Board Foot Calculator

Figure board feet for pricing and ordering lumber. Enter thickness, width and length to get board feet per piece and the total — using nominal sizes by convention, with the math shown.

Your lumber take-off

Total board feet

5.33 bf

Board feet per piece
5.33 bf
Pieces
1
  • Board feet use NOMINAL dimensions by convention: a 2×4 is figured as 2×4, though it actually measures 1.5×3.5.
How this is calculated
  1. Board feet per piece

    (thickness_in × width_in × length_ft) ÷ 12

    = (2 × 4 × 8) ÷ 12

    5.33 bf

  2. Total board feet

    board feet × quantity

    = 5.33 × 1

    5.33 bf

How to calculate board feet

Board feet is the volume unit lumber is priced in. The formula is (thickness in inches × width in inches × length in feet) ÷ 12 per piece. A 2×4 that is 8 ft long works out to (2 × 4 × 8) ÷ 12 = 5.33 board feet. Multiply by the number of pieces for the order total, then by your price per board foot for the cost. Board-foot math uses the nominal size by convention, even though a 2×4 really measures 1.5 by 3.5 inches.

Nominal vs actual lumber dimensions

Dry, surfaced (S4S) softwood. Board-foot pricing uses the nominal size; framing layout uses the actual.
NominalActual (inches)
0.75
1.5
1× / 2× width 43.5
width 65.5
width 87.25
width 109.25
width 1211.25

Studs by wall length (before corners and waste)

Field studs only: ceil(length ÷ spacing) + 1. Add two studs per corner and one per partition tie-in, then about 10% waste.
Wall lengthStuds at 16" OCStuds at 24" OC
8 ft75
10 ft96
12 ft107
16 ft139
20 ft1611
24 ft1913

Deck board coverage per row

Coverage per row = board width + gap. A 1/8 inch gap is typical for drainage and expansion.
Board widthGapCoverage per row
5.5 in1/8 in5.625 in
5.5 in3/16 in5.6875 in
5.5 in1/4 in5.75 in
3.5 in1/8 in3.625 in

Common lumber estimating mistakes

  • Mixing up nominal and actual sizes. Price board feet on the nominal size, but lay out framing on the actual size — a 2×4 is 1.5×3.5.
  • Forgetting the extra stud. A wall needs ceil(length ÷ spacing) plus one, then more for every corner and partition tie-in.
  • Ignoring the board gap on decks. A 1/8 inch gap across many rows adds up — count coverage as board width plus gap.
  • Using a layout count as a span rating. This tool counts pieces, not load capacity — size joists and rafters from your local code span tables.
  • Forgetting post footings. Deck piers and fence posts set in concrete — size each hole with the concrete calculator.

Frequently asked questions

How do you calculate board feet?+

Board feet = (thickness in inches × width in inches × length in feet) ÷ 12. A 2×4 that is 8 ft long is (2 × 4 × 8) ÷ 12 = 5.33 board feet. Multiply by the number of pieces for the total.

Do board feet use nominal or actual lumber dimensions?+

Board-foot pricing conventionally uses the nominal size. A 2×4 is figured as 2 inches by 4 inches even though it actually measures 1.5 by 3.5 inches. Use the actual toggle only when you need the dressed volume.

Are board feet figured on nominal or actual size?+

Board-foot pricing conventionally uses the nominal size. A 2×4 is figured as 2 by 4 inches even though it actually measures 1.5 by 3.5 inches. Switch on the actual toggle only when you need the dressed volume.

How many studs do I need for a wall?+

Studs = ceil(wall length ÷ spacing) + 1. A 20 ft wall at 16 inches on center needs 16 field studs before adding two per corner, one per partition tie-in, and about 10% waste.

How many deck boards do I need?+

Rows = ceil(deck width in inches ÷ (board width + gap)). Multiply rows by the deck length for total linear feet, then divide by the board length and round up. A 5.5 inch board with a 1/8 inch gap covers 5.625 inches per row.

Methodology & sources

Counts follow standard framing practice with full precision, rounding up to whole pieces and applying your waste factor. Board feet use the conventional nominal size. This tool counts pieces — it is not a structural span rating; size members from your local code span tables.

Last reviewed June 28, 2026. Estimates are indicative — verify against current product specs and local requirements before ordering.

We're committed to keeping these tools accurate and improving them over time. If you'd like to contribute to their accuracy, or you run into any issues or errors, please email us at info@tradesppl.com.