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Gravel Calculator

By · Updated Jul 2026

Calculate gravel in tons, cubic yards, and cubic feet for driveways, paths, and drainage projects.

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ft
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lb/ft³
$ton
Calculated area-

Your Gravel Estimate

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US Tons (with waste)
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Pounds
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Cubic Yards
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Cubic Feet
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Area Covered
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How to Use
  1. Pick a shape - rectangle, round (enter diameter), or triangle (base and height).
  2. Choose your gravel - select the material and the density sets itself - or enter a custom density.
  3. Enter dimensions - plus quantity if you have several same-size areas.
  4. Set depth - 2-4" for decorative, 4-6" for paths, 6-12" for structural base.
  5. Add price (optional) - enter your supplier's price per ton for an estimated total cost.
  6. Add waste - 10% standard. Use 15% for areas without hard borders.

Quick answer

Measure the area in square feet, pick a depth, and the rest is conversion: cubic feet = area × (depth ÷ 12), then divide by 27 for cubic yards or multiply by the gravel's density for weight. The quick guides worth remembering: a ton of gravel covers about 100 sq ft at 2 inches or 50 sq ft at 4 inches, and a cubic yard spreads over roughly 160 sq ft at 2 inches. So a 10 × 10 ft area at 4 inches comes to about 1.7 tons. The calculator above handles the math for any shape.

How Much Gravel Do I Need?

Suppliers sell gravel by weight or by volume, and the two don't line up evenly: a cubic yard of standard gravel runs about 1.35 to 1.5 tons, heavier when wet. That's why ordering goes wrong when people guess - you measure in feet but buy in tons.

The driveway case is the one most people land here for. A 10 × 20 ft drive at 4 inches deep works out to roughly 4 tons before waste. Below the calculator you'll find the depth a driveway actually needs, the layered base-and-surface build contractors use, and how the common gravel types differ in weight and price.

How a Gravel Driveway Is Layered

Finished gradeSurface courseCompacted baseCompacted subgradeTotal depth2 in4 in
A typical residential gravel driveway is built in layers. The surface course (often #57 stone or pea gravel, ~2 in) is what you see and drive on; the compacted base (crusher run, ~4 in) carries the load; and the subgrade is the prepared native soil. The calculator figures each layer - run it once per layer with that layer's depth and material, then add the results.

How Much Gravel for a Driveway

Driveways are the most common gravel project, and the right depth depends on traffic. These are the depths contractors use:

UseTotal compacted depthHow it is built
Residential, cars only4 inSingle layer, or a 3 in base + 1 in surface
Daily heavy vehicles / RV6 in4 in crusher-run base + 2 in #57 surface
Soft or clay soil6-8 inAdd depth and lay geotextile fabric under the base

New driveways hold up best built in two layers - a 4-inch compacted crusher-run base for strength, topped with 2 inches of #57 stone or pea gravel as the finished surface. Always excavate the full depth plus 1-2 inches so the gravel compacts flush with grade. Worked examples at 4 inches: a two-car driveway (20 × 40 ft) needs roughly 14-17 tons, and a single-car drive (10 × 40 ft) about 7-8 tons. Going to 6 inches for heavy vehicles adds about 50% more material.

Worked Examples: Three Shapes

Three real projects, three different area shapes - the volume-to-weight step is identical each time; only the way you measure the area changes. Follow the arithmetic and you can sanity-check whatever the calculator returns.

1. Rectangular driveway. 40 ft long, 12 ft wide, 4 in deep, #57 crushed stone (105 lb/ft³), 10% waste. Area = 40 × 12 = 480 sq ft. Volume = 480 × (4 ÷ 12) = 160 cu ft, plus 10% = 176 cu ft. That is 176 ÷ 27 = 6.5 cubic yards, or 176 × 105 ÷ 2,000 = about 9.2 tons of #57 stone.

2. Round fire-pit pad. 20 ft diameter, 3 in deep, pea gravel (96 lb/ft³), 10% waste. Area = π × (20 ÷ 2)² = 314 sq ft. Volume = 314 × (3 ÷ 12) = 78.5 cu ft, plus 10% = 86.4 cu ft - about 3.2 cubic yards, or roughly 4.1 tons of pea gravel. Pick the round shape in the calculator and enter the diameter.

3. Triangular garden bed. 16 ft base, 24 ft height, 2 in deep, river rock (105 lb/ft³), 10% waste. Area = (16 × 24) ÷ 2 = 192 sq ft. Volume = 192 × (2 ÷ 12) = 32 cu ft, plus 10% = 35.2 cu ft - about 1.3 cubic yards, or roughly 1.8 tons of river rock. Use the triangle shape and enter base and height.

