Last updated: May 04, 2026
Brick Calculator
| Region | Size (mm) | Bricks/m² | Total Bricks |
|---|
| Scenario | Waste % | Order Qty | Total Cost | Risk |
|---|
This calculator is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Consult a licensed contractor, structural engineer, or mason before making construction decisions.
The brick calculator is an essential planning tool for anyone laying a wall, building a garden bed, or undertaking a full masonry project. A standard wall measuring 10 feet wide by 8 feet tall with a single-brick thickness requires approximately 480 standard bricks — and that figure changes with every variable: brick size, mortar joint thickness, bond pattern, and waste allowance. Getting the number wrong costs money, delays timelines, and sends you back to the supplier mid-project.
Use this free Brick Calculator to instantly compute the number of bricks, bags of mortar, and total material cost for your wall, patio, or masonry project. Enter your wall dimensions and brick type, and the calculator returns a complete material list in seconds. No sign-up required.
What Is a Brick Calculator?
Brick Calculator Definition
A brick calculator is a construction estimation tool that calculates the total number of bricks required to build a wall or surface of specified dimensions, accounting for brick size, mortar joint thickness, bond pattern, and a waste factor to ensure accurate material ordering.
Brick calculators are used by homeowners, contractors, and architects during the planning phase of masonry projects. They eliminate manual calculation errors and provide a reliable baseline for material budgeting and supplier ordering.
What Does a Brick Count of 500 Actually Mean?
A result of 500 bricks means your wall’s total face area — at your specified brick size and mortar joint — requires 500 bricks to cover. This includes a standard 10% waste allowance for cuts, breakage, and irregularities. For a standard UK brick (215mm x 65mm) with a 10mm mortar joint, 500 bricks will cover approximately 5.4 square meters of wall face.
Use our aluminum weight calculator to quickly estimate the weight of aluminum based on dimensions and shape. It’s ideal for construction, manufacturing, and material planning with accurate results.
The Brick Calculation Formula
Standard Brick Calculator Formula
| Number of Bricks = (Wall Area ÷ Brick Face Area Including Mortar) × Waste Factor |
Where Wall Area = Wall Width × Wall Height, and Brick Face Area = (Brick Length + Mortar Joint) × (Brick Height + Mortar Joint). A standard 10% waste factor (multiply by 1.10) is recommended for straight walls; increase to 15% for patterns such as herringbone or diagonal coursing.
How to Calculate Bricks Per Square Meter
| Bricks Per m² = 1,000,000 ÷ [(Brick Length + Joint) × (Brick Height + Joint)] |
For a standard UK brick (215mm × 65mm) with a 10mm mortar joint, this gives (215 + 10) × (65 + 10) = 225 × 75 = 16,875 mm² per brick. Bricks per m² = 1,000,000 ÷ 16,875 = 59.3 bricks. Rounded to 60 bricks per square meter before waste allowance.
Step-by-Step Worked Example
| Step | Action | Value |
| 1 | Measure wall width × height | 6m × 2.5m = 15 m² |
| 2 | Subtract openings (doors/windows) | 15 m² − 2.4 m² = 12.6 m² |
| 3 | Calculate bricks per m² (standard UK brick + 10mm joint) | 60 bricks/m² |
| 4 | Multiply area × bricks per m² | 12.6 × 60 = 756 bricks |
| 5 | Add 10% waste allowance | 756 × 1.10 = 832 bricks |
| 6 | Round up to nearest full pack | 850 bricks (order 9 packs of 100) |
How to Use the Brick Calculator — Step by Step
Step 1 — Measure Your Wall Dimensions
Measure the total width and height of the wall in meters or feet. For walls with openings, measure the full wall first and subtract window and door areas separately. Always measure to the nearest centimeter for accurate results.
Step 2 — Select Your Brick Type and Size
Choose your brick from the standard size presets or enter custom dimensions. Brick length, height, and depth vary significantly by region and manufacturer. Selecting the wrong brick size is the most common source of calculation error.
Step 3 — Set Mortar Joint Thickness
Standard mortar joint thickness is 10mm for most residential brickwork. Decorative pointing and recessed joints may use 8mm; structural brickwork sometimes specifies 12–15mm joints. Confirm with your specification drawings or engineer.
Step 4 — Choose Bond Pattern
Different bond patterns use different numbers of bricks per square meter. Stretcher bond (the most common) uses approximately 60 bricks/m². English bond and Flemish bond incorporate headers and may increase brick count by 15–20% per course.
Step 5 — Add Waste Factor and Review Results
The calculator applies a default 10% waste factor. Increase this to 15% for complex cuts, curved walls, or decorative patterns. Review the total brick count, mortar bag estimate, and projected cost before placing your order.
