How do I calculate concrete for stairs?
For a solid flight: width × going × rise × n(n+1)/2, where n is the number of steps. SlabSet does this sum for you.
Typical metro prices in Australia. Confirm with your local supplier before ordering.
Concrete is sold by volume in m³. Measure the space, work out its volume, add wastage, then convert to individual bags or a premix order.
Wastage: sites lose concrete to spillage and uneven ground. 10% is standard; raise it for rough ground, lower it for tidy formwork.
Bags or premix: a 20 kg bag yields ≈ 0.0098 m³ (~102 bags/m³). Premix sells in 0.1 m³ steps; below 0.5 m³ bags usually avoid short-load fees.
Solid concrete stairs stack like wedges: each step adds one more riser-worth of volume than the last. Enter the step width, rise, going and the number of steps and SlabSet sums the whole flight.
Common Australian external steps use a 150–190 mm rise and 240–355 mm going. Stairs are fiddly to barrow and vibrate, so keep wastage at 10% or more.
For a solid flight: width × going × rise × n(n+1)/2, where n is the number of steps. SlabSet does this sum for you.
10% is a normal starting point. Use less for tidy formwork and more for rough ground, uneven excavation or over-dig.
Ready-mix is cheaper per cubic metre, but delivery and short-load fees make small deliveries poor value: suppliers charge extra below about 0.5 m³. Bags cost more per m³ but scale down to any size. The switchover is roughly 0.5 m³: below it, order bags; above it, book the truck.
No. Use SlabSet for estimating, then confirm quantities, grade and reinforcement before ordering.
Estimates only. Confirm quantities and prices with your supplier.
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