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Indiana Concrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & Cost

Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and Indiana-accurate ready-mix costs for any concrete project — driveways, foundations, Indianapolis metro slabs, Lake Michigan freeze-thaw footings, Indiana limestone belt projects & more.

$123
Avg IN Ready-Mix (per Cu Yd)
3,500
Min PSI — IN Exposed Flatwork
36 in
Frost Depth — South Bend / N. Indiana
IPLA
IN Professional Licensing Agency
🚗 Driveway 🏗️ Foundation / Basement 🏁 Indianapolis Metro Slab ❄️ Lake Michigan Freeze-Thaw 🪨 Indiana Limestone Belt 🏠 Garage Floor
The Indiana Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders estimate cubic yards, bag count, and ready-mix costs for any concrete project across the Hoosier State. Pricing typically runs $113–$150/yd statewide — Indiana benefits from abundant high-quality aggregate resources, including the famous Indiana Limestone Belt (Lawrence and Monroe counties near Bedford and Bloomington), which keeps aggregate costs low statewide. Indiana spans three distinct concrete environments: Northern Indiana (South Bend, Fort Wayne, Elkhart, Gary/Hammond) — the harshest concrete climate in the state, with lake-effect snow from Lake Michigan driving 200+ freeze-thaw cycles per winter in NW Indiana and frost depths reaching 36 inches in South Bend; Central Indiana (Indianapolis metro, Muncie, Anderson, Lafayette) — Indiana's largest construction market, moderate freeze-thaw with ~28-inch frost depth, and expansive clay soils common across the Indianapolis Basin; and Southern Indiana (Evansville, Bloomington, Columbus, Terre Haute) — milder winters, lower frost depth (~18–20 inches), and the Indiana Limestone Belt providing locally abundant aggregate. Indiana contractor licensing is managed by the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA) — commercial contractors must be licensed, while residential licensing is regulated at the local level. Building permits are issued by local city and county building departments under the Indiana Building Code (IBC-based).

🏁 Indiana Concrete Calculator

🏁 IN-Accurate Pricing · IBC + ACI 306 Compliant · Indiana State
Indiana Concrete Calculator
Cubic yards, bags needed & IN ready-mix cost — instant results
🚗 Driveway 🏗️ Foundation 🏁 Indianapolis Slab ❄️ NW Indiana Lake-Effect 🪨 Limestone Belt

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

Residential driveway: 4–6 in. depth, 3,500 PSI min. Air-entrained required in northern and central IN. INDOT access permit required on state-maintained roads.

Patio/walkway 4 in · Driveway 4–6 in · N. Indiana 5–6 in · Basement floor 4 in · Footing 10–14 in · Foundation wall 8–10 in

Cubic Yards Required
Including waste factor

📋 Project Summary

    💵 Indiana Cost Estimate

      📐 Indiana Driveway / Slab Cross-Section — IN Standard Layers

      Broom Finish — IN Standard (Freeze-Thaw Resistant · ACI 318 Exposure Class F1–F2)
      Concrete — 4–6 in. (Indiana Building Code / IBC)
      3,500–4,000 PSI · Air-Entrained 4–7% (N. & Central IN) · W/C ≤ 0.45 · Rebar on Clay Sites
      ⬛ Rebar #4 / Wire Mesh — Recommended All IN Driveways & Foundations
      🪨 4–6 in. Compacted Crushed Limestone / Gravel Base (Free-Draining)
      Compacted Subgrade — Frost: 18–20 in. (Evansville) / 28 in. (Indianapolis) / 36 in. (South Bend)
      27
      Cu ft per cubic yard
      45
      80 lb bags per cu yd
      $123
      Avg IN ready-mix / yd
      Concrete Slab Rebar Layer Limestone Base Subgrade

      Indiana Concrete Calculator — What You Need to Know

      Indiana's concrete environment ranges from one of the most freeze-thaw-aggressive zones in the Midwest to a mild southern climate within just 300 miles. Northern Indiana — particularly the Lake Michigan shoreline communities of Gary, Hammond, Portage, Michigan City, and the South Bend/Elkhart metro — endures some of the harshest concrete exposure in the Midwest. Lake-effect snow from Lake Michigan delivers repeated wet-freeze-thaw cycles throughout winter, with frost depths reaching 36 inches in South Bend. All outdoor concrete in this zone must be air-entrained at 5–7%, with a maximum W/C ratio of 0.45, sealed after curing, and reinforced with rebar or wire mesh. Central Indiana — anchored by the Indianapolis metro (the state's dominant construction market), Muncie, Anderson, and Lafayette — sees moderate freeze-thaw with ~28-inch frost depth. Expansive clay soils are common across much of central Indiana's glacially-deposited till plains, requiring compacted limestone sub-base and rebar reinforcement for any slab. Southern Indiana (Evansville, Bloomington, Columbus, Terre Haute) enjoys milder winters with ~18–20-inch frost depth and sits atop the renowned Indiana Limestone Belt — the Bedford/Bloomington area produces high-quality Salem and Oolitic limestone used as aggregate statewide. Indiana contractor licensing is administered by the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA) for commercial work; residential contractors should confirm local licensing requirements with their city or county.

