Mortar Calculator

Pri Geens

Pri Geens

ProCalculatorTools > Construction > Concrete & Masonry > Mortar Calculator

Mortar Calculator

Required Materials

Portland Cement 0 Bags (0 lbs)
Sand Volume 0 Cu. Ft. (approx. 0 lbs)
Total Bricks Required 0
Note: Cement calculation assumes standard 94lb bags (approx 1 cu. ft.). Sand weight assumes dry density of 100 lbs/cu. ft. Calculation includes a standard 1.33x bulking factor for dry material conversion.

What Is a Mortar Calculator?

A mortar calculator is an online tool that estimates:

  • Number of bricks needed
  • Cement required (in bags and weight)
  • Sand required (in volume and weight)

It does this by calculating how much space bricks take up and how much space is left for mortar. It also adds a waste factor, which accounts for spillage, uneven joints, and brick frogs.

This makes planning easier and more reliable.


Why Use a Mortar Calculator?

Using a mortar calculator has clear benefits:

  • Accuracy: Reduces overbuying or running short
  • Cost control: Buy only what you need
  • Time saving: No manual calculations
  • Consistency: Keeps mortar strength uniform

For larger walls, small calculation errors can turn into big cost problems. This tool helps avoid that.


Key Inputs Explained (Based on the Calculator)

1. Total Wall Area

This is the full surface area of the wall in square feet. Measure height and width, then multiply.

Example:
A wall 10 ft wide and 10 ft high = 100 sq. ft.


2. Brick Dimensions

The calculator uses standard brick sizes by default:

  • Length: 7.625 inches
  • Height: 2.25 inches
  • Depth: 3.625 inches

You can change these if you are using non-standard bricks.


3. Mortar Joint Width

This is the thickness of the mortar between bricks.

Common options include:

  • 1/4 inch
  • 3/8 inch (standard)
  • 1/2 inch and above

Wider joints increase mortar usage and reduce brick count per square foot.


4. Mix Ratio (Cement : Sand)

This controls mortar strength.

Common ratios in the calculator:

  • 1:3 – High strength
  • 1:4 – Standard (most brickwork)
  • 1:5 – Medium strength
  • 1:6 – Low strength

A lower sand ratio means stronger but more expensive mortar.


5. Waste Factor

This is extra material added as a safety margin.

The default is 10%, which is realistic for most projects. It covers:

  • Spilled mortar
  • Brick frogs filling
  • Minor rework

How the Calculator Works (Behind the Scenes)

The calculator follows these steps:

  1. Calculates how many bricks fit per square foot based on brick size and joint width
  2. Estimates total bricks needed, including waste
  3. Calculates total wall volume
  4. Subtracts brick volume to get wet mortar volume
  5. Converts wet mortar to dry volume using a 1.33 bulking factor
  6. Splits dry volume into cement and sand based on mix ratio

All results are shown in practical units used on-site.


What Results You Get

After clicking Calculate Materials, the tool shows:

Cement Required

  • Displayed in standard 94 lb bags
  • Also shown in total pounds

This makes it easy to order from suppliers.


Sand Required

  • Displayed in cubic feet
  • Also shown in approximate weight

Helpful if you are buying sand by volume or weight.


Total Bricks Required

  • Rounded up to avoid shortages
  • Includes waste factor

This ensures you do not stop work due to missing bricks.


Who Should Use This Mortar Calculator?

This tool is useful for:

  • Masonry contractors
  • Builders and site engineers
  • DIY homeowners
  • Renovation planners
  • Cost estimators

If you are building a brick wall, garden wall, or boundary wall, this calculator fits the job.


Practical Tips for Best Results

  • Always measure wall area carefully
  • Stick to one brick size for the whole project
  • Use the standard joint width unless design requires otherwise
  • Do not reduce waste factor too much
  • Order slightly more sand if site conditions are messy

These small steps improve accuracy even more.