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Asphalt Calculator

Calculate tons of hot-mix asphalt needed to pave a driveway or parking lot.

5%

5 % is typical for clean rectangular paving. Bump up for irregular edges or sloped sub-base.

Tons

12.18

At 145 lb/ft³ compacted

Cubic yards

6.22

27 ft³ = 1 yd³

Coverage

480 sqft

4" compacted depth

Logistics

Asphalt is sold by the ton and trucked from the plant hot — 22 tons per haul is a typical tri-axle dump.

Estimated truckloads

1

≈ 22 tons per truck

12.18 tons (6.22 yd³) of Standard HMA for 480 sqft at 4". 1 truckload (≈ 22 tons each). Includes 5% waste.

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How to use Asphalt Calculator

What this asphalt calculator does

This calculator estimates how much hot-mix asphalt, stone- matrix asphalt (SMA), or cold-mix patch is needed to pave a rectangular area at a given compacted depth. It outputs the result in tons (the unit asphalt plants weigh and bill in), cubic yards (a secondary volume check), the square footage covered, and the estimated truckload count at roughly 22 tons per tri-axle dump. A waste-factor slider lets you add the small cushion needed for irregular edges, sloped sub-base, or learning-curve laydown practice.

How to use the asphalt calculator

  1. Enter the length and width of the area in feet. Most driveways are simple rectangles; for L-shaped drives or driveways with a turnaround pad, split into rectangles and run the calculator twice.
  2. Enter the depth in inches — this is the compacted finished depth, not the loose lift. Standard residential is 3 inches, commercial 4 inches, and a typical resurfacing overlay is 2 inches.
  3. Pick the mix type. Standard HMA (145 lb/ft³) is the default and covers nearly all residential and commercial paving. SMA (148 lb/ft³) is a stiffer, longer-lasting mix used on high-traffic roads. Cold-mix patch (140 lb/ft³) is for repair work, not full pours.
  4. Adjust the waste-factor slider. 5 % is the default for clean rectangular paving; bump to 7–10 % for irregular edges, steep slopes, or first-time DIY laydown.
  5. Read the tonnage and truckload count, then tap Copy summary to share with your supplier.

Standard depths by application

ApplicationCompacted depthBase spec
Residential overlay2”Existing sound asphalt
Residential driveway (new)3”6–8” compacted gravel
Heavy-residential / RV pad4”8” compacted gravel
Commercial parking4–5”8–12” compacted gravel
Industrial / truck traffic6–8”12”+ compacted gravel

The depth choice drives the tonnage almost linearly. A typical 20 × 40 ft driveway at 3” is 9.6 tons (≈ one half-truck); the same area at 4” is 12.8 tons (still one truck); at 6” it’s 19.3 tons — nearly a full truckload. The base depth matters at least as much as the asphalt depth for long-term durability — most asphalt failures trace back to an under-built or under-compacted gravel base, not the asphalt itself.

Why density matters

Hot-mix asphalt at the NAPA reference density of 145 lb/ft³ is what nearly every US plant produces. Stone-matrix asphalt (SMA), used on heavily-trafficked roads and increasingly on commercial parking, runs a touch denser at 148 lb/ft³ because of its higher coarse- aggregate content. Cold-mix patch is slightly less dense at ~140 lb/ ft³ because the cold liquid asphalt binder doesn’t compact the aggregate as tightly. The calculator’s mix-type dropdown applies the correct density per material — small differences, but they compound on large orders.

Compacted vs loose weight

Asphalt is sold by the ton. Tonnage is mass-based and doesn’t change between the truck and the finished pavement. What changes is the depth: hot-mix tipped from a truck and screeded out loose is roughly 20 % thicker than what it compacts to under the roller. A 2.5” loose lay yields 2” compacted; a 4” loose lay yields ~3.2” compacted. The calculator always works in compacted depth because that’s the figure on every spec sheet and code requirement.