After You Estimate Your Gravel

Gravel rarely stands alone - it's usually the base or one course of a bigger surface. The usual sequence from here:

  1. Add a sand bedding layerSand levels the base under pavers or pipe.
  2. Estimate paversIf the gravel is a base for a paver patio or path.
  3. Pour a slab insteadCompare a gravel base under a concrete slab.

Gravel Types and Densities

Different gravel products have different weights - pick your material in the calculator (it sets the density) or enter a custom value to match your supplier:

Gravel TypeDensity (lb/ft³)Tons/YardBest For
Pea gravel961.30Decorative, drainage, paths
Bank-run gravel1301.76General fill, base courses
Crushed stone (#57)1051.42Driveways, under-slab base
Crusher run (#21A)1351.82Compacted road base, in place
River rock1051.42Decorative, dry creek beds
Decomposed granite1251.69Paths, patios, xeriscaping

Density varies with moisture content. Wet gravel weighs 10-15% more than dry. Ask your supplier for their specific bulk density.

What Is #57 Gravel?

#57 stone is one of the most-requested driveway and drainage aggregates, and the number is a size, not a brand. Under ASTM D448 - the standard that defines aggregate size numbers - #57 is a clean, open-graded crushed stone with particles roughly 3/4 inch to 1 inch: nearly all of it passes a 1-inch sieve, and it contains almost no fines (dust). That lack of fines is the whole point - the uniform stones stack with consistent gaps between them, so water drains straight through.

That makes #57 the standard choice for driveway surface layers, French drains, under-slab base, and behind retaining walls. It does not compact into a hard surface the way crusher run does, so on a driveway it is usually laid over a compacted crusher-run base rather than on its own. #57 vs #67: #67 is slightly smaller (about 1/4 inch to 3/4 inch) and packs a bit tighter and smoother, while #57 drains a touch faster - both are clean, no-fines stone. When ordering, ask the supplier for the size by number ("#57" or "#67") so you get the right gradation.

Gravel Coverage Quick Reference

AreaDepth 2"Depth 4"Depth 6"
100 ft²0.62 yd³ (0.8 tons)1.23 yd³ (1.7 tons)1.85 yd³ (2.5 tons)
200 ft²1.23 yd³ (1.7 tons)2.47 yd³ (3.3 tons)3.70 yd³ (5.0 tons)
400 ft² (20×20)2.47 yd³ (3.3 tons)4.94 yd³ (6.7 tons)7.41 yd³ (10.0 tons)
500 ft²3.09 yd³ (4.2 tons)6.17 yd³ (8.3 tons)9.26 yd³ (12.5 tons)
1,000 ft²6.17 yd³ (8.3 tons)12.35 yd³ (16.7 tons)18.52 yd³ (25.0 tons)

Based on bank-run gravel at 130 lb/ft³. These are base quantities before waste - add about 10% for spillage and compaction when ordering. A 10×10 area (100 ft²) at 4 inches is about 1.7 tons before waste.

Tons to Cubic Yards Conversion by Gravel Type

Gravel Type1 ton =1 cubic yard =Notes
Pea gravel0.77 yd³1.30 tonsLightest common gravel
Bank-run gravel0.57 yd³1.76 tonsGeneral fill standard
Crushed stone #570.71 yd³1.42 tonsDriveways, under-slab
Crusher run #21A0.55 yd³1.82 tonsCompacted in place
River rock0.71 yd³1.42 tonsDecorative, drainage
Decomposed granite0.59 yd³1.69 tonsPaths, patios

Suppliers quote in tons or yards - use this table to convert between the two. Wet material weighs 10-15% more than dry.

Formulas

Standard volume-to-weight:

Area - rectangle = Length × Width
Area - circle = π × (Diameter ÷ 2)²
Area - triangle = (Base × Height) ÷ 2
Volume (ft³) = Area × (Depth ÷ 12)
Cubic yards = Volume ÷ 27
Weight (tons) = Volume × Density ÷ 2,000
With waste = All results × (1 + Waste %)

Adjust density for your specific gravel type. Crushed products are denser than rounded stone.

