Mortar Calculator | Estimate Mortar for Any Project (2025 Guide)
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Mortar Calculator • Free Tool

Three ways to calculate — by unit count, by wall area, or by known volume

The unit you are laying
Total bricks or blocks
Your Estimate
Bag yield reference table
Unit Type80 lb Bag60 lb Bag40 lb Bag
Modular brick40-45 units28-34 units18-22 units
Queen brick34-3924-2816-19
Jumbo brick37-4226-3017-21
CMU 8x8x1612-149-106-7
CMU 12x8x1610-127-95-6

Midpoint estimates. Always verify against the coverage printed on your bag.

mortar calculator

A construction worker mixing mortar in a wheelbarrow beside a partially completed brick wall — mortar mix bags, measuring buckets, and masonry tools visible on site.

What Is Mortar and Why Does Accurate Estimation Matter?

Mortar is a workable paste made from a binding material — typically Portland cement or lime — combined with fine aggregate (sand) and water. Once applied and cured, it bonds masonry units together and seals the joints between them, forming the structural backbone of every brick wall, block foundation, tile floor, and stone veneer in existence.

Getting your mortar estimate right matters for three reasons:

  • Cost control. Running 30 bags over budget on a small patio adds up fast. Running short forces a mid-project store run — and mortar colour can vary between batches, leaving visible join lines in finished work.
  • Structural integrity. Joints that are too thin or too thick weaken the bond and lead to cracking, water infiltration, and premature failure.
  • Scheduling. Mortar has a working life of 1.5 to 2.5 hours once mixed. Knowing your quantities lets you batch correctly and avoid cold joints or wasted material.

How a Mortar Calculator Works

A mortar calculator solves one geometry problem: how much space do your mortar joints occupy across the whole project? The core formula is consistent across every professional estimating tool.

The formula

Core Formula

Bags = CEIL( units / yield per bag ) x ( 1 + waste % )

Example: 500 bricks / 30 bricks/bag = 16.67 -- CEIL = 17 bags Add 10% waste: 17 x 1.10 = 18.7 -- order 19 bags

The ceiling rounding step is critical — you always round up before adding waste, because a fraction of a bag is still a full bag you must purchase.

What you need before calculating

  • Total unit count, or wall dimensions (L x H) with openings subtracted
  • Joint thickness (3/8 in for standard brick; 1/2 in for CMU or stone)
  • Masonry unit type (different sizes produce different yields per bag)
  • Bag size (40, 60, or 80 lb)
  • Waste factor (minimum 10% for any job)
Pro Tip — Round Up, Never Down Running out of mortar mid-wall forces a cold joint — a structural weak point where fresh mortar meets set mortar. Always add at least 10% to your total, and keep one sealed spare bag for patch repairs.

Mortar Mix Types Explained

ASTM classifies mortar into four types based on compressive strength and flexibility. Using the wrong type is as harmful as using the wrong quantity.

TypeStrengthBest ApplicationsKey Property
Type M2,500 psiBelow-grade walls, driveways, foundationsHighest strength; least flexible
Type S1,800 psiExterior walls, chimneys, patios, walkwaysHigh strength + bond — most common
Type N750 psiInterior walls, above-grade exterior, veneersMedium strength; easiest to work
Type O350 psiNon-load-bearing interior, historic repairsHighest flexibility, lowest strength

For most residential DIY work above grade, Type N is the right choice. For patios, retaining walls, and anything below grade, use Type S. Never use standard brick mortar for tile — polymer-modified thinset is required.


Step-by-Step: Calculate Mortar for a Brick Wall

Worked example: a garden wall that is 20 feet long and 4 feet high using standard modular bricks with 3/8-inch joints.

Step 1 — Calculate wall area

Wall area = 20 ft x 4 ft = 80 sq ft

Step 2 — Count bricks

For modular brick at 3/8-inch joints: 6.75 bricks per square foot.

