Asphalt Tonnage Chart

Compare US tons per 1,000 square feet and coverage per ton across common compacted thicknesses.

Asphalt Tonnage Reference

US and metric weight for a flat, compacted 1,000 sq ft layer.

Quick density
Compacted thicknessUS tons / 1,000 sq ftMetric tonnes / 1,000 sq ftCoverage / US ton
1 in6.045.48165.5 sq ft
1.5 in9.068.22110.3 sq ft
2 in12.0810.9682.8 sq ft
2.5 in15.1013.7066.2 sq ft
3 in18.1316.4455.2 sq ft
4 in24.1721.9241.4 sq ft
5 in30.2127.4033.1 sq ft
6 in36.2532.8927.6 sq ft

Use the proposed mix's compacted density. These values contain no ordering allowance.

How to read the chart

Choose the compacted thickness, then read across to estimate material for 1,000 sq ft or coverage from one US ton. The values scale linearly: a 500 sq ft project uses half of the listed tons; a 2,500 sq ft project uses 2.5 times the listed tons.

Density is an input, not a universal constant

The default 145 lb/ft³ is a planning assumption. Actual compacted density varies by mix and project requirements. A 5% density change produces a 5% tonnage change for the same area and thickness.

Worked example

For 1,000 sq ft at 3 inches and 145 lb/ft³: 1,000 × (3 ÷ 12) × 145 = 36,250 lb. Divide by 2,000 to get 18.13 US tons, or about 16.44 metric tonnes. No allowance is included.

Common mistakes

  • Reading the 1,000 sq ft column as the quantity for a different area without scaling it.
  • Using loose depth or a generic density when the supplier has project-specific data.
  • Adding compaction again after already using compacted thickness and density.

Supplier confirmation checklist

  • Mix designation and compacted density;
  • finished thickness and lift arrangement;
  • minimum load, truck payload, rounding, and justified ordering allowance.

Chart versus calculator

This chart is best for quick comparisons. Use the main asphalt calculator for measured project dimensions and cost inputs, or the coverage calculator when the available tonnage is already known.

Source

The FHWA density demonstration report describes density as weight per unit volume and notes that aggregate differences can produce significantly different mixture densities. Review the density input guide and keep any extra quantity separate with the ordering allowance guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is the asphalt tonnage chart calculated?
For each 1,000 sq ft row, weight equals 1,000 × thickness in feet × compacted density. Pounds are divided by 2,000 to report US tons.
What density does the chart use?
The initial value is 145 lb/ft³, and the table lets you change it. Use the compacted density for the proposed mixture from the supplier, agency, or project documents.
Does the chart include an ordering allowance?
No. The chart reports calculated compacted material only. Add an allowance separately if measurements, geometry, waste, or supplier ordering rules justify one.

Stay Updated

Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest asphalt tips, industry news, and exclusive offers.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe by email at any time.