Sizing & Material Standards

  • Aggregate size numbers like #57, #67, and #8 are defined by ASTM D448, which sets the standard gradation (sieve sizes) for each number. Ordering by the number - not by a description like "3/4 inch" - gets you a consistent product from any supplier.ASTM D448 - Standard Sizes of Aggregate
  • For gravel used as aggregate in concrete, the size and quality requirements are set by ASTM C33, which adds durability and cleanliness limits on top of the D448 size ranges.ASTM C33 - Concrete Aggregates

Gravel delivered cost by type (2026 US)

Gravel typePer ton deliveredPer cubic yardBest use
Crushed stone #57$30-$60$45-$90Driveways, under-slab, drainage
Crusher run / road base$20-$45$30-$65Compacted driveways, parking areas
Pea gravel$35-$70$50-$100Paths, playgrounds, decorative beds
River rock$45-$90$65-$130Landscaping, dry creek beds, drainage
Decomposed granite$30-$55$45-$80Paths, patios, xeriscaping
Recycled concrete$15-$35$22-$52Base layers, non-visible applications

Delivery typically included within 20-30 miles. Western states average 10-25% above these prices. Orders over 10 tons often qualify for 10-20% contractor pricing. Spring and summer demand pushes prices 10-20% higher than winter quotes.

Related Calculators

Aggregate CalculatorLarger aggregate tonnage.Asphalt CalculatorAsphalt over the gravel base.Pea Gravel CalculatorDecorative pea gravel.Brick CalculatorBricks and mortar for walls.

Gravel pairs with sand for bedding and pavers for finished surfaces. See our full construction calculator collection.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much gravel do I need to cover a 10x10 area?
A 10 × 10 ft area is 100 square feet. At 2 inches deep that is about 0.8 tons (0.62 cubic yards); at 4 inches deep, about 1.7 tons (1.23 cubic yards). Enter your exact depth and gravel type above for a precise figure.
How much will 1 ton of gravel cover?
One ton of gravel covers roughly 100 square feet at 2 inches deep, about 70 square feet at 3 inches, or about 50 square feet at 4 inches. Lighter gravel like pea gravel covers a little more per ton; denser crushed stone a little less. Coverage drops as depth increases.
How many tons is 1 cubic yard of gravel?
About 1.3 to 1.5 tons for most loose gravel. Pea gravel is around 1.3 tons per cubic yard; river rock and crushed #57 stone about 1.4; bank-run gravel with its sand fraction about 1.76; and crusher run compacted in place about 1.8 tons. Wet material weighs 10 to 15 percent more. See the conversion table above for each type.
What is 4 tons of gravel in cubic yards?
It depends on the gravel's density. For standard bank-run gravel at about 1.76 tons per cubic yard, 4 tons is roughly 2.3 cubic yards. For lighter pea gravel or #57 stone (1.3 to 1.4 tons/yd³) it is about 2.8 to 3.1 cubic yards; for crusher run compacted in place (1.82 tons/yd³), about 2.2 cubic yards.
How much gravel do I need for a 20x20 area?
A 20 × 20 ft area is 400 square feet. At 4 inches deep that is about 6.7 tons (4.9 cubic yards) of standard gravel; at 2 inches, about 3.3 tons. For a parking pad carrying vehicles, plan on 4 to 6 inches over a compacted base.
How much gravel for a 1,000 sq ft driveway?
At a 4-inch depth, about 16 to 17 tons (roughly 12 cubic yards) of standard gravel. Most driveways use two layers - a compacted crusher-run base plus a #57 or pea gravel surface - so run the calculator once per layer and add the results. Add a 10% waste allowance for compaction and spillage.
How deep should gravel be for a driveway? Is 3 inches enough?
For cars only, 4 inches of compacted gravel is the practical minimum; 3 inches is acceptable only for a light-traffic, well-drained surface and tends to rut over time. Daily heavy vehicles or RVs need about 6 inches, and soft or clay soils need 6 to 8 inches with a geotextile fabric under the base. Build deeper driveways in two layers - base then surface.
What is #57 gravel and what is it good for?
#57 is a clean, open-graded crushed stone roughly 3/4 inch to 1 inch in size, defined by ASTM D448. Because it has almost no fines, it drains exceptionally well, which makes it the standard choice for driveway surface layers, French drains, under-slab base, and behind retaining walls. It is usually placed over a compacted crusher-run base rather than on its own, since it does not compact into a hard surface.
Will 1 ton of gravel fit in a pickup truck?
Yes - a half-ton pickup can typically carry about 1 ton of gravel, and a full-size three-quarter-ton truck can handle 1.5 tons, though that is near the limit of most beds and suspensions. For anything above 1 to 2 tons, bulk delivery by dump truck is safer and usually cheaper than multiple trips.
How do you calculate how much gravel you need?
Measure the area in feet (length × width for a rectangle), multiply by the depth in feet to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards or multiply by the material density and divide by 2,000 for tons. Add 10% for waste and compaction. The calculator above does all of this - including round and triangular areas - once you enter your dimensions.

Updated Jul 2026 · See our Methodology
These results are planning-grade estimates, not engineering measurements. Actual requirements vary by site conditions, mix design, compaction, and local codes. Always verify with your supplier and a licensed contractor. See our Data Sources and Methodology.