Brick Sizes by Country — Reference Table
Standard brick dimensions vary significantly by country. The table below shows the nominal brick face dimensions (length × height) used in the calculator’s preset options.
| Country / Standard | Length (mm) | Height (mm) | Depth (mm) | Bricks per m²* |
| UK Standard (BS 3921) | 215 | 65 | 102.5 | 60 |
| US Standard Modular | 194 | 57 | 92 | 65 |
| US Queen Size | 203 | 70 | 95 | 52 |
| Australian Standard | 230 | 76 | 110 | 50 |
| European (DIN 105) | 240 | 71 | 115 | 47 |
| South African Standard | 222 | 73 | 106 | 55 |
* Bricks per m² calculated with 10mm mortar joint, stretcher bond
Mortar Calculation — How Much Mortar Do You Need?
Mortar Volume per 1,000 Bricks
For standard stretcher bond brickwork with 10mm joints, approximately 0.5 cubic meters (500 liters) of mortar mix is required per 1,000 bricks. This assumes a mortar mix ratio of 1:3 (cement:sand) to 1:4 for general-purpose brickwork.
| Mortar Volume (m³) = Number of Bricks × 0.0005 |
Bags of Cement Required
A standard 25kg bag of cement yields approximately 0.012 m³ of mortar when mixed at a 1:4 ratio with sharp sand. For 1,000 bricks requiring 0.5 m³ of mortar, you need approximately 42 bags of cement and 125 bags of sharp sand (25kg bags).
| Bricks Required | Mortar Volume (m³) | Cement Bags (25kg) | Sand Bags (25kg) |
| 100 | 0.05 | 5 | 13 |
| 250 | 0.125 | 11 | 31 |
| 500 | 0.25 | 21 | 63 |
| 1,000 | 0.50 | 42 | 125 |
| 2,500 | 1.25 | 105 | 313 |
| 5,000 | 2.50 | 209 | 625 |
Brick Bond Patterns and Their Effect on Brick Count
Common Bond Patterns Compared
The bond pattern determines how bricks are arranged across courses and significantly affects the total brick count. Patterns that use more headers (bricks laid perpendicular to the wall face) consume more bricks per square meter.
| Bond Pattern | Description | Relative Brick Use | Best For |
| Stretcher Bond | All bricks laid lengthways, offset by half a brick | Baseline (1.0×) | Single-leaf walls, garden walls |
| English Bond | Alternating courses of stretchers and headers | +20–25% | Structural double-leaf walls |
| Flemish Bond | Alternating stretchers and headers in same course | +15–20% | Decorative facades |
| Running Bond | Identical to stretcher bond, used for paving | Baseline (1.0×) | Paths, patios, driveways |
| Herringbone | Bricks laid at 45° in a V-pattern | +30–35% | Decorative paving, feature walls |
| Stack Bond | All joints aligned vertically | Baseline (1.0×) | Modern feature walls |
Waste Factor — Why You Always Need Extra Bricks
Ordering the exact calculated number of bricks is a mistake even experienced contractors avoid. Waste occurs at every stage: cutting bricks to fit corners and openings, breakage during delivery and handling, mortar contamination of face bricks, and matching problems when restocking mid-project.
Recommended Waste Allowances by Project Type
| Project Type | Recommended Waste Factor | Reason |
| Straight garden wall | 10% | Minimal cuts, simple coursing |
| House wall with openings | 10–12% | Window and door cuts increase waste |
| Curved or radiused wall | 15–20% | Significant brick cutting required |
| Herringbone or diagonal paving | 15–20% | 45° cuts on every border brick |
| Restoration or matching work | 20–25% | Colour matching may require rejection of bricks |
| Arches and feature details | 20–30% | Complex cuts and specials required |
Benefits of Using This Brick Calculator
- Instant estimates — enter wall dimensions and receive a full material list in under 10 seconds
- Multiple brick sizes — UK, US, Australian, European, and custom presets included
- Mortar calculation — automatic cement and sand quantities per your brick count
- Bond pattern adjustment — account for herringbone, English bond, Flemish bond, and more
- Waste factor control — adjust default 10% to match your project complexity
- Cost estimator — add unit price per brick for a complete project budget
- No registration required — completely free and accessible on any device
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1 — Using Nominal Brick Size Without Mortar Joint
The most frequent error is calculating bricks using the brick’s actual face dimensions without adding the mortar joint. A 215mm brick with a 10mm joint occupies 225mm of wall length. Omitting the joint understates the brick spacing and overstates the brick count by approximately 5–8%.
Mistake 2 — Ignoring Openings
Many first-time builders calculate the full wall area including doors and windows, then order that full quantity. Measure your total wall area, then subtract the area of all openings before applying the bricks-per-square-meter rate.
