Self-Leveling Concrete Calculator: How Much Do You Need?
What Is Self-Leveling Concrete?
Self-leveling concrete (also called self-leveling underlayment or SLU) is a polymer-modified cementitious compound that flows across uneven floors and settles into a smooth, flat surface using gravity. Unlike standard concrete, you don’t screed or trowel it — you pour it, spread it roughly, and it levels itself within 10–20 minutes.
It’s commonly used to flatten existing concrete floors before installing tile, hardwood, LVP, or carpet. It’s also the go-to for radiant floor heating systems where you need a smooth encapsulating layer.
Self-Leveling Concrete Calculator: The Math
The formula for calculating self-leveling concrete is:
Volume (cu ft) = Area (sq ft) × Average Depth (inches) ÷ 12
The tricky part is “average depth.” Unlike a slab where thickness is uniform, self-leveling concrete fills low spots that vary across the floor. You’ll need to measure the depth at multiple points and average them.
Coverage Rates by Product
| Product | Bag Size | Coverage at ¼” | Coverage at ½” | Coverage at 1” |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard SLU | 50 lb | ~50 sq ft | ~25 sq ft | ~12.5 sq ft |
| High-flow SLU | 50 lb | ~44 sq ft | ~22 sq ft | ~11 sq ft |
| Quikrete Self-Leveling | 50 lb | ~50 sq ft | ~25 sq ft | ~12.5 sq ft |
Example Calculation
Scenario: You have a 200 sq ft basement floor that averages ½ inch low across the surface.
- Volume needed = 200 × 0.5 ÷ 12 = 8.33 cubic feet
- At standard coverage (25 sq ft per bag at ½”): 8 bags of 50lb SLU
- Add 10% waste = 9 bags
When to Use Self-Leveling Concrete
Self-leveling concrete makes sense when:
- Existing floor is uneven by ¼” to 1½” — too much for thin-set adjustments, not enough for a full slab
- Installing new flooring — tile, hardwood, and LVP need flat substrates (within 3/16” over 10 feet)
- Covering radiant heat tubing — needs 1” coverage over tubes minimum
- Fixing garage floor low spots — before epoxy coating or paint
- Commercial renovations — leveling old warehouse or retail floors
Self-Leveling vs. Standard Concrete
| Factor | Self-Leveling | Standard Concrete |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum depth | ¼ inch | 2 inches |
| Maximum depth | 1½ inches (single pour) | Unlimited |
| Strength (PSI) | 3,500–5,000 | 3,000–4,000 |
| Working time | 15–20 minutes | 45–60 minutes |
| Cost per sq ft | $1.50–$3.00 | $0.30–$0.75 |
| Surface finish | Glass-smooth | Requires troweling |
| Curing time | Walk-on in 4–6 hours | 24–48 hours |
Tips for Self-Leveling Concrete Success
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Seal all cracks and edges first — SLU is extremely fluid and will find any gap, crack, or hole in your floor. Use foam backer rod and caulk to dam edges.
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Prime the floor — Most SLU products require a primer coat to bond properly. Skip this and it can delaminate.
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Mix to exact water ratios — Too much water weakens it; too little prevents proper flow. Use a drill with a mixing paddle.
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Work fast — You have 15–20 minutes before it starts setting. For large areas, have a helper mixing the next batch while you pour.
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Temperature matters — Most products require 50–80°F floor and air temperature. Cold floors dramatically slow curing.
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Break large areas into pours — For rooms over 200 sq ft, use foam dam strips to divide into sections.
How to Calculate for Uneven Floors
Since self-leveling concrete fills varying depths, measure depth at multiple points:
- Place a straight 8-foot level across the floor
- Measure the gap at multiple points (every 2 feet)
- Record all measurements
- Average them: (sum of all measurements) ÷ (number of measurements) = average depth
Example: Measurements of 0”, ¼”, ½”, ¾”, ½”, ¼”, 0”
- Sum = 2.25 inches across 7 points
- Average depth = 2.25 ÷ 7 = 0.32 inches
- For a 12×15 (180 sq ft) room: 180 × 0.32 ÷ 12 = 4.8 cu ft = about 7 bags with waste
Use Our Concrete Calculator
While our main calculator is designed for standard concrete projects (slabs, footings, post holes), you can adapt it for self-leveling concrete by using the slab calculator with your floor area and average depth. Just remember that SLU bags have different yields than standard concrete — refer to the product’s coverage chart for exact bag counts.
For standard concrete projects — slabs, sonotubes, fence posts, walls, and more — use our free concrete calculator for instant results with waste factor included.