Garage Slab Calculator

Estimate concrete yards, bags, rebar, and cost for a garage slab

Length of the garage slab
Width of the garage slab
Slab thickness (4 in is standard)
80 lb Bags
bags
Rebar Mats
mats
Cubic Yards
cu yd
Estimated Cost
USD
Disclaimer: Results are estimates based on standard formulas. Not a substitute for professional advice from a licensed contractor, engineer, or architect. Verify all calculations before making purchasing or construction decisions.

How to Use This Calculator

Pouring a garage slab? Getting the concrete quantity right means you won't run short mid-pour or pay for overage you don't need.

  1. Enter the length and width of the garage slab
  2. Set the thickness (4 in for cars, 6 in for trucks)
  3. Review cubic yards, bag count, and rebar mats
  4. Compare ready-mix vs bagged concrete against the cost estimate
Expert Insights Smart analysis for your Garage project
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Bag vs Ready-Mix
Each 80 lb bag yields ~0.6 cu ft. A typical 2-car slab needs 300+ bags — ready-mix delivery from a truck is far cheaper for pours over 2 cubic yards.
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Rebar Mat Spacing
We estimate one rebar mat per 64 sq ft (an 8x8 ft sheet). Mats sit on chairs at mid-depth so the steel engages when the concrete is loaded.
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Thickness Selection
4 inches handles passenger cars. Step up to 5-6 inches for SUVs and trucks, and 6-8 inches for heavy equipment or RV parking.

Calculation Formula

Volume (cu ft) = Length x Width x (Thickness / 12) Cubic yards = Volume / 27 80 lb bags = ceil(Volume / 0.6) Rebar mats = ceil((Length x Width) / 64) Estimated cost = ceil(Cubic yards x $6 per cu yd)

Garage Slab Thickness Comparison

Slab ThicknessTypical UseRebar / WireCost Impact
4 inchesStandard garage, light vehicles#3 rebar @ 24" or wire meshBaseline
5 inchesHeavy vehicles, SUVs#4 rebar @ 18"+25%
6 inchesHeavy trucks, RVs#4 rebar @ 12"+50%
8 inchesCommercial / workshops#5 rebar @ 12"+100%

Authority References

Our calculations are based on guidelines and standards from these authoritative sources:

  • American Concrete Institute (ACI) — ACI 332 Residential & ACI 360R Guide to Slabs-on-Ground. Learn more
  • International Residential Code (IRC) — R404 Foundation & R309 Garage Slab Requirements. Learn more
  • Portland Cement Association (PCA) — Concrete Slab Construction Guides. Learn more

Frequently Asked Questions

How thick should a garage slab be?
A 4-inch slab is standard for passenger vehicles. Use 5-6 inches for SUVs and trucks, and 6-8 inches for heavy equipment, RVs, or commercial use.
How many bags of concrete do I need for a garage slab?
Each 80 lb bag yields about 0.6 cubic feet. A 24x24 ft, 4-inch slab needs roughly 320 bags. For slabs over 2 cubic yards, ready-mix delivery is far cheaper than bagged concrete.
Do I need rebar in a garage slab?
Yes. Rebar or wire mesh controls cracking from vehicle loads and freeze-thaw. A typical layout uses #3 or #4 rebar mats spaced 24 inches on center, sized in 8x8 ft sheets.