Board Foot Calculator
Calculate board feet for any combination of hardwood lumber. Add multiple boards with different thicknesses, widths, and lengths — enter a per-board-foot price per row to get a full cost estimate. Supports the 4/4 quarter-inch thickness system, waste allowance, and Imperial or metric units.
This calculator uses the exact board foot formula — (Thickness × Width × Length) ÷ 144 — with all measurements in inches. Add as many rows as your project needs, enter a price per board foot for each species or size, and get a complete line-item breakdown with per-piece board footage, totals, and cost. The 4/4 quick-fill button in each row auto-fills common hardwood thicknesses (4/4 through 12/4). A 10% waste factor is applied by default.
| Description | T × W × L | Qty | BF each | BF total | Line cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTAL (incl. waste) | — | — | — | ||
Board feet per 1 linear foot of board, by thickness and width. Formula: BF/lin ft = (T_in × W_in) ÷ 12. Hardwood thicknesses shown as rough/nominal quarter sizes.
| Thickness | Quarter (HW) | Width 4" | Width 6" | Width 8" | Width 10" | Width 12" |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ¾ in / 19 mm | 3/4 (S4S) | 0.250 | 0.375 | 0.500 | 0.625 | 0.750 |
| 1 in / 25 mm | 4/4 ★ | 0.333 | 0.500 | 0.667 | 0.833 | 1.000 |
| 1¼ in / 32 mm | 5/4 | 0.417 | 0.625 | 0.833 | 1.042 | 1.250 |
| 1½ in / 38 mm | 6/4 | 0.500 | 0.750 | 1.000 | 1.250 | 1.500 |
| 2 in / 51 mm | 8/4 | 0.667 | 1.000 | 1.333 | 1.667 | 2.000 |
| 2½ in / 64 mm | 10/4 | 0.833 | 1.250 | 1.667 | 2.083 | 2.500 |
| 3 in / 76 mm | 12/4 | 1.000 | 1.500 | 2.000 | 2.500 | 3.000 |
Dimensional softwood: 2×4 = 0.583 BF/ft · 2×6 = 0.875 BF/ft · 2×8 = 1.167 BF/ft (using nominal dims per softwood convention). Hardwood uses actual measured width and nominal (rough) thickness.
What is a board foot: definition and history
A board foot is a unit of lumber volume equal to 144 cubic inches — the exact volume of a board that is 1 inch thick, 12 inches wide, and 12 inches long. It is the standard unit for pricing and selling hardwood lumber in the United States and Canada, and it has been in continuous use in the North American timber trade for over two centuries.
The origins of the board foot lie in the practical needs of the early 19th-century lumber trade. When buyers and sellers at a sawmill or timber yard needed to agree on a fair price for a pile of boards that varied in thickness, width, and length, a purely linear measurement was useless — a narrow thin board and a wide thick board of the same length contained very different amounts of wood. Volume provided a fair and neutral basis for pricing. The board foot emerged as the unit of choice because it combined all three dimensions into a single number that any party could verify by measuring the board.
The unit spread throughout North American commerce with the growth of the timber industry in the Great Lakes region and the Pacific Northwest through the 1800s. By the late 19th century, board feet had become the standard of the hardwood trade from New England sawmills to Chicago furniture factories, and the convention persisted through industrialization because it remained the most practical way to price variable-dimension material.
Today the board foot is still universally used for hardwood lumber — at hardwood dealers, specialty lumber yards, and sawmills — and it appears in woodworking material estimates worldwide even as metric countries use cubic metres (m³) for bulk timber trading. The conversion is fixed: 1 board foot = 0.0023597 cubic metres. Equivalently, 12 board feet = 1 cubic foot (0.0283 m³).
The board foot’s central insight is that it captures three dimensions at once. A 4-inch-wide board that is 1 inch thick contains exactly half as much wood as an 8-inch-wide board of the same thickness and length. A 2-inch-thick board contains exactly twice as much wood as a 1-inch-thick board of the same width and length. These ratios hold regardless of how you combine dimensions, which makes board feet a reliable unit for comparing prices across different sizes — the cost-per-board-foot at a lumber yard normalizes for all of those differences.
The board foot formula and worked examples
The board foot formula has three equivalent forms depending on how you know the dimensions:
In all three forms, thickness and width are always in inches. The denominator changes depending on whether length is in inches (144 = 12 × 12) or feet (12). For most practical woodworking use, Form 2 is the most convenient because boards are typically measured in feet.
Worked example 1 — Oak tabletop blanks, 4/4 thickness:
A woodworker needs 4 oak boards for a dining table top, each rough-sawn at 1 inch thick (4/4), 8 inches wide, and 6 feet long.
