23 free calculators for home improvement, construction materials, energy systems, gardening, and hobby projects. Get accurate material estimates and cost breakdowns before you start.
Every successful home improvement project starts with accurate material estimates. Buying too little means extra trips to the hardware store and potential color-lot mismatches. Buying too much wastes money and leaves you with leftover materials taking up garage space. ThisCalc provides 23 free home and DIY calculators that give you precise quantities, bag counts, and cost estimates before you make a single purchase.
Planning a room makeover? Start with the paint calculator to determine exactly how many gallons you need, accounting for wall dimensions, doors, windows, number of coats, and primer requirements. For flooring, the flooring calculator covers hardwood, laminate, tile, vinyl, and carpet with appropriate waste factors for each material type. The tile calculator goes deeper with grout quantity, thinset mortar, box count, and layout-specific waste calculations. Adding wallpaper? The wallpaper calculator handles pattern repeat matching, which is the trickiest part of wallpaper estimation and the most common source of ordering errors.
The concrete calculator covers slabs, footings, columns, and stairs, converting between cubic yards and bag counts for 60-lb, 80-lb, and bulk delivery. Building a deck? The deck board calculator computes boards, joists, screws, and joist hangers with lumber dimensions and spacing options for both wood and composite materials. The fence calculator handles posts, rails, pickets, and concrete for post holes with material cost estimation. For landscaping, the gravel and mulch calculator converts area and depth into cubic yards, tons, and bag counts for gravel, mulch, topsoil, river rock, and sand.
Make informed decisions about your home's energy systems. The solar panel savings calculator models your complete solar financial picture including the 30% federal ITC, electricity rate inflation, panel degradation over 25 years, and cumulative CO2 offset. The heat pump payback calculator compares heat pump versus gas furnace costs across climate zones with COP efficiency curves and IRA rebate eligibility. The energy cost calculator reveals how much any appliance costs to run, and the home battery runtime calculator shows how long your backup battery system will last during an outage with solar refill modeling.
Green thumbs will appreciate the garden planner for soil volume, mulch depth, and plant spacing in raised beds, plus the potting soil calculator for container gardening. The rainwater harvesting calculator sizes collection tanks based on your roof area and local rainfall data. Hobby enthusiasts have dedicated tools too: the sourdough calculator plans levain builds and fermentation schedules, the homebrew calculator handles yeast pitch rates and carbonation, the 3D printing calculator estimates filament and electricity costs, and the ham radio link budget calculator models signal propagation for amateur radio operators.
Running these calculators before heading to the hardware store or calling a contractor can save you hundreds of dollars on a single project. Over-ordering concrete by one bag at $6 is minor, but over-ordering hardwood flooring by 50 square feet at $8/sqft is $400. Every calculator runs in your browser with no signup, no data collection, and instant results as you adjust your measurements.
Measure the total wall area (length x height for each wall), then subtract the area of doors and windows. Divide the net paintable area by the paint coverage rate (typically 350-400 sq ft per gallon for a smooth wall). Multiply by the number of coats — most colors need two coats, and dark-to-light changes may need three. Our paint calculator handles all of this including primer and different coverage rates per surface type.
First calculate the volume in cubic feet (length x width x depth for a slab, or pi x radius squared x height for a column). Convert to cubic yards by dividing by 27. Each 80-lb bag yields about 0.6 cubic feet, and each 60-lb bag yields about 0.45 cubic feet. Add 10% for waste. Our concrete calculator handles slabs, footings, columns, and stairs with automatic bag count and cost estimation.
The basic rule of thumb is 20 BTU per square foot of living space, but the actual requirement depends on ceiling height, insulation quality, climate zone, sun exposure, number of windows, and occupancy. A south-facing room with large windows needs more cooling capacity than an insulated interior room. Our HVAC BTU calculator accounts for all these factors to recommend the correct tonnage for both heating and cooling.
Solar panel ROI depends on your electricity rate, available sunlight (peak sun hours), system cost after the federal 30% Investment Tax Credit, roof orientation, and local net metering policies. Most homeowners see a payback period of 6-10 years with 20+ year panel warranties. Our solar panel savings calculator models the full financial picture including electricity rate inflation, panel degradation, and cumulative CO2 offset.
Measure the room's square footage (length x width), then add a waste factor: 10% for standard installations, 15% for diagonal layouts, and 20% for complex rooms with angles or many doorways. Different materials have different waste rates — tile generates more cutting waste than vinyl plank. Our flooring calculator computes the exact amount for hardwood, laminate, tile, vinyl, and carpet with cost estimation.