Fill Dirt Calculator
Calculate the volume, weight and number of dump-truck loads of fill dirt, topsoil, sand, gravel or crushed stone you need to order.
Calculation results
Volume to order
Total weight
Dump-truck loads
Estimated cost
Results include the specified compaction factor. Densities are typical averages — confirm with your supplier for orders over 50 yd³.
Understanding the formula
Three short calculations turn dimensions on a drawing into a delivery order. Volume comes from the footprint area times the depth, the compaction factor adds the extra you need to order, and density turns volume into weight.
Area equals L × W for a rectangle, π × r² for a
circle and 0.5 × base × height for a triangle.
The number of truckloads is ceil(ordered / truck capacity),
and the cost (when entered) is ordered × price per cubic
yard or cubic metre.
Worked example
A 10-ft × 10-ft pad, six inches deep, in loose fill dirt:
- Volume = 10 × 10 × 0.5 = 50 ft³ ≈ 1.85 yd³
- Ordered = 50 × 1.25 = 62.5 ft³ ≈ 2.31 yd³
- Weight = 2.31 × 2,200 = 5,093 lb ≈ 2.55 tons
- Truckloads = ceil(2.31 / 14) = 1
When to use this calculator
Use it any time you need to order loose material by the truckload:
- Driveway prep: crushed stone or gravel base under a new gravel or paver driveway.
- Foundation backfill: returning soil around a poured wall once forms come off.
- Raised garden beds: topsoil for vegetable boxes and landscape mounds.
- French drains: clean gravel bedding around a perforated pipe.
- Slope correction: adding fill to grade a low spot away from a building.
- Pad preparation: compacted fill under a slab, deck or shed.
The calculator does not size retaining walls, slopes or drainage — those need site-specific engineering. It also doesn’t subtract the volume taken up by pipes, footings or other obstructions inside the fill area; deduct those by hand if they’re significant.
Common mistakes & tips
- Don’t order by hole volume alone. Skipping the compaction factor is the most common error — you end up two truckloads short on a one-day pour.
- Ask your supplier for the actual density. Default values are conservative averages. Wet dirt can run 10–15 % heavier; dry sand ~10 % less.
- Round up truckloads. A half-load usually costs the same as a full one — take the truck and stockpile the remainder.
- Mind the difference between “fill dirt” and “structural fill”. Generic fill dirt is fine for landscape grading; under a foundation you usually need engineered fill with documented density.
- Measure depth twice. A small change in depth has the same effect as a big change in length × width.