Asphalt Tonnage Calculator
How Many Tons Do I Need?
Enter your area, depth, and mix type — get exact tons, cubic yards, and truckloads in seconds. Supports rectangle, circle, triangle, and irregular shapes. The only free calculator that lets you draw your own polygon.
Asphalt Tonnage Calculator
1. Select your shape
Tap or click to place polygon vertices. Set canvas width to match your real-world measurement, then enter your depth and calculate.
Optional — activates additional outputs
The exact math
Asphalt tonnage formula — step by step
Our calculator uses the Asphalt Institute Manual Series No. 2 (MS-2) formula — the same standard used by DOT engineers and paving contractors across the US.
Quick shortcut at standard HMA density (145 lb/ft³):
Tons = Area (ft²) × Depth (in) × 0.00604
3 worked examples
These are the three most common questions we see. Follow along to verify the calculator's output or do it manually.
Standard driveway — 600 ft²
20 ft × 30 ft = 600 ft² · 3 inch depth · HMA (145 lb/ft³)
600 × (3÷12) × 145 ÷ 2,000 = 10.88 tons
+ 10% waste = 11.96 tons → order 12 tons
Truckloads: 1 tandem (18t) handles it comfortably.
Parking lot — 5,000 ft²
100 ft × 50 ft = 5,000 ft² · 3 inch depth · HMA
5,000 × (3÷12) × 145 ÷ 2,000 = 90.6 tons
+ 10% waste = 99.7 tons → order 100 tons
Truckloads: 4 tri-axle trucks (25t each) = 100t delivered.
Road resurfacing — 2" overlay
200 ft × 24 ft = 4,800 ft² · 2 inch overlay · HMA
4,800 × (2÷12) × 145 ÷ 2,000 = 58 tons
+ 5% waste (simple rectangle) = 60.9 tons → order 61 tons
Truckloads: 3 tri-axle trucks (25t) with a small 11t short load.
Tons per square foot — quick reference table
Based on HMA at 145 lb/ft³. Use this to sanity-check the calculator output or get a rough figure without measuring first.
Why density matters more than most people realise
Asphalt density by mix type — full reference
Using 145 lb/ft³ for a porous asphalt job understates your tonnage by 17%. Using it for SMA overstates it by 3%. The calculator picks the right density automatically — here's the data behind it.
| Mix type | lb/ft³ | kg/m³ | tons/yd³ | Typical project | Vs HMA cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) Dense-graded, standard |
142–148 | 2,274–2,370 | 1.96–2.00 | Driveways, roads, parking lots — the default for 90%+ of projects | Baseline |
| Stone Matrix Asphalt (SMA) Rut-resistant, high traffic |
145–155 | 2,322–2,483 | 1.96–2.09 | Highways, high-volume intersections, bus lanes | +20–30% |
| Warm Mix Asphalt (WMA) Lower temperature, lower emissions |
142–148 | 2,274–2,370 | 1.96–2.00 | Same density as HMA — laid at 30°F lower temperature | Same |
| Open-Graded / OGFC Porous, permeable |
115–135 | 1,842–2,162 | 1.55–1.82 | Stormwater management, noise reduction, airport aprons | +15–25% |
| Cold Mix Asphalt Patching only, not structural |
100–130 | 1,602–2,082 | ~1.70 | Pothole repair, temporary patches, winter maintenance | Similar |
| RAP / Recycled Millings Reclaimed asphalt pavement |
120–140 | 1,922–2,242 | 1.62–1.89 | Budget driveways, access roads, base course material | −40–60% |
Source: Asphalt Institute MS-2 Manual; NAPA Information Series IS-134. All values are for compacted, in-place material.
Why density varies between mixes
Asphalt density depends on three things: aggregate type and gradation, binder content (typically 4.5–7% by weight), and compaction level. Coarser aggregate in SMA packs more tightly and produces higher density. Open-graded mixes intentionally leave air voids (15–25%) which dramatically lowers density. Always confirm the density with your plant or supplier for accurate ordering — especially on projects over 50 tons where a 5% density error means 2.5+ tons short or over.
Compacted vs. loose density
Loose (uncompacted) HMA weighs approximately 110–120 lb/ft³. After rolling it compacts to 142–148 lb/ft³ — a 20–25% volume reduction. This calculator always uses compacted density because tonnage is ordered by weight, not volume, and the weight doesn't change. What changes is the thickness: crews lay it ~25% thicker before rolling. Enter the final, compacted depth you want. The formula handles the rest.
Depth specifications by project type
How thick does asphalt need to be?
Under-specified depth is the leading cause of premature pavement failure. Too thin and the surface flexes under load, cracks within 2–5 years, and requires full replacement. Here are the industry benchmarks.
Standard driveway
Over 6–8" compacted aggregate base. 2" handles passenger vehicles; choose 3" if you park SUVs or trucks. Full-depth (no base): 4–6". Lifespan: 15–25 years with proper sealing.
Parking lots — cars only
NAPA minimum for light vehicle parking. Add 3–4" HMA base course for occasional delivery truck access. Over 8" compacted dense-graded aggregate base.
Trucks & loading areas
Semi-trailers, garbage trucks, heavy equipment. Typically laid in two lifts: 3–4" binder course + 1.5–2" surface course. Each lift is calculated separately — use the Paving Calculator.
Arterial road surface
Roads are multi-layer structures: 1.5–2" wearing course + 2–4" binder + 4–8" base. This calculator handles one lift at a time — add multiple areas for multi-lift calculations.
Pedestrian areas
Bike paths, walkways, recreational areas. Use 9.5mm fine-graded surface mix. Over 4–6" compacted base. Full-depth without a base layer: 3".