      🔵 Indiana Building Code — Minimum Concrete Requirements

      Exposed flatwork (driveways, patios, walkways): 3,500 PSI min statewide · Structural / foundations: 4,000 PSI · Air entrainment: Required in northern IN (5–7%), strongly recommended in central IN (4–6%); ACI 318 Exposure Class F1 (moderate) to F2 (severe) applies north of Indianapolis · W/C ratio: max 0.45 · Frost depth: ~18–20 in. (Evansville) · ~28 in. (Indianapolis) · ~36 in. (South Bend / NW Indiana). Indiana adopts the IBC — always verify frost depth and permit requirements with your local city or county building department before excavating.

      🚗 Indiana Driveway

      A standard 10×40 ft driveway at 4 inches needs ~4.9 cubic yards (at 6 in: ~7.4 yd). At IN pricing of $115–$143/yd, a 6-inch driveway material cost runs $852–$1,058. Northern Indiana driveways benefit greatly from 5–6 inch thickness with 5% air-entrained 3,500 PSI — the Lake Michigan freeze-thaw cycle delivers more concrete surface stress per winter than almost anywhere in the Midwest.

      ❄️ NW Indiana — Lake Michigan Freeze-Thaw

      The Lake Michigan shoreline zone (Gary, Hammond, Portage, Chesterton, Michigan City, La Porte) is the most freeze-thaw-aggressive concrete environment in Indiana. Lake-effect moisture combined with temperatures that repeatedly cross the freezing point can deliver 200+ freeze-thaw cycles per winter — far more than any other Indiana region. Specify 4,000 PSI with 5–7% air entrainment, W/C ≤ 0.40, and apply a penetrating silane/siloxane sealer to all finished concrete surfaces in this zone.

      🪨 Indiana Limestone Belt — Local Aggregate Advantage

      Lawrence and Monroe counties (Bedford, Bloomington, Oolitic) form the heart of the Indiana Limestone Belt — one of the most productive dimensional and crushed limestone regions in North America. Locally quarried limestone aggregate keeps concrete pricing competitive across all of southern and central Indiana. Crushed limestone from this belt is the standard sub-base material for concrete flatwork statewide, providing excellent drainage and a stable non-expansive foundation layer.

      How to Calculate Concrete Volume for Indiana Projects

      Measure your project length and width in feet, depth in inches. Convert depth to feet (divide by 12), multiply all three dimensions together for cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. Add at least 10% for waste — for northern Indiana projects where subgrade conditions can be uneven after winter frost heaving, add 15%. For neighboring state pricing comparisons, see the Ohio Concrete Calculator or the Illinois Concrete Calculator.

      📐 Indiana 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 × 5 in = 83.3 cu ft = 3.09 cu yd → Order 3.4 cu yd (+10%)

      ⚠️ NW Indiana — Lake-Effect Freeze-Thaw Scaling Warning

      Northwest Indiana's Lake Michigan climate delivers moisture-saturated air masses that repeatedly freeze and thaw concrete surfaces throughout winter — a primary cause of concrete scaling, spalling, and surface deterioration. Non-air-entrained concrete in Gary, Hammond, Portage, and Michigan City typically shows visible scaling within 2–3 winters. The fix is inexpensive at pour time: specify 5–7% air entrainment, W/C ratio 0.40 or lower, cure for a full 7 days, and wait at least 30 days before applying any deicing salts. Avoid calcium chloride deicers — use sand or potassium acetate instead on new concrete for the first winter.

      Indiana Concrete Pricing Reference

      The Indianapolis metro (Marion, Hamilton, Hendricks, Johnson, Boone, and Madison counties) is the most competitive ready-mix market in Indiana due to high construction volume and multiple suppliers. Fort Wayne and South Bend/Elkhart are near the state average. The Louisville, KY border area influences Evansville pricing. Rural southern Indiana counties can run $8–$14/yd higher due to fewer batching plants. Air-entrained mixes for northern Indiana add $5–$10/yd.