Mistake 3 — Ordering Without Waste Allowance
Ordering the exact calculated number always leads to a shortage. Batch-to-batch colour variations mean you cannot easily top up from a new delivery. Always add a minimum 10% waste factor and keep any surplus for future repairs.
Mistake 4 — Using the Wrong Brick Thickness for Single vs Double Leaf
A single-leaf wall uses bricks laid in stretcher orientation — the 102.5mm depth becomes the wall thickness. A double-leaf (cavity) wall uses bricks laid as headers, doubling the width. Confirm whether your project is single-leaf or double-leaf before entering dimensions into the calculator.
Real-World Applications
Garden Wall Construction
A typical garden boundary wall 15 meters long and 1.2 meters high in stretcher bond requires approximately 1,080 standard UK bricks (15m × 1.2m = 18 m² × 60 bricks/m²) before waste. Adding 10% brings the order to 1,190 bricks. The brick calculator delivers this estimate instantly alongside the mortar requirement.
Brick Paving and Patios
For a 30 m² patio in running bond using standard 215mm × 65mm bricks on edge, the calculation changes: bricks are laid flat, so the effective face area per brick differs. The calculator adjusts automatically when you select the paving mode, providing accurate quantities for both full bricks and cuts at the perimeter.
Contractor Material Takeoff
Quantity surveyors and contractors use brick calculators as the first pass in a Bill of Quantities. The calculator output feeds directly into cost estimates, supplier RFQs, and project scheduling tools. Accurate brick counts prevent both costly over-ordering and project-halting shortages.
Key Takeaway
Accurate brick estimation begins with precise wall measurements, the correct brick size preset, and an appropriate waste factor. A standard 10% waste allowance suits straight walls; increase to 15–20% for patterned work or curved structures. Use the Brick Calculator above to generate your complete material list — bricks, mortar, cement, and sand — in a single calculation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many bricks do I need for a square meter?
For a standard UK brick (215mm × 65mm) with a 10mm mortar joint in stretcher bond, you need approximately 60 bricks per square meter. US standard modular bricks require around 65 per square meter. Always add a 10% waste allowance to your calculated total.
How do I calculate bricks for a wall?
Multiply wall width × wall height to get total area in square meters. Subtract any door or window openings. Multiply the net area by the bricks-per-m² rate for your chosen brick size and mortar joint (typically 60 bricks/m² for UK standard). Add a 10% waste factor to the result and round up.
What is the standard mortar joint thickness for brickwork?
Standard mortar joint thickness is 10mm for most general-purpose brickwork. Thin-joint masonry systems use 2–3mm bed joints with specially formulated adhesive mortars. Recessed or bucket-handle pointing may reduce the visible joint face but the structural bed joint remains 10mm.
How many bags of cement do I need per 1,000 bricks?
For a standard 1:4 cement:sand mortar mix with 10mm joints, approximately 42 bags of 25kg cement are required per 1,000 bricks. This corresponds to roughly 0.5 m³ of mortar. Some ready-mixed mortar products specify coverage per bag on the packaging — always check the manufacturer’s data sheet.
Should I order extra bricks and how many?
Yes. Always order a minimum 10% extra for waste, cuts, and breakage. For complex patterns such as herringbone or diagonal bond, order 15–20% extra. For restoration work where colour matching is critical, add 20–25% to ensure you have sufficient bricks from the same batch before the production run ends.
What is the difference between a single-leaf and double-leaf wall?
A single-leaf (half-brick) wall is one brick deep — approximately 102.5mm thick — with all bricks laid in stretcher orientation. A double-leaf (full-brick) wall is one full brick deep — approximately 215mm thick — and requires roughly twice the bricks. Cavity walls are two separate single-leaf walls with a gap between them, each calculated independently.
How does bond pattern affect brick quantity?
Stretcher bond uses the fewest bricks per square meter as all bricks are laid flat and lengthways. English bond and Flemish bond incorporate headers (bricks laid across the wall thickness), increasing the number of bricks visible on the face per course by 20–30%. Herringbone paving adds 30–35% due to diagonal cutting at borders.
Can I use the brick calculator for paving and driveways?
Yes. For paved surfaces, calculate the total paved area in square meters and select the brick orientation — bricks laid flat on their stretcher face use different dimensions than bricks laid on edge. The calculator accounts for orientation and applies the correct bricks-per-m² rate for each paving configuration.
About This Calculator
This brick calculator is part of Intelligent Calculator’s Construction suite, built on standard masonry engineering principles and BS 3921 / ASTM C62 brick sizing standards. Suitable for residential, commercial, and landscaping projects. Free. No sign-up required.

