From Area to Order Quantity: How to Turn Square Feet into Cubic Yards

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters

Almost every bulk building or landscaping material, concrete, gravel, mulch, sand, and topsoil, is priced and delivered by the cubic yard. Yet projects are almost always laid out and measured in square feet. That mismatch is exactly why the square-feet-to-cubic-yards conversion exists, and why it trips so many people up: you cannot convert a flat area into a volume until you decide how deep that area will be filled.

Think of it this way. A cubic yard is a cube three feet on every side, holding 27 cubic feet of material. Spread that single yard out one inch thick and it blankets about 324 square feet. Spread the same yard four inches thick and it only covers about 81 square feet, because the material is piled four times as deep. Depth is the lever that decides how far your order stretches, which is why two identical patios can need wildly different deliveries.

To do the conversion by hand, start with your area in square feet and convert your intended depth from inches to feet by dividing by 12. Multiply area by that decimal depth to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. A 600 sq ft driveway at 5 inches deep becomes 600 times 0.417, or 250 cubic feet, which divided by 27 is about 9.3 cubic yards. The shortcut version skips the inch-to-foot step: just multiply 600 by 5 and divide by 324.

Choosing the right depth is its own decision, and it varies by material. Residential concrete slabs are commonly poured at 4 inches, with 5 to 6 inches for driveways that carry heavier vehicles. Mulch is typically applied 2 to 4 inches deep in garden beds, while a decorative gravel layer often only needs 1 to 2 inches over a prepared base. Picking a sensible depth before you calculate keeps your order realistic instead of wildly over or under.

Finally, treat the calculated number as a clean minimum rather than the exact amount to buy. Loose materials compact when raked and tamped, some volume is always lost to spillage and uneven ground, and excavated subgrade is rarely perfectly level. A modest buffer of 5 to 10 percent, plus rounding concrete up to the nearest quarter or half yard, is cheap insurance against the headache and delivery fee of running short halfway through the pour.

Quick tips

  • Decide your depth first based on the material: 4 inches for most concrete slabs, 2 to 4 inches for mulch, and 1 to 2 inches for decorative gravel.
  • Use the divide-by-324 shortcut when your depth is already in inches, so you skip the inch-to-foot conversion step.
  • Add 5 to 10 percent to the calculated cubic yards to cover compaction, spillage, and uneven ground.
  • For odd-shaped areas, break the space into rectangles, convert each separately, then add the cubic-yard totals together.

The Square Feet to Cubic Yards is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.