes · Apply silane/siloxane sealer at 28 days — SF fog moisture protection essential
      2
      CONCRETE SLAB — 3,000–3,500 PSI (4,000+ PSI Structural) #3 / #4 Rebar @ 18 in. OC Both Ways · Seismic SDC D: seismic hooks mandatory on all ties
      W/C Ratio ≤ 0.50 · No plain structural concrete (2022 SFBC + DBI seismic reqs.)
      10-mil poly vapor barrier under all interior slabs
      Fog / marine air: cover with plastic sheeting 48 hrs after pour
      Cure minimum 7 days — wet burlap or curing compound
      Pump truck virtually always required in SF — plan in advance
      3
      REBAR / WWF — ASTM A615 Grade 60 · SDC D Full Seismic Detail Min. 1.5–2 in. concrete cover · Chairs / dobies required · Seismic hooks on all ties and stirrups · Epoxy-coated rebar recommended for all SF coastal exposure slabs · Special inspection during all structural pours
      4
      CLASS 2 AGGREGATE BASE — 6 in. Min. (Caltrans / SF DPW Standard) 6 in. compacted Class II aggregate base · Compacted ≥ 95% Modified Proctor
      Proofrolled before pour · Geotextile fabric recommended over Bay fill / soft soils
      SF DPW encroachment permit required for any work in public ROW
      5
      ⚠ BAY FILL / LIQUEFACTION ZONE — Marina, SoMa, Mission Bay Hydraulic Bay fill placed 1870s–1915 (Marina District filled for 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition)
      Liquefied in both 1906 (M7.9) and 1989 (M6.7 Loma Prieta) earthquakes — sand boils throughout Marina District
      CGS Seismic Hazard Zone check + CA-licensed GE required for all Bay-fill sites
      6
      NATIVE SUBGRADE — Franciscan Bedrock / Serpentinite / Dune Sand Western / elevated SF: Franciscan complex bedrock — excellent bearing capacity · Central valley / low-lying areas: dune sand and alluvium · Bay-edge: soft clay and Bay mud · Soil conditions vary dramatically across SF's 7×7 mile area
      ½ in.Finish
      4–5 in.Slab
      ~1 in.Rebar
      6 in.Base
      ⚠ FillMarina/SoMa
      VariesBedrock
      27
      Cu ft per cubic yard
      45
      80 lb bags per cu yd
      $192
      Avg San Francisco CA ready-mix / yd
      4,000
      SF concrete buildings — CBSP screening req. 2027
      1 Surface Finish
      2 Concrete Slab
      3 Rebar / WWF
      4 Class 2 Base (6 in.)
      5 Bay Fill Liquefaction Zone
      6 Franciscan Bedrock / Subgrade

      San Francisco CA Concrete — What You Need to Know

      San Francisco is arguably the most complex concrete construction environment in the United States, combining the most expensive urban labor market in the country, extreme seismic hazard from multiple fault systems, proven liquefaction zones, steep and narrow hillside lots requiring pump trucks for nearly every pour, and a 2025 Board of Supervisors concrete building safety mandate affecting 4,000 structures. The city sits directly between the San Andreas Fault (~5 miles southwest through Daly City) and the Hayward Fault (~12 miles east across the Bay). The 1906 earthquake (M7.9) ruptured the San Andreas Fault directly through San Francisco County, destroying 80% of the city. The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (M6.7) caused the Marina District to liquefy, collapsing buildings, rupturing gas lines, and causing devastating fires in the neighborhood built on 1915 Bay fill. Permits are issued by the SF Department of Building Inspection (DBI) at (628) 652-3200.