BF per board = (1 × 8 × 6) ÷ 12 = 48 ÷ 12 = 4 BF
Total for 4 boards = 4 × 4 = 16 BF
With 10% waste: 16 × 1.10 = 17.6 BF to order
In metric: 1” = 25.4 mm, 8” = 203.2 mm, 6 ft = 1.829 m. Volume = 0.0254 × 0.2032 × 1.829 = 0.00944 m³ per board × 4 = 0.0378 m³ raw, or 0.0415 m³ with 10% waste.
Worked example 2 — Mixed hardwood project:
A furniture maker is ordering material for a walnut shelf unit:
- 2 walnut boards: ¾ in thick (surfaced S4S) × 10 in wide × 8 ft long
- 3 walnut boards: 1 in thick (4/4) × 4 in wide × 4 ft long (legs/aprons)
Row 1: (0.75 × 10 × 8) ÷ 12 = 60 ÷ 12 = 5 BF each × 2 = 10 BF
Row 2: (1 × 4 × 4) ÷ 12 = 16 ÷ 12 = 1.333 BF each × 3 = 4 BF
Combined raw total: 14 BF
With 15% waste (complex cuts): 14 × 1.15 = 16.1 BF to order
Worked example 3 — Large rough-sawn order from a sawmill:
A builder is buying 6/4 (1.5 in) rough-sawn cherry boards, widths ranging from 6 to 10 inches, for a kitchen island countertop. The sawmill quotes by the board foot. The builder has 6 boards measured at the yard:
| Board | T (in) | W (in) | L (ft) | BF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1.5 | 8 | 7 | 7.0 |
| 2 | 1.5 | 9 | 7 | 7.875 |
| 3 | 1.5 | 7 | 8 | 7.0 |
| 4 | 1.5 | 10 | 6 | 7.5 |
| 5 | 1.5 | 8 | 8 | 8.0 |
| 6 | 1.5 | 7 | 7 | 6.125 |
Total raw: 43.5 BF at $9/BF = $391.50. With 10% waste allowance: 47.9 BF ordered, estimated cost: $430.65.
How hardwood and softwood lumber are sold differently
The way lumber is sold depends fundamentally on whether it is hardwood or softwood, and understanding the difference explains why board feet matter more in some contexts than others.
Dimensional softwood — the 2×4s, 2×6s, 2×8s, and larger framing lumber at a home improvement store — is sold by the piece at standardized lengths: 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, and 20 feet. The price is per piece, and the size is fixed and labeled (even if the actual dimension differs from the nominal label). Estimators use board feet to compare the value of different sizes and to plan total material volume, but at the register you simply count boards and multiply by the per-piece price.
Hardwood lumber from specialty dealers and sawmills is an entirely different market. Boards from a hardwood dealer vary in thickness (4/4 to 16/4 and beyond), vary in width (random widths from 3 inches to 18+ inches depending on the tree), and may vary in length. No two boards in a bin are exactly the same dimensions. Pricing by the piece is impractical; pricing by the board foot normalizes all the variation into a single per-unit cost that applies equally to a narrow 6-inch board and a wide 14-inch slab. When you visit a hardwood dealer, the price is always quoted per board foot.
| Species | Typical price ($/BF) | Grade | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Poplar | $2–$5 | Select/Better | Soft hardwood; easy to work; paints well |
| Red Oak | $4–$8 | Select/Better | Most common domestic hardwood; widely available |
| Hard Maple | $5–$9 | Select/Better | Dense, tight grain; excellent for tabletops and floors |
| White Oak | $5–$10 | Select/Better | Water-resistant rays; furniture, flooring, cooperage |
| Ash | $4–$8 | Select/Better | Flexible, shock-resistant; furniture, tool handles |
| Cherry | $7–$14 | Select/Better | Warm reddish-brown color; ages beautifully |
| Walnut | $9–$18 | Select/Better | Premium cabinet and furniture wood; rich dark color |
| Figured maple (curly/bird's eye) | $15–$40+ | Varies | Premium figure commands steep premium over plain |
| Teak | $20–$45+ | FAS | Naturally oily; outdoor furniture and boat decking |
Prices above are 2025 retail averages from specialty hardwood dealers in the continental US. Local sawmills typically sell 20–40 percent cheaper for regional species. Lumber prices fluctuate with log supply, energy costs, and seasonal demand — always get current pricing from your supplier before finalizing a project budget.
Why waste allowances differ. For framing softwood, a 10 percent waste factor covers end cuts and a few defective boards. For hardwood, waste is higher because boards often have natural edge wane (bark edge), checks (small cracks from drying), and defects that must be cut around. Figured wood — curly, quilted, or bird’s-eye — requires more careful planning to show the figure where it matters, increasing effective waste. A 10 percent factor is standard for clear, straight-grained hardwood; 15 percent is appropriate for figured wood and projects with complex joints or curves.
