Enter your wall dimensions and block size to instantly calculate how many CMU blocks you need, how many bags of mortar, fill concrete volume, and total material cost.
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Underbuying means a second trip and potential lot-mismatch. Overbuying wastes budget on blocks that sit in your yard. Get it right the first time.
Wall area ÷ block face area (with mortar joint) = block count. A standard 8×16 CMU with 3/8" joint covers ~0.89 sq ft of wall. Most contractors add 10% for cuts, corners, and breakage.
Block count, mortar bags (bed and head joints), grout/fill concrete for structural cores, and total material cost estimate based on your local prices.
Contractors bidding masonry jobs, homeowners building garden or retaining walls, project managers calculating material orders, and DIYers planning a first CMU build.
Always add 5–10% for cuts and breakage. Structural walls over 4 ft need engineered fill and rebar — consult a licensed mason or structural engineer before starting.
Free Tool
Enter your wall dimensions, block size, and get blocks, mortar, fill, and cost — instantly.
CMU · Cinder Block · Concrete Block · Retaining Wall · Any size
Block Type Guide
Choosing the right block size changes your count, your mortar usage, and your structural rating. Here's what each one is actually used for.
The workhorse of masonry construction. Used for foundations, load-bearing walls, retaining walls, and basement walls. Hollow core allows rebar reinforcement and concrete fill for structural applications.
Used for corners, ends of courses, and areas where a full-length block won't fit. Also used as the top course cap or for bond beam courses. You'll typically need 15–20% half blocks on any wall.
Lightweight interior partition walls, non-load-bearing dividers, and space separation in commercial and residential buildings. Not suitable for exterior or structural applications.
Foundation walls, below-grade walls, and any application requiring maximum compressive strength or thermal mass. More expensive per block but significantly stronger than standard 8" CMU.
Reference Data
Blocks needed per 100 sq ft of wall face at standard 3/8" mortar joint, before waste factor.
| Block Size (Nominal) | Face Area | Blocks / 100 sq ft | Mortar bags / 100 sq ft | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8×8×16 Standard CMU | ~0.89 sq ft | ~113 | ~3 | Foundation, retaining walls |
| 8×8×8 Half block | ~0.44 sq ft | ~227 | ~6 | Corners, cap course |
| 4×8×16 Partition | ~0.89 sq ft | ~113 | ~3 | Interior partitions |
| 6×8×16 Medium | ~0.89 sq ft | ~113 | ~3 | Light structural |
| 12×8×16 Heavy | ~0.89 sq ft | ~113 | ~3.5 | Below grade, foundation |
| 16×8×16 Extra wide | ~0.89 sq ft | ~113 | ~4 | Retaining, heavy load |
⚠ All values assume 3/8" mortar joint. Add 5–10% for cuts and waste. Mortar coverage assumes standard Type S mortar mix.
Step by Step
The same formula used by masonry contractors — in four steps.
Length × height = total wall area in sq ft. Subtract any openings (doors, windows) to get the net area requiring blocks.
Divide net wall area by the face area of one block (including mortar joint). For 8×16 with 3/8" joint: 1 block ≈ 0.89 sq ft.
Add 5–10% for cuts at corners, openings, and broken blocks. Always round up to whole blocks — you can't buy half a block.
One 60 lb bag of Type S mortar covers ~35–40 blocks. Fill concrete for structural cores: calculate total core volume × fill percentage.
In-Depth Guide
Technically, "cinder block" refers to older masonry units made with coal cinder aggregate — a byproduct of coal combustion. These are rarely produced today. Modern concrete masonry units (CMU) are manufactured with Portland cement, aggregate (sand, gravel, or lightweight materials), and water.
In practice, contractors and homeowners use both terms interchangeably. When someone searches for a "cinder block calculator" or "cmu block calculator," they're looking for the same thing — and this calculator handles both.
The main practical differences: CMU blocks have standardized ASTM-rated compressive strength (1900 psi minimum for standard grade). Older cinder blocks were weaker and are no longer code-compliant for structural applications in most jurisdictions.
A standard 60 lb bag of Type S or Type N mortar covers approximately 35–40 standard 8×16 CMU blocks when applied to both bed (horizontal) and head (vertical) joints at 3/8" thickness.
For 100 sq ft of standard CMU wall (~113 blocks), you need roughly 3 bags of mortar. For 500 sq ft (565 blocks), budget 15–16 bags. Our calculator includes mortar estimates based on your exact block count and joint thickness.
Structural walls, retaining walls, and any wall over 4 feet tall require core fill — grout or concrete poured into the hollow cores, typically with vertical rebar every 24–48 inches on center. This dramatically increases the wall's structural strength and resistance to lateral forces.
For garden walls, landscape borders, and non-structural decorative walls under 4 feet, core fill is optional. Many DIYers skip it to reduce cost and weight. Check your local building code — some jurisdictions require fill for all masonry walls regardless of height.
Material cost for a standard 8×8×16 CMU wall runs $3.50–$5.50 per sq ft (blocks + mortar + fill). Labor adds $10–$18 per sq ft for professional masonry work. Total installed cost for a basic 8×16 CMU wall is typically $14–$24 per sq ft depending on region, wall complexity, and local labor rates.
Contractor Tips
Practical advice from masonry contractors to avoid the most expensive mistakes on your block wall project.
Blocks break during transport and installation, cuts at corners and openings waste material, and color/texture batches vary between orders. Ordering short and reordering mid-project causes delays and potential color mismatches in the finished wall.
Type S mortar has higher compressive strength and better resistance to moisture — required for below-grade and exterior applications. Type N is sufficient for interior non-load-bearing walls. Never use Type N mortar for retaining walls or foundations.
CMU walls expand and contract with temperature changes. Without control joints at regular intervals, thermal movement creates random cracking. Plan control joints every 20–25 feet of wall length and at all openings, corners, and wall intersections.
Dry CMU blocks absorb moisture from fresh mortar, weakening the bond. Lightly dampen very dry blocks before laying (especially in hot, dry conditions) but never use saturated blocks — excess water weakens mortar too. The goal is SSD (saturated surface dry) condition.
Plan your rebar layout before you start laying the first course — vertical rebar must extend from the footing through the full wall height. It's nearly impossible to add rebar properly after more than 2–3 courses are laid. For retaining walls, consult an engineer for rebar sizing and spacing.
FAQ
Real questions from contractors and homeowners about CMU block counts, mortar, and wall construction.
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