      🔵 San Francisco CA Minimum Concrete Requirements — 2022 SF Building Code (SFBC)

      Driveways / flatwork: 3,000 PSI min, #3/#4 rebar at 18 in. OC, 4–5 in. thick, 6 in. Class 2 base, W/C ≤ 0.50 · Seismic foundations (SDC D): 4,000 PSI min, CA-licensed SE/PE design, no plain structural concrete, special inspection during all structural pours — 2022 SFBC confirmed · CBSP (April 2025 ordinance): All ~4,000 non-ductile concrete buildings must submit DBI seismic screening by June 9, 2027 — CA-licensed SE/PE required for assessment; voluntary retrofit standards established for early adopters · Marina / SoMa / Mission Bay: CGS Seismic Hazard Zone check mandatory + CA-licensed GE geotechnical report for any structural foundation in designated liquefaction zones · Stormwater: SF SFPUC Stormwater Design Guidelines apply to all projects disturbing ≥ 5,000 sq ft. Contact SF DBI at (628) 652-3200 for current requirements.

      🏚️ San Andreas + Hayward + CBSP 2025

      San Francisco faces seismic threat from multiple directions. The San Andreas Fault caused the catastrophic 1906 earthquake (M7.9) that destroyed 80% of the city, and a repeat event is considered by USGS to have a 72% probability of a M6.7+ earthquake on the Bay Area fault system within 30 years. In April 2025, the SF Board of Supervisors unanimously passed legislation requiring owners of approximately 4,000 non-ductile concrete buildings to submit seismic screening assessments to DBI by June 9, 2027, using the new DBI Concrete Screening portal. Buildings not excluded by initial screening must hire a CA-licensed architect, civil engineer, or structural engineer for detailed assessment. This CBSP (Concrete Building Safety Program) reflects the city's recognition that unreinforced concrete is a primary earthquake life-safety risk — and that new concrete poured in SF must meet full SDC D seismic detailing requirements without exception.

      🌊 Marina District + SoMa Liquefaction — Proven 1906 & 1989

      San Francisco's most serious concrete foundation hazard is well-documented: the Marina District, South of Market (SoMa), and Mission Bay all overlie hydraulic Bay fill placed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (M6.7, epicenter 60 miles away), Marina District soils liquefied extensively — sand boils erupted through streets and building foundations, causing multiple building collapses, gas line ruptures, and a neighborhood-scale fire. CGS research confirmed the liquefied area precisely matched the boundary of the old lagoon filled in 1915 for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Before any foundation concrete project in low-lying SF neighborhoods, check the CGS Seismic Hazard Zones map for your address. A CA-licensed GE geotechnical report is required by SF DBI for any foundation work in designated liquefaction zones.

      🚒 Pump Trucks + Steep Hills + Urban Access

      San Francisco's dense urban fabric, narrow streets, steep hills, and restricted lot access make concrete pump trucks virtually mandatory for the vast majority of pours — unlike suburban markets where direct chute discharge is common. SF's famous hills (Nob Hill, Russian Hill, Twin Peaks, etc.) mean that many residential lots are accessed only by staircases, narrow driveways, or shared alleys. A standard ready-mix truck cannot discharge by chute on most SF lots — a boom pump truck ($800–$1,500 for a 4-hour minimum) is required to reach rear yards, basement levels, and hillside foundations. Additionally, SF DPW street use permits are required whenever a pump truck or ready-mix truck must park in the public right-of-way during a pour — contact SFMTA/DPW at least 72 hours in advance. Plan for pump truck, street permit, and parking meter bagging costs in every SF concrete budget.

      How to Calculate Concrete Volume in San Francisco CA

      📐 San Francisco CA Concrete 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: 14×20 ft SF garage apron × 4.5 in = 105 cu ft = 3.89 cu yd → Order 4.5 cu yd
      Example: 16×20 ft rear patio × 4 in = 106.7 cu ft = 3.95 cu yd → Order 4.5 cu yd
      Example: 25×40 ft seismic found. × 5 in = 416.7 cu ft = 15.43 cu yd → Order 17.0 cu yd

      ⚠️ San Francisco Pump Truck Warning — Plan Street Access Before Booking Ready-Mix

      The single most common costly mistake on SF concrete projects is booking ready-mix without securing street access, pump truck, and DPW permits first. In San Francisco, this sequence is mandatory: (1) Secure SF DPW street use permit for pump truck + ready-mix truck parking in the public ROW — apply at least 72 hours in advance at sf.gov/public-works; (2) Book SFMTA parking meter bagging for any metered spaces needed (minimum 24-hour advance notice, typically $100–$200/space/day); (3) Book boom pump truck — Peninsula-area pump companies book 2–3 weeks out in peak season; (4) THEN book ready-mix delivery, coordinating arrival time with the pump truck schedule. SF ready-mix trucks cannot wait more than 90 minutes from batching — if your street access, pump setup, or rebar inspection runs over, you risk losing your load. Also: SF DBI requires a pre-pour inspection of all reinforcing steel before any structural pour — schedule the inspector 48 hours in advance and confirm the morning of the pour.