Truck logistics

A typical asphalt tri-axle dump truck carries about 22 tons hot. Smaller single-axle trucks carry 10–12 tons. The plant times the load to your job: the asphalt cools as it travels and stops being workable below about 180 °F. For jobs further than 20–30 miles from the plant, schedule deliveries to stagger so trucks aren’t sitting in your driveway losing temperature. The truckload count in the calculator assumes 22-ton hauls — adjust the math by hand if your supplier uses smaller trucks.

Why a waste factor matters

Real laydown loses material to:

  • Truck dump-out, where a few hundred pounds stick to the bed.
  • Edge spillage at the gravel-to-asphalt boundary, especially on irregular shapes.
  • Sub-base variation, where a 3” target lift becomes 3.3” in pockets where the gravel dipped.
  • Cold spots and rework, where a portion has to be torn up and re-laid.

5 % is the default for clean rectangular driveways with experienced crews. 7–10 % is realistic for irregular shapes, slopes over 5 %, or DIY jobs where the laydown technique is still being learned. Under- ordering forces a second small load at a premium rate — most plants charge a minimum-load fee of $200–$500 below 5 tons.

Privacy

This calculator does its arithmetic in JavaScript on your device. There is no fetch call, no analytics on the values you enter, no server-side logging. The page works the same way offline once loaded.

Frequently asked questions

How thick should an asphalt driveway be?
For a residential driveway on a properly prepared 6–8 inch compacted gravel base, the standard is 3 inches of compacted asphalt — laid as either a single 3" lift or, more commonly, a 2" binder course topped by a 1.5" surface course (totals 3.5" pre-compaction, 3" compacted). For a commercial parking lot or any drive expecting truck traffic, go to 4 inches of asphalt over an 8–12 inch base. For a 2" overlay on an existing sound asphalt surface, no base prep is needed. The calculator's depth input is the compacted depth — that's what trucks deliver against.
How many tons of asphalt do I need per square foot?
At standard HMA density (145 lb/ft³), 1 square foot of asphalt at 1 inch thick weighs about 12 lbs, which means 1 ton of asphalt covers roughly 165 sqft at 1 inch (or 80 sqft at 2 inches, 55 sqft at 3 inches, 40 sqft at 4 inches). A typical residential driveway — 40 ft × 12 ft × 3 inches deep — works out to 9 tons of asphalt. The calculator handles the math precisely for any dimensions you enter, and accounts for the small density differences between standard HMA, stone-matrix asphalt, and cold-mix patch.
Hot-mix vs cold-patch — which one for my job?
Hot-mix asphalt (HMA) is the standard material for full driveways, parking lots, and roads. It's trucked at about 300 °F, must be laid and rolled within an hour or two of leaving the plant, and bonds into a single monolithic surface. Use HMA for any pour above ~100 sqft. Cold-mix patch comes in bags or buckets, is applied cold with a trowel or shovel, and is designed for pothole repairs and small patches — anything from a 1-foot crack fill to a 4 × 4 ft patch. Cold-mix is convenient and forgiving but never gets as hard as HMA, so it's a temporary or small-scale solution, not a way to build a new driveway.
Why does compacted depth matter more than loose depth?
Hot-mix asphalt compresses by roughly 20 % between when it's tipped from the truck and when the roller has finished. A 2.5" loose lay becomes a 2" compacted surface; a 4" loose lay becomes ~3.2". Suppliers quote and bill by tons, which is mass-based and unaffected by compaction, but the depth you specify on order is always the finished, compacted depth — that's what the engineer's drawing or local code requires. The calculator's depth input is the compacted depth and the tonnage is calculated against the compacted-state density of 145 lb/ft³ (the NAPA reference figure).
Is any data I enter sent off my device?
No. Dimensions, depth, mix type, and waste percentage are processed locally on your device by a few lines of JavaScript. There are no fetch calls, no analytics on the values, no server-side logging. You can verify in your browser's Network panel — once the page is loaded the calculator continues to work with Wi-Fi disabled. Every number stays on this device.

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