Deck Footing Calculator
Use this deck footing calculator to estimate footing count, footing diameter, concrete volume, and concrete bag count based on deck size, post spacing, beam layout, footing depth, and soil assumptions.
This tool helps homeowners plan one of the most important structural parts of a deck build: the support system below the deck.
Unlike basic concrete calculators, this tool connects footing size to real support conditions instead of estimating concrete volume in isolation.
Plan Your Deck Footings With Confidence
Estimate footing count, tributary area, recommended footing size, concrete volume, and bag count before planning your deck support layout.
Build Your Estimate
It estimates footing count from deck length, beam rows, and post spacing; derives tributary area per footing; then solves required footing area from deck load and soil bearing capacity, using round equivalent diameter and concrete volume.
Recommended Footing Plan
Project Summary
Cost Breakdown
Important Notes
Next Steps
What This Deck Footing Calculator Does
This calculator estimates structural support requirements for a typical residential deck footing layout, including:
- footing count
- tributary area per footing
- recommended round footing diameter
- square footing equivalent
- total concrete volume
- estimated concrete bag count
It also helps compare how footing needs change when you adjust spacing, soil assumptions, or support layout.
Why Footing Planning Matters
Deck footings do more than hold posts in place. They transfer structural load safely into the soil below the deck.
If footings are undersized, too widely spaced, or installed in poor soil without adjustment, the deck may settle unevenly or require redesign.
Small layout changes can significantly affect footing size:
- adding another beam row
- tightening post spacing
- changing tributary area
- weaker soil assumptions
- greater footing depth
What Your Results Mean
1. Footing Count
Estimated number of footings required based on deck length, beam rows, and post spacing.
2. Tributary Area
The amount of deck area supported by each footing. Larger tributary areas often require larger footings.
3. Recommended Footing Size
Estimated round footing diameter based on load assumptions and allowable soil bearing pressure.
4. Concrete Volume
Total concrete required for all footings combined.
5. Bag Count
Approximate number of concrete bags required based on selected bag size.
How to Use This Deck Footing Calculator
For the most useful output, enter:
- deck length
- deck width
- beam rows supported by footings
- typical post spacing
- soil bearing assumption
- footing depth
- concrete bag size
If unsure, begin with conservative standard assumptions and compare scenarios.
What Affects Deck Footing Size the Most?
Tributary Area
The more deck area a footing supports, the larger it often needs to be.
Soil Bearing Capacity
Weaker soil generally requires larger footings.
Post Spacing
Wider spacing often increases tributary load per footing.
Beam Layout
Additional beam rows can redistribute loads and change footing count.
Footing Depth
Greater depth increases concrete volume and project cost.
Tributary Area Explained
Footing sizing is not based only on total deck square footage. It depends on how much of that deck is actually supported by each footing.
That supported area is called tributary area.
- larger tributary area = larger footing
- larger footing = more concrete
- more concrete = higher cost
This is why structural calculators are more useful than generic concrete tube calculators.
Soil Bearing Capacity Matters
Soil strength is one of the biggest drivers of footing size.
Lower soil bearing assumptions usually mean:
- larger footing diameter
- more concrete
- higher footing cost
If you do not know actual soil capacity, use conservative assumptions for planning.
How Much Concrete Do Deck Footings Require?
Concrete quantity depends on:
- footing diameter
- footing depth
- total footing count
This calculator converts total volume into approximate bag counts so you can estimate materials more practically.
For full budgeting, compare with the Deck Cost Calculator.
Attached vs Freestanding Deck Footings
Attached Decks
Often use an outer beam row supported by footings while the house ledger supports the opposite side.
Freestanding Decks
Usually require more support because the deck is carried entirely by beams and footings.
Larger freestanding decks often need:
- more beam rows
- more posts
- more footings
- more concrete
How Accurate Is This Calculator?
This tool is designed for planning and comparing footing scenarios. It is not a substitute for code review, engineering, or contractor judgment.
Accuracy depends on:
- actual soil conditions
- final beam and post layout
- local code requirements
- frost depth
- site-specific details
How Much Do Deck Footings Cost?
Footing cost varies based on:
- number of footings
- diameter and depth
- concrete quantity
- form tubes
- excavation difficulty
- local labor rates
Larger decks and weaker soil often increase footing cost.
Common Footing Planning Mistakes
- assuming all soils perform the same
- underestimating tributary area
- spacing posts too far apart
- using too few beam rows
- forgetting how depth affects concrete volume
- treating footings like a simple concrete problem
Before You Build
Before digging footings, compare:
- support layout
- post spacing
- beam count
- tributary area
- footing size
- concrete volume
- overall project budget
Helpful next steps:
Deck Footing Size Chart, Deck Post Spacing Chart, Deck Beam Span Chart, Deck Framing Layout Explained
Frequently Asked Questions
How many footings do I need for a deck?
It depends on deck size, beam layout, and post spacing. This tool estimates count based on those assumptions.
What determines footing size?
Tributary area, deck load assumptions, and soil bearing capacity.
Does weaker soil require bigger footings?
Usually yes. Lower soil bearing pressure often requires larger bearing area.
Does footing depth affect concrete estimate?
Yes. Deeper footings require more concrete.
Does this replace engineering review?
No. This is a planning tool only.
Helpful Related Tools
Deck Cost Calculator
Estimate full project budget.
Deck Material Calculator
Estimate boards, framing, and hardware.
Deck Stair Calculator
Plan rise, run, treads, and stringers.
All Deck Calculators
View all planning tools.
Sources & Technical References
- International Residential Code (IRC)
- American Wood Council — DCA 6 Prescriptive Residential Deck Guide
Final Assessment
A deck footing calculator helps translate deck size and support layout into a more realistic structural support plan.
It is most valuable when comparing footing count, footing size, concrete quantity, and layout assumptions before construction begins.


