Rebar Calculator

Calculate rebar requirements for concrete slabs, foundations, and structures. Get accurate estimates for rebar quantity, weight, and costs.

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šŸ”„ Pricing Updated:

šŸ For Homeowners: Get a quick cost range with just a few measurements. Perfect for budgeting and comparing contractor quotes.

Quick Mode: Get a fast estimate with basic dimensions. Perfect for homeowners and initial budgeting.

feet
Length of concrete slab
feet
Width of concrete slab
inches
Slab thickness affects rebar size/spacing
Larger rebar for heavier loads
Typical Rebar Costs by Size
Rebar Size$/Linear FootWeight (lbs/ft)Common Application
#3 (3/8")$0.65 – $1.100.376Sidewalks, light slabs, stirrups
#4 (1/2")$0.90 – $1.550.668Residential slabs, driveways, patios
#5 (5/8")$1.40 – $2.401.043Footings, grade beams, retaining walls
#6 (3/4")$2.00 – $3.401.502Foundation walls, columns, heavy structural
#7 (7/8")$2.75 – $4.602.044Commercial foundations, bridge decks
#8 (1")$3.55 – $6.002.670Heavy commercial, infrastructure

Prices are for black (uncoated) rebar. Epoxy coating adds 50%, galvanized 100%, stainless steel 300%. Sold in standard 20 ft bars.

Assumptions & Sources

Assumptions

  • Bar length: Standard 20 ft bars with 10% waste factor for cutting, bending, and lap splices. Custom-cut lengths reduce waste but increase per-foot cost.
  • Spacing: Quick mode defaults to 18" O.C. (on center) both ways — standard for 4-6" residential slabs. Structural applications may require 12" or tighter per engineering plans.
  • Concrete cover: 3" minimum from edge of slab, calculated by subtracting 6" total from each dimension. Reduced cover in quick mode for simplicity.
  • Labor rates: $0.50-1.00/lb of rebar for tying, placing, and supporting. Includes chair placement and tie wire. Complex layouts (columns, beams) cost more per pound.
  • Regional multiplier: ZIP-code-based adjustment using RSMeans 2025 regional cost indices applied to both materials and labor.

Last updated: February 2026

Pro Tips from a Construction PM
  • Lap splice = 40Ɨ bar diameter: That's 20" for #4 rebar, 25" for #5. Short splices are the #1 inspection failure. The inspector will make you cut it out and redo — and that means chipping concrete if you already poured.
  • Chair spacing for proper cover: Set chairs every 3-4 feet in a grid. Rebar must sit at the right elevation — typically 2-3" from slab bottom. Rebar sitting on the ground does nothing structurally.
  • Get inspection before the pour: Once concrete covers rebar, there's no verifying spacing, cover, or splice lengths. A failed post-pour inspection means core drilling or demolition.
  • Tie wire vs. mechanical couplers: Wire ties are fine for residential flat work — hit every other intersection. For critical structural joints (columns, grade beams, retaining walls), mechanical couplers develop 100% bar strength vs. 80% for lap splices.
  • Light rust is actually fine: Surface rust improves concrete bonding. But scaled, flaking rust means lost cross-section — replace those bars. Store rebar off the ground on dunnage to prevent this.
Related Calculators
  • Concrete Calculator — Estimate concrete volume and cost for the slab, footing, or wall your rebar is reinforcing.
  • Foundation Repair Calculator — Calculate foundation repair costs if rebar work is part of structural remediation.
  • Excavation Calculator — Figure excavation costs for footings, grade beams, and foundation trenches that need rebar.