Overlay & mill-and-fill
Existing surface must be structurally sound. Mill 1–2" of old surface, then lay fresh HMA to restore grade. See the Overlay Calculator for millings + new HMA totals.
The minimum lift thickness rule
Each asphalt lift must be at least 3× the nominal maximum aggregate size. For 9.5mm fine-graded surface mix: minimum lift = 1.2 inches. For 12.5mm mix: minimum 1.5 inches. For 19mm base mix: minimum 2.3 inches. Going thinner causes segregation under the roller and a weak, ravelling surface. This is why 1.5" is the practical minimum for any lift — not an arbitrary number.
The #1 ordering mistake — and how to avoid it
Waste factor & compaction — what you must understand before ordering
Most short-orders on residential paving projects happen because the buyer didn't understand compaction, used the wrong depth type, or underestimated waste. Here's every factor explained.
Why running short always costs more than over-ordering
HMA must be placed at 275–325°F and compacted before it drops below ~175°F. Run out mid-job and you face:
Re-mobilisation: $200–$400+ to bring the crew and truck back out. Cold joint: Where old and new asphalt meet after cooling, a structural weakness forms that cracks within 2–5 years. Partial compaction: The already-placed material has cooled and been walked on — it will never compact properly.
Which waste factor should you use?
5 calculation mistakes that cost contractors money every week
These errors appear repeatedly on job sites. Every one of them is avoidable with the right formula and a 2-minute check.
Entering depth in feet instead of inches
Entering "3" when the unit is feet gives 36 inches of depth and overstates tonnage by 12×. Always confirm the unit label next to the depth field. 3 inches = 0.25 feet. Our calculator takes inches — no conversion needed.
Using loose-mat depth instead of compacted depth
If your contractor gives you a "3.75-inch loose spread" for a 3-inch finished surface — entering 3.75 overestimates tonnage by 25%. Always ask for, and enter, the compacted final depth.
Using HMA density for a different mix
Using 145 lb/ft³ for an open-graded porous job understates tonnage by ~17%. Using it for SMA overstates by ~3%. Select the correct mix type in the calculator — it applies the right density automatically.
Skipping the waste factor entirely
Ordering exactly the calculated base tonnage with no waste buffer is the most common cause of short-orders. Always add at least 5%. Running out means $200–$400 re-mobilisation plus a permanent cold joint.
Measuring the wrong dimension
For an L-shaped area or driveway with a turnaround, measuring the longest dimension both ways overestimates area. Break complex shapes into rectangles and use the "Add another area" button to accumulate them correctly.
Ready-to-use tonnage estimates
How many tons do I need? — by project size
Use these as a sanity check on the calculator output. All figures use HMA at 145 lb/ft³ with 10% waste included. Enter your exact dimensions above for a precise number.
| Project type | Typical area | At 2" depth | At 3" depth | At 4" depth | Truckloads (18t) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-car driveway | 10×30 ft (300 ft²) | 4.0 t | 6.0 t | 8.0 t | 1 |
| Standard 2-car driveway | 20×30 ft (600 ft²) | 7.9 t | 11.9 t | 15.9 t | 1 |
| Large driveway | 20×50 ft (1,000 ft²) | 13.3 t | 19.9 t | 26.5 t | 1–2 |
| Basketball court | 50×84 ft (4,200 ft²) | 55.6 t | 83.4 t | 111.2 t | 3–6 |
| Small parking lot | 100×50 ft (5,000 ft²) | 66.2 t | 99.3 t | 132.4 t | 4–7 |
| Medium parking lot | 200×100 ft (20,000 ft²) | 264.7 t | 397.1 t | 529.4 t | 15–30 |
| Road — 100 ft length | 100×24 ft (2,400 ft²) | 31.8 t | 47.7 t | 63.6 t | 2–4 |
| Road — 1,000 ft length | 1,000×24 ft (24,000 ft²) | 317.8 t | 476.6 t | 635.5 t | 18–36 |
All figures include 10% waste. Based on HMA at 145 lb/ft³. Actual tonnage varies with local mix density — confirm with your supplier.
Understanding your results
How to read the tonnage calculator output
The calculator gives you more than just tons. Here's what every output means and how to use it when calling your supplier or comparing contractor quotes.
Short tons (the number to order)
This is what you give to your asphalt plant. It includes the waste factor you set. A US short ton = 2,000 lb = 0.9072 metric tonnes. When your supplier quotes a price per ton, multiply by this number to get material cost. If they ask for metric tonnes, divide by 0.9072.
Cubic yards
Useful for estimating truck volume and comparing with volumetric quotes. 1 yd³ of compacted HMA weighs approximately 1.96 tons. Some suppliers and spec sheets quote volumes — use cubic yards to cross-check. 27 ft³ = 1 yd³.
Truckloads
Shows how many full trucks of the type you selected. Helps with logistics planning and scheduling delivery windows. HMA is temperature-sensitive: each truck must arrive, be placed, and be compacted before it cools below ~175°F. Don't schedule trucks faster than the paving crew can lay them.
Material cost estimate
Appears when you enter a price per ton. This is material cost only — it does not include labour, base prep, equipment, or mobilisation. Add approximately $1.50–$3.00/ft² for labour and $0.50–$1.00/ft² for base prep to get a full installed estimate. Use the Cost Calculator for a complete breakdown.
Frequently asked questions
Asphalt tonnage calculator — FAQ
Every question we see asked about tonnage, density, depth, and ordering — answered directly with the numbers you actually need.
Complete your estimate
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