Bricks = 80 x 6.75 = 540 With 10% waste: 540 x 1.10 = 594 -- order 600

Step 3 — Calculate mortar volume

Use 0.02 cubic feet of mortar per modular brick at a 3/8-inch joint.

Mortar = 540 x 0.02 = 10.8 cu ft With 10% waste: 10.8 x 1.10 = 11.88 -- use 12 cu ft

Step 4 — Convert to bags

A 60 lb pre-mixed mortar bag yields approximately 0.45 cu ft.

Bags = CEIL(12 / 0.45) = CEIL(26.7) = 27 bags of 60 lb mortar
The calculator at the top automates all four steps. Use the By Wall Area tab, enter 20 ft x 4 ft, and get your result instantly.
mason measuring brick wall dimensions with tape measure while using mortar calculator on tablet at construction site

A mason measuring wall dimensions on site while using a mortar calculator app on a tablet — combining physical measurement with digital estimation for a precise material order.


Mortar Calculator for Tile Projects

Tile uses thinset mortar (polymer-modified), not standard masonry mortar. Coverage depends on tile size and trowel notch. Never set tile with brick mortar — the coarse sand prevents proper adhesion.

Tile SizeTrowel NotchCoverage / 50 lb BagNotes
Up to 4×4 in3/16 in V-notch95-100 sq ftMosaic and small wall tile
4×4 to 8×8 in1/4 x 3/16 in40-50 sq ftStandard floor tile
12×12 to 16×16 in1/4 x 1/4 in35-40 sq ftMost common residential tile
18×18 in and larger1/2 x 1/2 in25-30 sq ftBack-butter required (TCNA)
TCNA Standard The Tile Council of North America requires 95%+ mortar contact for floor tile. Back-butter all tiles 18 inches and larger to prevent hollow spots and cracking under load.

Mortar for Block and Stone Masonry

CMU block walls

A standard 8x8x16-inch CMU with 3/8-inch joints requires approximately 0.06 cubic feet of mortar per block. One cubic foot covers about 16-17 standard CMUs.

CMU Example — 100 blocks
Mortar = 100 x 0.06 = 6.0 cu ft +10% waste = 6.6 cu ft Bags (80 lb = 0.60 cu ft): CEIL(6.6 / 0.60) = 11 bags

Natural stone

Natural stone is the most mortar-intensive application. Joints often run 1/2 to 1 inch thick. Expect mortar consumption 20-40% higher than equivalent brick work. Use the By Volume tab with a 20% waste factor.


Mortar Coverage Charts by Project Type

Project TypeUnit / JointMortar / 100 sq ft60 lb Bags / 100 sq ft
Brick wall — modular3/8 in joint2.0 cu ft~5 bags
Brick wall — queen3/8 in joint1.8 cu ft~4 bags
CMU block wall3/8 in, 8x8x163.5 cu ft~8 bags
Floor tile 12×123/16 in grout joint0.9 cu ft thinset~2 bags (50 lb)
Natural stone veneer1/2 in joint4.5 cu ft~10 bags
Repointing / tuckpointingExisting joints, 3/4 in depth1.5 cu ft~3-4 bags

How Much Mortar Per Bag?

Bag WeightMixed YieldBrick CoverageBest Use
40 lb~0.30 cu ft~15 modular bricksSmall repairs, patches
60 lb~0.45 cu ft~22 modular bricksMedium DIY projects
80 lb~0.60 cu ft~30 modular bricksLarge jobs; best per-bag value
Pre-mix 3.5 gal bucket~0.47 cu ft equiv.VariesTile and repair; no mixing

Common Mortar Estimation Mistakes

Not subtracting openings

Doors and windows occupy wall area that needs no masonry. A 20×8 ft wall with two 3×5 ft windows: subtract 30 sq ft before you calculate. Skip this and you will buy 5-10 extra bags.

Wrong joint thickness

A 1/2-inch joint uses roughly 33% more mortar than a 3/8-inch joint for the same area. Use the exact joint width in your design, not a generic default.