      San Francisco CA Concrete Pricing — Current Reference

      San Francisco and Bay Area ready-mix is supplied by Harbor Ready-Mix (serving SF to Santa Clara via Redwood City) and other Peninsula suppliers. SF is the highest-cost concrete market in the United States — reflecting extreme Bay Area labor costs, California regulatory overhead, pump truck requirements on virtually every pour, and complex DBI permitting and inspection requirements. Short-load fees are especially significant in SF since most residential projects are under 5 yards. Always budget for pump truck, DPW street permit, and meter bagging costs in addition to material.

      Mix / PSI San Francisco CA Price / Cu Yd National Avg Best For Seismic Spec SFBC Code
      3,000 PSI — CA Standard$178–$194$143–$158Driveways, walkways, patios#3/#4 RebarCompliant
      3,500 PSI — Outdoor Slab$184–$200$153–$166Rear patios, exposed decks#3/#4 RebarCompliant
      4,000 PSI — Seismic Foundation$190–$208$161–$173Structural foundations (SDC D)SE/PE RequiredCompliant
      4,500 PSI — Commercial / Retrofit$200–$218$171–$181CBSP seismic retrofit / commercialSpecial InspectionCompliant
      5,000 PSI — High Strength$210–$228$178–$193High-rise / tilt-up / precastEngineer SpecCompliant
      Pump Truck (Boom)$800–$1,500/pour$400–$900/pourVirtually all SF poursRequiredSF Standard
      Decorative / Colored Add-On+$20–$35/yd+$12–$22/ydVictorian / historic streetscapeStandard BaseCompliant

      3,000 PSI — Standard (Driveways / Patios)

      San Francisco CA Price$178–$194/yd
      Seismic Spec#3/#4 Rebar
      SFBC CodeCompliant

      4,000 PSI — Seismic Foundation (SDC D)

      San Francisco CA Price$190–$208/yd
      Seismic SpecSE/PE Required
      SFBC CodeCompliant

      Pump Truck — Virtually All SF Pours

      SF Pump Truck Cost$800–$1,500/pour
      DPW Street PermitRequired 72 hrs ahead
      StatusSF Standard

      4,500 PSI — CBSP Seismic Retrofit

      San Francisco CA Price$200–$218/yd
      Seismic SpecSpecial Inspection
      SFBC CodeCompliant

      ✅ San Francisco CA Pro Tip — SE/PE + Liquefaction Check + Pump Truck + DPW Permit

      Four non-negotiables for every SF concrete project: (1) CA-licensed SE or PE for all structural work — 2022 SFBC prohibits structural plain concrete in SDC D and the CBSP 2025 ordinance mandates professional assessment for ~4,000 existing concrete buildings; (2) CGS liquefaction map check for Marina, SoMa, Mission Bay, and all Bay-edge SF addresses before any foundation work — GE geotechnical report required by SF DBI if in designated zone; (3) Book pump truck and SF DPW street use permit 72 hours+ in advance — never book ready-mix without confirmed pump truck and street access secured first; and (4) Apply silane/siloxane penetrating sealer + acrylic topcoat to all SF exterior concrete at 28 days — SF's marine fog, salt air, and cool moist climate accelerate concrete surface carbonation and rebar corrosion; epoxy-coated rebar is strongly recommended in all coastal-exposure SF slabs. Verify CSLB license at cslb.ca.gov and DBI permit requirements at sfdbi.org (628) 652-3200.

