Concrete

Concrete post-hole fill

The volume is the planned concrete cylinder, not automatically the entire drilled hole. If a post displaces concrete or the hole is irregular, use measured project dimensions and the applicable installation instructions rather than assuming a universal subtraction.

First answer

For equal cylindrical fills, use π × (diameter ÷ 2)² × concrete depth × hole count, divide by the selected bag yield, and round up.

Run the calculator

Formula or decision rule

π × (diameter ÷ 2)² × concrete depth × hole count × allowance factor ÷ bag yield
  • Diameter and depth must be in the same length unit.
  • The calculator converts the cylindrical volume to cubic feet.
  • It does not determine required hole geometry or whether concrete is appropriate.

Cylinder worksheet

Cylinder worksheet
InputMeaningDo not substitute
Diameterplanned concrete cylinder widthradius
Depthplanned concrete fill depthtotal excavation unless fully filled
Quantityequal cylindersmixed hole sizes
Yieldselected No. 1101 baganother product’s label

Work through the project

  1. Confirm the installation detail

    Use the fence, deck, mailbox, or equipment plan and local requirements to establish the actual fill geometry.

  2. Measure groups separately

    Put different diameters or depths in separate runs rather than averaging irregular holes.

  3. Match the label

    Select the exact 40, 60, or 80 pound No. 1101 bag in the calculator.

Safety and scope

  • Locate utilities before digging and protect the excavation.
  • Post and footing design must account for local soil, frost, wind, loads, drainage, and code.

Sources and scope

Source links reviewed July 16, 2026. A review date is not the document's publication date.

  1. QUIKRETE: Concrete Mix No. 1101 Technical Data SheetNorth America · manufacturer data sheet

    Bag counts are based on stated approximate yield and must be rounded up to whole bags.

  2. National Institute of Standards and Technology: NIST Guide to the SI, Appendix B — Conversion FactorsUnited States · government standard

    Code retains exact defining constants where NIST identifies an exact relationship.