Hardwood thickness: the 4/4 quarter system
When you buy hardwood at a specialty dealer or sawmill, thickness is expressed in a system that puzzles many first-time buyers: 4/4, 5/4, 6/4, 8/4. These fractions are read “four-quarter,” “five-quarter,” and so on, and they express the rough-sawn thickness in increments of one quarter of an inch.
The system originated at the sawmill: logs were sawn into boards in quarter-inch increments of thickness, and the quarter notation gave buyers a precise shorthand. A “4/4” board is a board sawn 4 quarters thick — that is, 1 inch. A “5/4” board is 5 quarters — 1.25 inches. The math is simply: quarters ÷ 4 = thickness in inches.
| Notation | Rough thickness (in) | Rough thickness (mm) | Surfaced (S2S) typical | Surfaced (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/4 | 1 in | 25.4 mm | 13/16 in | ~21 mm |
| 5/4 | 1¼ in | 31.8 mm | 1–1/16 in | ~27 mm |
| 6/4 | 1½ in | 38.1 mm | 1–5/16 in | ~33 mm |
| 8/4 | 2 in | 50.8 mm | 1¾ in | ~44 mm |
| 10/4 | 2½ in | 63.5 mm | 2¼ in | ~57 mm |
| 12/4 | 3 in | 76.2 mm | 2¾ in | ~70 mm |
| 16/4 | 4 in | 101.6 mm | 3¾ in | ~95 mm |
The critical rule for board foot calculation: always use the rough (nominal) thickness. A 4/4 board is calculated as 1 inch thick even after it has been surfaced to 13/16 inch. A 5/4 board is calculated as 1.25 inches even after surfacing to 1-1/16 inch. This rule exists because hardwood dealers price the board based on what they sawed, not what you receive after surfacing — the material that came off during surfacing is still part of the cost of producing that board.
If you are measuring boards you already own (after surfacing), use the actual measured thickness. If you are ordering from a dealer who quotes in quarter sizes, use the rough thickness in the formula.
Dimensional softwood does not follow this pattern. A 2×4 in framing lumber is a nominal 2 × 4 inches, but the actual dimension is 1.5 × 3.5 inches. For softwood, the industry convention when computing board feet is to use the nominal dimensions (2 and 4), not the actual ones — which is the opposite of what you would do for precision inventory math. The practical implication: when a lumber dealer quotes softwood by the board foot, the formula uses nominal dimensions. When a structural engineer calculates section properties, they use actual dimensions. Keep the two contexts separate to avoid errors.
Board feet per linear foot: reference table
One shortcut that simplifies board foot estimation is the “BF per linear foot” value for a given size. For any board at a fixed thickness and width, the number of board feet increases exactly proportionally with length — so the BF-per-foot value is a constant multiplier that you can memorize or look up.
The table below covers common hardwood quarter sizes across a range of widths. To use it: multiply the BF/ft value by the length in feet, then multiply by quantity for the total before waste.
Common softwood dimensional lumber reference values (using nominal dimensions per softwood convention): 2×4 = (2 × 4) ÷ 12 = 0.667 BF/ft; 2×6 = 1.0 BF/ft; 2×8 = 1.333 BF/ft; 2×10 = 1.667 BF/ft; 2×12 = 2.0 BF/ft. Note these are higher than the values in the tool’s reference table, which uses actual softwood dimensions — the softwood convention for BF pricing uses nominal, while structural calculations use actual.
Using the table. If you need 10 boards of 8/4 walnut, each 8 inches wide and 7 feet long: from the table, 8/4 × 8” = 1.333 BF/ft × 7 ft = 9.333 BF per board × 10 boards = 93.3 BF raw. With 10% waste: order 102.7 BF. At $12/BF: $1,232.
Real-world applications and buying guide
Ordering from a hardwood dealer
The most common scenario for board foot calculation is preparing a hardwood materials list before visiting a dealer or placing an online order. Most dealers sell random-width, random-length lumber — you specify the species, thickness (in quarter notation), and total board feet, and the dealer selects boards to fill your order.
Before placing an order:
- Calculate the total BF for your project with at least a 10 percent waste factor (15 percent if the design requires careful grain matching).
- Consider whether your minimum width matters: specify “no pieces narrower than X inches” if your design requires wide boards (e.g., panels without edge-jointing).
- Add a “call ahead” step — popular species like figured walnut and wide cherry sell quickly. Most dealers can give you real-time inventory counts.
