Sonotube Calculator

Your footings

Frost depth matters: your tube must reach below the local frost line (typically 30–48″ in northern states, 12–18″ in the South).

Your materials

Bags to buy
Per tube
Bag cost (incl. 10% extra)
Volume
Total concrete
In cubic yards
Sonotube forms (~$/tube)

How much concrete does a sonotube need?

A sonotube (cardboard form tube) needs concrete equal to the cylinder’s volume: π × radius² × depth. In practical terms, a common 10-inch tube takes about one 80 lb bag per foot of depth — so a 4-foot deck footing needs roughly 4 bags, and a 6-footing deck project needs about 24–27 bags including the standard 10% extra. At July 2026 prices ($5.40 per 80 lb bag), that’s around $145 in concrete plus $12–18 per tube form.

Bags per sonotube — quick reference

Tube diameter80 lb bags per ft of depthBags for 4 ft footingCu ft per ft
8″0.630.35
10″0.940.55
12″1.360.79
14″1.881.07
16″2.3101.40
18″3.0121.77

Sizing a footing correctly

ANATOMY OF A PROPER SONOTUBE FOOTING grade (ground level) frost line (30–48″ north) post anchor set in wet concrete tube 6″ above grade, rebar centered full depth belled base spreads the load Always confirm your local frost depth and footing code before digging · ProjectCosted, July 2026
A code-compliant footing reaches below frost depth, stands proud of grade, and carries rebar and an anchor.

Choosing tube diameter

Diameter is set by the load, not preference. Common practice: 8″ tubes for fence posts and light pergolas, 10–12″ for typical deck posts (the most common residential size), and 14–18″ for tall decks, hot-tub-bearing corners, and covered porch columns. When in doubt, size up — the extra bag or two of concrete costs less than $12, and an undersized footing can’t be fixed without digging it out. Local code may specify diameter based on your deck’s tributary load; check before you dig, and call 811 to locate utilities first.

Mixing tips for tube pours

Tube footings are the most beginner-friendly concrete job there is. Three things make them go well: mix slightly wet — a stiffer mix leaves voids in narrow tubes; consolidate by rodding with rebar or a stick every foot of pour to release trapped air; and brace the tube plumb before pouring, because a leaning footing is permanent. Set your post anchor into the wet concrete within 15–20 minutes of topping off, and let footings cure 48–72 hours before loading them.

Frequently asked questions

How many bags of concrete for a 10 inch sonotube 4 feet deep?
Four 80 lb bags (about 0.9 bags per foot of depth). Buy 5 to be safe — returns are easy, mid-pour shortages aren’t.
How deep should sonotubes be?
Below your local frost line: typically 30–48 inches in northern states, 12–18 inches in the South. Your building department publishes the exact figure.
Do I need rebar in a sonotube?
One or two vertical #4 rebar lengths are cheap insurance and often code-required for decks. Center them in the tube for the full depth.
Do you remove the sonotube after pouring?
Strip the exposed portion after 24–48 hours for looks; the buried cardboard can stay — it degrades harmlessly.
Should I use ready-mix for footings instead of bags?
Only for big jobs: 12+ tubes of 12″ × 4 ft approaches a yard and a half. Under that, bags beat the truck’s short-load fee.

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