      San Francisco CA Bag Count Quick Reference

      Project Dimensions Cu Yards 80 lb Bags Recommendation
      Small Rear Patio10×12 ft × 4 in.1.48 yd67 bagsBags OK — But pump truck still needed
      Garage Apron / Driveway14×20 ft × 4.5 in.3.89 yd175 bagsReady-Mix + Pump Required
      Rear Deck / Patio16×20 ft × 4 in.3.95 yd178 bagsReady-Mix + Pump Required
      Retaining Wall20 ft × 6 ft × 8 in.2.96 yd134 bagsReady-Mix + Pump Required
      Seismic Foundation25×40 ft × 5 in.15.43 yd695 bagsReady-Mix + Pump Required
      Entry Steps (4 steps)5 ft wide typical0.80 yd36 bagsBags OK — Pump for access

      Garage Apron / Driveway — 14×20 ft × 4.5 in.

      Cubic Yards3.89 yd
      80 lb Bags175 bags
      RecommendationReady-Mix + Pump

      Seismic Foundation — 25×40 ft × 5 in.

      Cubic Yards15.43 yd
      80 lb Bags695 bags
      RecommendationReady-Mix + Pump

      Rear Deck / Patio — 16×20 ft × 4 in.

      Cubic Yards3.95 yd
      80 lb Bags178 bags
      RecommendationReady-Mix + Pump

      Small Rear Patio — 10×12 ft × 4 in.

      Cubic Yards1.48 yd
      80 lb Bags67 bags
      RecommendationBags OK / Pump Access

      San Francisco CA Concrete — Frequently Asked Questions

      How much does a concrete driveway cost in San Francisco, CA?+
      A 14×20 ft garage apron/driveway in San Francisco typically costs $4,500–$10,500 installed — the highest range of any US city for this project size, reflecting SF's extreme labor costs, mandatory pump truck, and DBI permit requirements. Material (~4 yards of 3,000 PSI) runs approximately $712–$776. SF labor rates run $6.50–$11.00/sq ft for standard broom-finish flatwork. Pump truck adds $800–$1,500. DBI permit + DPW street use permit add $300–$800. Decorative finishes cost $18–$28/sq ft installed. Always verify CSLB license at cslb.ca.gov and contact SF DBI at (628) 652-3200 for current permit requirements.
      What is San Francisco's Concrete Building Safety Program (CBSP)?+
      The San Francisco Concrete Building Safety Program (CBSP) was established by the SF Board of Supervisors in April 2025, requiring owners of approximately 4,000 non-ductile concrete and tilt-up buildings in SF to submit seismic safety screening assessments to SF DBI by June 9, 2027. Owners use the DBI online concrete screening portal to provide building information. Buildings not excluded by initial screening must hire a CA-licensed architect, civil engineer, or structural engineer for detailed assessment. The ordinance currently focuses on assessment rather than mandatory retrofitting, but establishes voluntary retrofit standards for early adopters. For new concrete construction, the CBSP reinforces that all SF structural concrete must meet SDC D requirements with full seismic detailing — no plain structural concrete permitted under the 2022 SFBC.
      What is the liquefaction risk in San Francisco?+
      San Francisco has some of the most extensively documented liquefaction hazard in the world. The Marina District, SoMa, Mission Bay, and Bay-edge neighborhoods all overlie hydraulic Bay fill placed between the 1870s and 1915. During the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (M6.7, epicenter 60 miles away), the Marina District experienced widespread liquefaction — sand boils erupted throughout streets, buildings collapsed into liquefied soil, gas lines ruptured, and a catastrophic neighborhood fire burned for hours. Research by USGS confirmed that even a smaller earthquake than 1989 will produce some degree of liquefaction in the Marina District. Check your SF address on the CGS Seismic Hazard Zones map. If your site is in a designated liquefaction zone, SF DBI requires a CA-licensed GE geotechnical report before issuing any foundation structural permit.
      Do I need a pump truck for concrete in San Francisco?+
      In virtually all cases, yes. San Francisco's dense urban environment, steep hillside lots, narrow shared driveways, and restricted rear-yard access make direct chute discharge from a ready-mix truck impossible for most SF pours. A boom pump truck (typically $800–$1,500 for a 4-hour minimum) is required to place concrete in rear yards, basement foundations, hillside footings, and above-grade decks. Even front driveway aprons often require a pump because the ready-mix truck cannot position close enough to the pour area due to parked cars, fire hydrants, and sidewalk clearances. You must also secure an SF DPW street use permit and SFMTA parking meter bagging for any equipment in the public right-of-way — apply at least 72 hours in advance. Never book a concrete pour in SF without first confirming pump truck availability and street permit status.
      Do I need a permit for concrete in San Francisco, CA?+
      Yes — SF DBI requires permits for new driveways, patios over 200 sq ft, all foundations and footings, retaining walls over 30 inches, any seismic retrofit work, and all commercial concrete. Contact SF Department of Building Inspection (DBI) at (628) 652-3200 or visit sfdbi.org. Your contractor must hold an active CSLB Class B or C-8 license — verify at cslb.ca.gov. Structural permits require CA-licensed SE/PE calculations and typically take 6–12 weeks for plan check in SF's busy DBI permit queue. Required inspections include: steel/rebar inspection (before pour), underslab inspection (plumbing, vapor barrier, gravel base), and final inspection. Also required: SF DPW street use permit for any equipment in the public ROW, coordinated with every pour.
      How many cubic yards for a San Francisco garage apron or rear patio?+
      Use: (Length × Width × Thickness ÷ 12) ÷ 27 × 1.10. A 14×20 ft garage apron at 4.5 in = 3.89 yd → order 4.5 yd. A 16×20 ft rear patio at 4 in = 3.95 yd → order 4.5 yd. A 12×24 ft driveway at 4.5 in = 4.0 yd → order 4.5 yd. A 25×40 ft seismic foundation at 5 in = 15.43 yd → order 17.0 yd. SF projects under 3 yards are best done with 80 lb bags to avoid short-load fees ($125–$200 extra from ready-mix plants) — but pump truck access cost still applies on most SF lots. Use our San Francisco CA Concrete Calculator above for instant Bay Area-accurate estimates.