      Mix Type / PSI IN Price / Cu Yd National Avg Best For Air Entrained? IN Code
      3,000 PSI — Standard$106–$126$125–$145Interior slabs, fully protected areasNot OutdoorInterior Only
      3,500 PSI — IN Standard$113–$136$133–$152Patios, walkways, garage floors, drivewaysRecommendedCompliant
      4,000 PSI — Structural$121–$146$140–$162Foundations, N. Indiana driveways, structuralN. IN RequiredCompliant
      4,500 PSI — High Structural$131–$156$150–$172Heavy structural, industrial, tilt-wall panelsRequiredCompliant
      5,000 PSI — Commercial$141–$168$158–$185Commercial, industrial, heavy precastRequiredCompliant
      Fiber-Reinforced / Colored$149–$188$155–$200Decorative patios, stamped drivewaysRecommendedCompliant

      3,000 PSI — Standard

      IN Price / Cu Yd$106–$126
      National Avg$125–$145
      Best ForInterior / fully protected slabs only

      3,500 PSI — IN Standard

      IN Price / Cu Yd$113–$136
      National Avg$133–$152
      Best ForPatios, walkways, garage floors, driveways

      4,000 PSI — Structural

      IN Price / Cu Yd$121–$146
      National Avg$140–$162
      Best ForFoundations, N. Indiana driveways, structural

      4,500 PSI — High Structural

      IN Price / Cu Yd$131–$156
      National Avg$150–$172
      Best ForHeavy structural, industrial, tilt-wall panels

      5,000 PSI — Commercial

      IN Price / Cu Yd$141–$168
      National Avg$158–$185
      Best ForCommercial, industrial, heavy precast

      ✅ Indiana Cold-Weather Concreting — ACI 306 Requirements

      Indiana winters — especially in the northern half of the state — frequently require ACI 306 cold-weather concreting procedures. Do not pour concrete when air temperature is below 40°F without proper cold-weather protection: use heated mix water, insulating blankets, and maintain slab temperature above 50°F for at least 7 days. In South Bend, Fort Wayne, and Indianapolis, the concrete pouring season is most reliable from mid-April through mid-October. Winter pours are possible with proper precautions but add $8–$18/yd in heating and protection costs. Never pour on frozen subgrade — thaw thoroughly and verify temperature at depth before placing any concrete.

      Indiana Concrete Project Tips

      • NW Indiana: always specify air-entrained mix — for Gary, Hammond, Portage, Michigan City, and the entire Lake Michigan shoreline zone, specify 5–7% air content on every outdoor concrete pour. This is the single most cost-effective protection against Lake-effect freeze-thaw scaling. Air entrainment adds $5–$10/yd — a trivial cost versus resurfacing a spalled driveway in 5 years.
      • Central Indiana: test for clay before pouring — Indiana's glaciated central plains are blanketed in expansive till clay across much of the Indianapolis Basin. Over-excavate 4–6 inches, replace with compacted crushed limestone, and reinforce all slabs with #4 rebar or wire mesh. This $200–$400 extra step prevents the majority of Indianapolis-area concrete cracking.
      • Respect frost depths — 36 in. in South Bend — footing and foundation depths must clear the local frost penetration. In South Bend and Elkhart, this means a minimum 36-inch depth. In Indianapolis, ~28 inches. In Evansville, ~18 inches. Always confirm the required depth with your local building department before digging — using the wrong frost depth is one of the most common and costly concrete mistakes in Indiana.
      • Follow ACI 306 for fall and spring pours — Indiana's shoulder seasons (October, November, March, April) are high-risk for cold-weather concrete damage. Monitor overnight temperatures carefully: if air temp will drop below 40°F within 24 hours of your pour, use insulating blankets or heated enclosures. A surprise late-spring frost on freshly placed concrete can destroy surface quality and require complete removal.
      • Use Indiana limestone aggregate where available — crushed Indiana limestone from Lawrence and Monroe counties produces excellent concrete aggregate with good freeze-thaw durability. Ask your ready-mix supplier about locally sourced limestone aggregate — it is standard practice throughout central and southern Indiana and contributes to the state's competitive pricing.
      • Get your INDOT access permit before you pour — the Indiana Department of Transportation requires an access permit before constructing any driveway approach on a state-maintained highway. Apply through your local INDOT district office before any concrete is poured on a state-route driveway apron — required statewide across all 6 INDOT districts.
      • Avoid deicers on new concrete for the first winter — deicing salts dramatically accelerate freeze-thaw scaling on concrete less than one year old. Use sand for traction on new Indiana driveways and walkways for the first full winter. After the first year, avoid calcium chloride entirely — use sodium chloride sparingly, or switch to potassium acetate for concrete longevity, especially in the aggressive NW Indiana lake-effect zone.

