Direct concrete answer
How much concrete for a 24x24 slab (6 inches thick)?
A 24 ft by 24 ft by 6 inch concrete slab requires 10.7 cubic yards of concrete, or 480 bags of 80-lb premix before field waste. With 10% overage, order about 11.8 cubic yards.
Quick answer
| Project dimensions | 24 ft x 24 ft x 6 in |
|---|---|
| Area or count | 576 sq ft |
| Volume | 288.00 cubic feet |
| Volume | 10.7 cubic yards |
| Metric volume | 8.16 cubic meters |
| 80-lb bags needed | 480 bags |
| 60-lb bags needed | 640 bags |
| 50-lb bags needed | 768 bags |
| Ready-mix order with 10% overage | 11.8 cubic yards |
| Ready-mix planning cost at $150/yd3 | $1,760 |
| Bagged planning cost at $5/80-lb bag | $2,400 |
Calculation steps
- Convert depth to feet: 6 inches / 12 = 0.500 ft.
- Calculate cubic feet: 24 ft x 24 ft x 0.500 ft = 288.00 ft3.
- Convert to cubic yards: 288.00 ft3 / 27 = 10.7 yd3.
- Add waste for ordering: 10.7 yd3 x 1.10 = 11.8 yd3. Round according to the supplier's ordering increment.
This is the exact math behind the answer, but the field order should reflect the actual formed dimensions, the base condition, and the supplier's minimum order policy. Measure the finished inside form dimensions. For this 24x24 slab, 6 inches thick, even a half-inch depth change across 576 sq ft changes the order.
Number of bags by size
Bag counts use common premix yields and round up to whole bags. Always check the yield printed on the exact product before buying because specialty mixes can differ.
| Bag size | Common yield | Calculation | Bags to buy |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80-lb bag | 0.6 ft3 | 288.00 / 0.6 | 480 |
| 60-lb bag | 0.45 ft3 | 288.00 / 0.45 | 640 |
| 50-lb bag | 0.375 ft3 | 288.00 / 0.375 | 768 |
Cost snapshot
At a planning price of $150 per cubic yard, the waste-adjusted ready-mix concrete is about $1,760 before short-load, delivery, pump, labor, forms, base stone, reinforcement, tax, or finish upgrades. The 80-lb bag material estimate is about $2,400 before mixer rental or labor.
Cost is where small concrete jobs surprise people. A short-load fee can make the delivered price look high, while bagged concrete can look cheap until the crew has to mix 480 heavy bags fast enough to place and finish one continuous surface. Use the material number as a quote starting point, not as the final installed price.
Ready-mix vs bagged concrete
Order ready-mix if schedule, access, and short-load fees make sense; use bags only when a truck cannot reach the pour or the crew can mix fast enough.
As a rule of thumb, ready-mix becomes easier once a project is near or above one cubic yard. This page's base volume is 10.7 cubic yards, so the practical choice depends on access, crew size, weather, finish timing, and whether the supplier charges a short-load fee. If the pour must be continuous, the truck often reduces risk even when the invoice includes a delivery charge.
Recommended PSI and reinforcement
| Use | Typical planning PSI | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Patio or walkway | 3,000 PSI | Light foot traffic on compacted base. |
| Garage floor | 3,500 PSI | Verify vapor barrier, joints, and reinforcement. |
| Driveway | 3,500 to 4,000 PSI | Use higher strength for trucks, RVs, or weak soil. |
| Footings | 3,000 to 4,000 PSI | Plan and local code control final mix. |
Use 3,500 to 4,000 PSI for typical residential vehicle traffic, higher if the design or supplier recommends it.
A 6 inch slab is commonly paired with rebar or welded wire reinforcement when it carries vehicles, equipment, or concentrated loads.
Project-specific notes
This answer is for a heavy garage slab, shop floor, or vehicle pad. The geometry is straightforward, but the site details decide whether the estimate is clean in the field. Before ordering, compare the calculated dimensions against the actual form layout, the base depth, and the planned finish elevation.
- This is a large residential pour and should be scheduled like a contractor job even if the owner is doing prep work.
- The cost difference between 4 and 6 inches is significant, so verify the load case and local practice before committing.
- If the project includes thickened edges, a landing, a flare, a step, or a separate footing, calculate that concrete separately and add it to the base result.
Common mistakes
- Using drawing dimensions after forms have moved. Recheck inside length and width before ordering.
- Forgetting that thickness is converted to feet before multiplying. Four inches is 0.333 ft and six inches is 0.5 ft.
- Ordering the exact mathematical volume with no allowance for low spots, spillage, or surface finishing.
The expensive mistake is running short during placement. The second most expensive mistake is ordering more concrete than the site can place before it starts setting. The best order is not the smallest number; it is the number that fits the measured work, the crew, the truck access, and the supplier's rounding policy.
What to say when ordering
I am estimating a 24 ft by 24 ft by 6 inch concrete slab. My calculated volume is 10.7 cubic yards, and I want to plan around 11.8 cubic yards with 10% overage. Can you confirm the order size, mix strength, short-load fee, delivery charge, chute reach, and whether this job needs a pump or different placement method?
Related calculations
Sources and methodology
BuilderCalc uses standard geometric volume formulas, the 27 cubic feet per cubic yard conversion, common premix bag yields, and planning cost ranges that should be verified with local suppliers.