Rebar Calculator

Calculate how many rebar bars you need for any concrete slab, footing, or column. Get total linear feet, weight, and cost estimate based on rebar size and spacing.

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ft
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Total Bars
Bars Lengthwise
Bars Widthwise
Total Linear Feet
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%
Total Bars
Total Linear Feet
Bars Lengthwise
Bars Widthwise
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Rebar Grid

Total Bars
Total Linear Feet

Weight & Splices

Total Weight
Overlap/Splice Length

Hardware & Cost

Chairs/Supports Needed
Rebar Material Cost

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the slab length and width in feet.
  2. Enter the rebar spacing in inches (default 12).
  3. Results show bars needed in each direction, total bars, and total linear feet.

Formula

Bars lengthwise = ceil(Width ÷ Spacing) + 1

Bars widthwise = ceil(Length ÷ Spacing) + 1

Total linear feet = (Bars lengthwise × Length) + (Bars widthwise × Width)

Example

Example: 20×12 ft slab, 12 in spacing → 13 lengthwise + 21 widthwise = 34 bars → 412 linear feet.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • For a typical 4-inch residential slab, place #3 or #4 rebar in a 12-inch grid. Calculate bars by dividing each dimension by spacing and adding one. Total linear feet = total bars × their respective lengths.
  • Residential slabs: 12–18 inch spacing. Structural slabs and driveways: 12 inches. Footings: 12–18 inches between longitudinal bars. Consult a structural engineer for load-bearing applications.
  • #3 rebar weighs 0.376 lbs/ft, #4 = 0.668 lbs/ft, #5 = 1.043 lbs/ft, #6 = 1.502 lbs/ft. Total weight = total linear feet × weight per foot.
  • When splicing rebar, the overlap (lap splice) must be at least 40 bar diameters. For #4 rebar (0.5 inch diameter), that is 20 inches minimum.
  • #3 (3/8") for light slabs and footings. #4 (1/2") for driveways and most residential slabs. #5 (5/8") and larger for structural applications, retaining walls, and heavy loads.

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