      Frequently Asked Questions — Indiana Concrete Calculator

      How much does concrete cost per yard in Indiana?+
      Expect $113–$150 per cubic yard for standard 3,500 PSI ready-mix across Indiana. The Indianapolis metro and Fort Wayne are the most competitive at $113–$138/yd. South Bend and Elkhart run slightly higher due to northern logistics. Rural southern Indiana counties run $8–$14/yd above the state average. Short-load fees of $125–$250 apply for orders under 5 yards at most Indiana plants.
      What PSI concrete do I need for an Indiana driveway?+
      Use 3,500 PSI minimum statewide. In northern Indiana (South Bend, Fort Wayne, Gary, Hammond), upgrade to 4,000 PSI with 5–7% air entrainment — the Lake Michigan freeze-thaw exposure is classified as ACI 318 Severity F2 (severe), requiring higher PSI and lower W/C ratio. In central Indiana, 3,500 PSI with 4–5% air entrainment is a sensible upgrade for all driveways. Southern Indiana can use 3,500 PSI without air entrainment, though adding it is low cost.
      How deep do footings need to be in Indiana?+
      Frost depth across Indiana: ~18–20 inches in Evansville and far southern IN · ~24 inches in Terre Haute and Bloomington · ~28 inches in Indianapolis · ~30 inches in Muncie and Fort Wayne · ~36 inches in South Bend and NW Indiana. Always confirm the exact required footing depth with your local city or county building department — locally adopted frost depth tables are the legal standard.
      Why does concrete scale and spall so quickly in NW Indiana?+
      Northwest Indiana's Lake Michigan climate creates a unique concrete environment: lake-effect moisture delivers repeated wet-freeze-thaw cycles through the winter, sometimes 200+ per season. Non-air-entrained concrete saturates with water, which expands ~9% when it freezes, fracturing the cement paste matrix at the surface. This produces scaling and spalling within 2–3 winters. The solution: 5–7% air-entrained 4,000 PSI concrete with W/C ≤ 0.40, sealed after curing, and no deicing salts for the first winter season.
      Do I need a permit for concrete work in Indiana?+
      Indiana has no uniform statewide residential permitting system — permits are issued by local city and county building departments under the Indiana Building Code. Foundations, structural slabs, and retaining walls over 4 ft require permits in most jurisdictions. Residential driveways on private property may not require permits, but any approach connecting to an INDOT-maintained state highway requires an INDOT access permit. Commercial contractors must hold an IPLA license — confirm residential licensing requirements locally.
      How many cubic yards for an Indiana 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 IN pricing of $121–$146/yd, material cost runs roughly $786–$949. In northern Indiana, upgrade to 5 inches with air-entrained 3,500 PSI on the garage apron and any exposed slab areas — the apron in particular is exposed to full freeze-thaw cycling and deicing salt runoff from vehicles throughout winter.
      When is the best time to pour concrete in Indiana?+
      The ideal concrete pouring window in Indiana is mid-April through mid-October statewide. May, June, and September are the best months — temperatures are moderate, humidity is manageable, and frost risk is low. Avoid pouring when temperatures are expected to drop below 40°F within 24 hours without ACI 306 cold-weather precautions. In NW Indiana, spring pours can be earlier but lake-effect cold snaps in April require vigilance. Avoid July–August afternoon pours in Indianapolis when heat and humidity can cause plastic shrinkage cracking.

      Official Indiana Concrete Resources

      Indiana IPLA contractor licensing, INDOT access permits, and ACI standards for compliant Indiana concrete work.

      🏛️

      IPLA — Indiana Contractor Licensing

      State Authority

      The Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA) administers contractor licensing in Indiana. Commercial contractors must hold the appropriate IPLA license for structural, plumbing, and electrical work. Residential contractor licensing requirements vary by municipality — contact your local city or county building department for specific requirements before starting any foundation, slab, or structural concrete project in Indiana.

      Visit Indiana IPLA
      🛤️

      INDOT — Driveway Access Permits

      IN Dept. of Transportation

      The Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) requires an access permit before constructing any driveway approach on a state-maintained highway or US route in Indiana. Apply through your local INDOT district office well before any concrete is poured — required statewide across all 6 INDOT districts. Processing typically takes 2–4 weeks in active construction seasons.

      Visit INDOT Permits
      📘

      ACI 318 & ACI 306 — IN Concrete Standards

      Industry Standards

      ACI 318 (structural concrete) and ACI 306 (cold-weather concreting) are the critical standards adopted by Indiana's IBC-based building code. ACI 306 is especially important across northern and central Indiana — it specifies minimum mix temperatures, heating requirements, insulation periods, and curing protection for concrete poured when ambient temperatures are below 40°F, a common condition during Indiana's long winter and shoulder seasons.

      Visit ACI Standards