Ignoring temperature

Above 90 degrees F mortar stiffens faster than you can lay it. Below 40 degrees F it may not cure properly. Both extremes affect how much you waste per batch.

Skipping the waste factor

Mortar falls off trowels, sticks to boards, and dries in buckets. A 10% buffer is the minimum for any job. Use 20% for stone work or any first-time installation.

Always Buy One Extra Bag After finalising your order, add one sealed spare bag. Mortar colour varies between production batches — matching a repair to old mortar is notoriously difficult once the original batch is gone.

Expert Tips for Accurate Mortar Estimates

  • Measure at three points. Walls are rarely perfectly uniform. Take length and height at both ends and the middle — use the largest value.
  • Read the bag label. Manufacturer coverage data is calculated for their exact mix ratio. It beats any generic reference table.
  • Account for substrate porosity. Old dry masonry or uneven surfaces absorb more mortar. Add 5-10% extra on restoration or repointing work.
  • Respect pot life. Most mortar is workable for 1.5-2.5 hours. Use your bag count to plan batch sizes, not just total quantity.
  • Test one bag first. On unfamiliar materials or large orders, mix one bag and measure actual coverage before ordering the full quantity.
  • Cross-check two calculators. Run your numbers through two tools and use the higher result.
For ASTM mortar specification standards, the Portland Cement Association mortar guidance is the authoritative US reference for mix types, compressive strengths, and application requirements.

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Frequently Asked Questions

A 60 lb bag typically lays 20 to 25 standard modular bricks with a standard 3/8-inch joint. The midpoint is around 22 bricks per bag. An 80 lb bag extends to about 28 to 32 bricks. Always confirm against the coverage data on your specific bag label.
Type N: 1 part Portland cement to 3 parts sand. Type S: 1 part cement to 2.5 parts sand. Many masons also add 1/4 to 1/2 part hydrated lime for workability. Pre-bagged mortar comes pre-proportioned — no additional sand needed.
For modular brick with 3/8-inch joints over 100 sq ft: approximately 675 bricks and 13 to 14 cu ft of mortar including 10% waste. That is roughly 29 to 31 bags of 60 lb, or 23 to 25 bags of 80 lb mortar mix.
Most mortar stays workable for 1.5 to 2.5 hours after adding water. You can re-temper once within the first hour by adding a small amount of water. Discard any mortar mixed for more than 2 hours — never re-temper set mortar.
Concrete contains coarse aggregate (gravel) for structural strength in foundations and slabs. Mortar uses only fine aggregate (sand), making it workable enough to form thin joints and bond masonry units. Never substitute concrete for mortar — coarse aggregate prevents proper joint packing.
A standard 60 lb bag of Type N or Type S costs $8 to $15 at major US home improvement retailers in 2025. Polymer-modified thinset and Type M mixes run $15 to $25 per bag. Pallet buying typically cuts the per-bag cost by 10 to 15%.
Properly mixed mortar should hold its shape when squeezed but release cleanly from the trowel without slumping — often described as peanut butter consistency. Too wet and it shrinks and cracks. Too dry and it will not bond, creating hollow spots in joints.
No. Tile requires polymer-modified thinset mortar designed for the flexibility, adhesion, and contact coverage that tile demands. Standard mortar’s coarse sand prevents adequate back coverage and the bond will fail over time.

Final Thoughts

A mortar calculator takes the guesswork out of one of the most consequential decisions on any masonry project. Get the number right and you order once, work without interruption, and finish with no wasted bags. The keys: measure accurately, subtract openings, match your mortar type to the application, add at least 10% for waste, and verify against the yield printed on the bag you are actually buying.

Use the free calculator at the top of this page to run your numbers in seconds — no sign-up required.

For informational purposes only. Consult a licensed masonry contractor for structural applications.  |  Privacy  |  About  |  Copyright 2025 Concrete Calculator Pro