How to Calculate Asphalt: Formulas, Units & Worked Examples
Calculating asphalt boils down to three steps: find the volume, convert volume to weight using density, and convert weight to tons. This guide walks through the math in both imperial and metric units, with worked examples and the most common mistakes to avoid.
In India, projects are typically measured in metric and mix densities follow MoRTH specifications. The 2,322.7 kg/m³ standard applies to BC, DBM and most dense-graded mixes.
The Three-Step Asphalt Calculation
Step 1 — Find the Volume
Volume = Length × Width × Thickness, with all three values in the same unit.
- Imperial: convert thickness from inches to feet (÷ 12). Volume is in cubic feet.
- Metric: convert thickness from centimeters to meters (÷ 100). Volume is in cubic meters.
Step 2 — Convert Volume to Weight
Multiply volume by the density of hot mix asphalt:
- Imperial: weight (lbs) = volume (ft³) × 145
- Metric: weight (kg) = volume (m³) × 2,322.7
Step 3 — Convert Weight to Tons
- US short tons: tons = lbs ÷ 2,000
- Metric tonnes: tonnes = kg ÷ 1,000
Worked Example: 600 sq ft Driveway at 2.5 Inches
Driveway: 30 ft × 20 ft × 2.5 inches thick.
- Volume: 30 × 20 × (2.5 ÷ 12) = 125 ft³
- Weight: 125 × 145 = 18,125 lbs
- Tons: 18,125 ÷ 2,000 = 9.06 tons
- With 10% buffer: ≈ 9.97 tons
You'd order 10 tons to be safe.
Common Mistakes
- Forgetting to convert inches to feet. A 2-inch slab is 0.167 ft, not 2 ft.
- Mixing units. Don't multiply meters by inches.
- Ignoring the buffer. Loose mix compacts down ~10%.
- Using millings density for HMA. See millings calculator.
Tons vs Tonnes
A US short ton is 2,000 lbs (907.18 kg). A metric tonne is 1,000 kg (2,204.62 lbs). Different by about 10%.
Use the Calculator
Skip the arithmetic and use the asphalt calculator for instant results.