      San Francisco CA Concrete Resources

      Official references for San Francisco, California concrete projects

      🏛️

      SF Department of Building Inspection (DBI)

      Permits, CBSP & Inspections

      Apply for building permits, schedule concrete inspections (rebar, underslab, final), register for the CBSP Concrete Building Safety Program, and verify 2022 SFBC seismic requirements for all San Francisco residential and commercial concrete. Contact SF DBI at (628) 652-3200. Structural permit plan check typically takes 6–12 weeks — begin the process before booking any contractor. The CBSP online screening portal allows building owners to submit seismic assessments by the June 9, 2027 deadline. DPW street use permits (for pump trucks in the public ROW) are coordinated separately at sf.gov/public-works.

      Visit SF DBI Department
      📋

      CSLB — CA Contractor License Lookup

      License Verification

      Verify your San Francisco concrete contractor holds an active California State License Board (CSLB) license before signing any contract. Require CSLB Class B (General Building) or C-8 (Concrete) for flatwork and foundations. For structural and seismic retrofit work, also require a CA-licensed Structural Engineer (SE) or Civil Engineer (PE). In San Francisco, confirm active general liability insurance plus workers' compensation — SF's high labor rates and complex project environments mean unlicensed contractor liability is especially significant. Unlicensed contractors cannot pull SF DBI permits, cannot pass required special seismic inspections, and expose homeowners to full financial liability.

      Search CSLB Contractor Licenses
      🌤️

      NOAA Weather — San Francisco CA + CGS Liquefaction Map

      Pour Day Planning & Liquefaction Check

      Check the 10-day San Francisco CA forecast before scheduling any concrete pour — target days above 50°F with zero rain probability and no dense fog advisory. SF's marine climate means dense fog and cool temperatures year-round; temperatures below 50°F slow curing (apply ACI 306 cold-weather practices), and rain or heavy fog will ruin a fresh pour. Always check the CGS Seismic Hazard Zones map for your SF address before any foundation project to determine liquefaction zone status — required before SF DBI will issue structural permits for Marina, SoMa, Mission Bay, and other Bay-edge addresses.

      Check San Francisco CA Forecast