Buying from a local sawmill
Local sawmills are often the most economical source for domestic hardwoods: prices run 20–40 percent below specialty retail, and you can inspect and select each board yourself. The trade-off is that boards may be rough-sawn (not surfaced), in green (unseasoned) condition, and available in limited species depending on what the sawmill cuts locally.
When buying rough-sawn boards at a sawmill, dimensions are usually marked in chalk on the end of each board as the board-foot total. Verify by measuring: the board-foot number the sawyer wrote should equal (T × W × L) ÷ 144, where T and W are the actual rough-sawn dimensions. Green lumber weighs significantly more than kiln-dried — a 4/4 green board at 8 inches wide and 8 feet long weighs approximately 8–10 lb (3.6–4.5 kg) depending on species; the same board kiln-dried weighs 5–7 lb (2.3–3.2 kg).
Furniture and woodworking projects
For a furniture project, calculate board feet at the component level — break the project into individual parts (tabletop, legs, aprons, drawers, panels), calculate BF for each part with its specific thickness and width, then sum with a waste factor. This level of detail lets you identify which thickness categories drive the most material cost and whether you can consolidate into fewer distinct sizes.
For a typical dining table in 4/4 hardwood (tabletop panels, stretchers, and aprons) plus 8/4 legs, a 36 × 72-inch table might require 20–25 BF of 4/4 and 6–8 BF of 8/4. At $8/BF for clear oak, the material cost is roughly $210–$264 before hardware and finish.
Hardwood flooring estimation
Some specialty hardwood flooring is quoted by the board foot rather than by the square foot. The relationship between the two depends on the board’s nominal thickness: for 3/4-inch (4/4) flooring, 1 BF covers approximately 1.33 square feet (the floor area covered by one board foot of 3/4-inch material laid flat). This conversion assumes the full board width — losses to tongue-and-groove profiling reduce the effective coverage by about 10–12 percent.
Common mistakes to avoid
Board foot calculations are simple in principle but generate consistent errors in practice. These are the most common ones.
Using surfaced thickness instead of rough thickness for hardwood. When a dealer prices boards in “4/4 rough,” the board foot count on the invoice uses 1 inch for thickness. If you measure the board after surfacing (13/16 inch) and use that in your calculation, you will underbid by about 19 percent. Use the rough or nominal thickness that the dealer quotes — it is what they charged you for.
Using actual dimensions instead of nominal for softwood BF pricing. The softwood industry computes board feet from nominal dimensions (2 × 4, not 1.5 × 3.5). A 2×4 at 8 feet = (2 × 4 × 96) ÷ 144 = 5.33 BF using nominal. Using actual (1.5 × 3.5): (1.5 × 3.5 × 96) ÷ 144 = 3.5 BF — 34 percent less. When a softwood supplier quotes you a board foot price, they are using nominal dimensions. For personal project planning (volume, weight, cost per cubic foot), use actual dimensions.
Forgetting to multiply by quantity. The formula produces board feet for a single board. A note that says “3-inch walnut at 1 in thick × 8 in wide × 8 ft = 5.33 BF” needs to be multiplied by the number of boards in that lot. Forgetting this step is the most common arithmetic error when tallying a materials list.
Insufficient waste for figured or wide boards. Standard 10 percent waste works for clear, straight-grained lumber with minimal defects. Figured wood (curly, quilted, crotch, bird’s-eye) has more variable quality — the figure that makes a board beautiful also makes some sections unusable for a given application. Wide boards (12 inches and up) often have checks, wane, or sap wood on the edges. Budget 15–20 percent waste for highly figured material or boards wider than 12 inches.
Confusing board feet with linear feet. A board foot is a volume unit; a linear foot is just a length. Saying “I need 50 board feet of 4/4 × 6-inch oak” is specific and meaningful. Saying “I need 50 linear feet” is ambiguous without also stating thickness and width. Many ordering errors stem from a buyer describing a quantity in linear feet to a dealer who quotes in board feet, or vice versa.
Not verifying board foot tallies at the yard. Larger hardwood dealers mark board-foot totals on each board in chalk. These are sometimes estimated quickly and can be 5–10 percent off on irregular boards with varying width. For expensive material — figured walnut, wide cherry, exotic species — it is worth independently measuring and calculating the board feet on boards above a certain size before accepting the chalk mark.
Ordering exactly the calculated quantity. A board foot calculation with no waste factor built in will leave you short. Unexpected defects, miscuts, one board that warps as it acclimates to your shop, an extra joint needed for alignment — any of these can push you over budget. Order your calculated total plus at least 10 percent, and for expensive species, keep those offcuts: a 2-BF walnut scrap becomes a cutting board, drawer bottom, or box lid.