Home & Property

Fence Post Calculator

Estimate fence posts, spacing, post holes, concrete, and layout needs.

Updated May 2026No signup requiredBuilt for mobile
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Line posts0

Gate posts0

Total posts0

How to use this calculator

  • Enter the real numbers for your situation.
  • Review the main result and any secondary results.
  • Adjust inputs to compare practical scenarios.
  • Use the estimate as a planning number before making a purchase or decision.

Formula

Estimated result = measured inputs run through the page-specific method

Use the result summary to compare outputs

Add a reserve when real-world conditions can vary

This calculator uses practical estimating math. The exact formula depends on the inputs shown in the calculator card.

Worked examples

Basic example

Use the example numbers, then enter measured values or usage numbers to get a realistic estimate.

Planning example

Increase the main quantity or add a buffer to see how the result changes before buying supplies or committing to a plan.

Practical planning tips

  • Double-check units before trusting the result.
  • Round up when running short would stop the job or trip.
  • Use manufacturer labels, local rules, or professional guidance when safety matters.
  • Save or print the result before going to the store or job site.

Safety and disclaimer note

This is a practical planning estimate. Verify safety, code, health, financial, or equipment decisions with the right professional or official source.

FAQ

Fence Post Calculator questions

How accurate is the Fence Post Calculator?

It is a planning estimate based on the numbers you enter. Real-world results can vary.

Should I add a buffer?

Yes when waste, weather, terrain, safety, or product variation could change the result.

Can I use the result for buying supplies?

Use it as a starting point, then confirm supplier packaging, labels, and local requirements.

Why do results vary?

Measurements, product specs, user habits, and field conditions can all change the final outcome.

Does this replace professional advice?

No. Use professional guidance for safety, health, code, legal, or financial decisions.

How to use this estimate

The fence post calculator estimates post count, spacing, hole count, and concrete needs for straight fence runs, gates, corners, and layout planning. It is useful before ordering posts, bags of concrete, rails, wire, panels, or marking the line.

Inputs that matter most

Formula and method

Post count is based on run length divided by spacing, rounded so both ends are supported. Concrete volume is based on the hole cylinder volume minus the post volume when that level of detail is available. Add reserve for uneven holes, bell-shaped bottoms, waste, and broken bags.

If the result changes sharply when spacing changes by one foot, compare material strength and fence type before choosing the wider spacing. A few fewer posts may save money but can reduce durability.

Worked example

Example: a 120 foot straight fence with 8 foot spacing needs intervals across the run plus end support. The layout points to about 16 posts before adding gate or brace posts. If each hole takes roughly two 50 pound bags of concrete, the project needs about 32 bags, plus a small reserve for oversized holes or bad soil.

Common planning mistakes

Safety and disclaimer note

Fence estimates are planning aids, not structural, property, or code advice. Confirm property lines, utility marking, permits, frost depth, soil conditions, livestock needs, and local code with the proper authority, supplier, contractor, or professional before digging.

FAQ

Practical questions

How far apart should fence posts be?

Common spacing depends on fence type and material. Many layouts use 6 to 8 feet, but wind, livestock, panels, and local practice can change that.

Should gate posts be counted separately?

Yes. Gate posts often need stronger posts, deeper holes, more concrete, or bracing.

Do I need to call utility marking?

Yes before digging. Buried utilities can create serious safety and service risks.

Why does concrete quantity vary?

Hole depth, diameter, soil collapse, post size, and over-digging can all change concrete volume.

Can this calculator verify property lines?

No. Use surveys, records, or qualified professional help for property-line questions.

What number should I use?

Use measured inputs first

Start with the actual number from your project, device, network, trip, or equipment label instead of a best guess.

Round in the safer direction

Round up for materials, food, water, storage, and capacity. Round down for runtime when running short would cause trouble.

Check related tools

Use the related calculators on this page to plan the next part of the job instead of treating one result as the whole answer.