Sod calculator square feet

Get accurate sod quantities using real-world sample measurements and confidence intervals. Designed for professionals and DIYers — just enter your data below.

📐 1. Enter your sample data & parameters

Provide measurements from different parts of your lawn. The more samples you add, the tighter the confidence interval. All fields are required.

  • Total sections (N): How many individual plots / sections make up the whole lawn? (e.g., 20 if you divide lawn into 20 squares)
  • Sample data: Actual measured areas (in sq ft) from some of those sections. Use commas.
  • Confidence level: Typical values: 90%, 95%, 99%. Higher = wider interval.
  • Model year: For your record (2024,2025…). Doesn’t affect math.

📊 2. Statistical results & graphs

Below you’ll find the detailed statistics from your samples, a visual distribution, and the final estimated sod square footage with confidence intervals.

Bar chart: each sample area (sq ft). Dashed line = sample mean.

📋 Input summary

Table 1: Parameters you entered
Total sections (N)
Sample size (n)
Confidence level
Model year

📋 Sample data listing

📊 Descriptive statistics (from samples)

Table 2: Sample statistics
Mean (average) area per section
Standard deviation (sample)
Standard error (SE)
Degrees of freedom (df)

🎯 Confidence interval & total sod area

Table 3: Interval estimates for total sod (sq ft)
Critical t-value
Margin of error (per section)
CI for mean section area
Estimated total sod area
CI for total area (lower – upper)

🔍 Interpretation of results

Table 4: What these numbers mean for your lawn
Confidence level
We are [conf]% confident that the true average section area lies between
Total sod required (point estimate)
Plausible range for total sod (with [conf]% confidence)
Practical adviceIf you order this amount, you cover the whole lawn with the chosen confidence.

✅ How to use these estimates in real life

The calculator follows international statistical standards (t-distribution, SRS). It works for any shape of lawn — just break it into sections (grids) and measure a random few.

  • Point estimate: total area = average sample × N. Good starting point.
  • Confidence interval: gives a safety margin. For critical projects, use the upper bound to avoid shortage.
  • Model year: handy to compare quotes from different years.

💡 Pro tip: more samples → narrower interval → less waste or risk.

Use the Siding Square Foot Calculator to find the square footage you need, or explore the full Feet & Inches Measurement Calculator category for more measurement tools.