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Rebar Calculator 2026 | Calculate Reinforcement Steel Requirements

Rebar Calculator 2026

Calculate Reinforcement Steel Requirements

Professional Rebar Quantity & Weight Estimator for Concrete

Rebar (reinforcing bar) is essential steel reinforcement used to strengthen concrete structures against tensile forces. Calculating accurate rebar quantities prevents material shortages, reduces waste, and ensures structural integrity. For contractors working with imperial units or US-based calculations, you can also use this concrete rebar calculator designed for American construction standards. Our rebar calculator 2026 uses BS 4449:2005 standards to calculate reinforcement requirements for slabs, foundations, beams, columns, and walls.

UK rebar is manufactured in sizes from 6mm to 50mm diameter, with common construction sizes ranging from 8mm to 32mm. Standard grades include B500B (460 MPa yield strength) for general construction and B500C for enhanced seismic resistance. Understanding rebar specifications, spacing requirements, and weight calculations ensures proper structural design according to 2026 building regulations and Eurocode 2 standards.

⚙️ Rebar Calculator

Calculate reinforcement quantity, weight, and material requirements

Application Type

Dimensions

Rebar Specifications

Rebar Calculator Standards 2026

Rebar specifications in the UK follow BS 4449:2005 "Steel for the reinforcement of concrete - Weldable reinforcing steel". This standard defines mechanical properties, dimensions, tolerances, and testing requirements for reinforcement bars. Our rebar calculator uses these standards to ensure accurate specifications for 2026 construction projects compliant with Eurocode 2.

Standard UK Rebar Sizes & Weights

Diameter (mm) Cross-Section Area (mm²) Weight (kg/m) Weight per 12m Bar (kg) Common Applications
6mm 28.3 0.222 2.66 Light mesh, stirrups, ties
8mm 50.3 0.395 4.74 Slabs, stirrups, light walls
10mm 78.5 0.617 7.40 Standard slabs, foundations
12mm 113.1 0.888 10.66 Beams, heavy slabs, columns
16mm 201.1 1.579 18.95 Main beams, columns, retaining walls
20mm 314.2 2.466 29.59 Heavy columns, large beams
25mm 490.9 3.854 46.25 Industrial columns, bridge beams
32mm 804.2 6.313 75.76 Heavy industrial, large structures
40mm 1256.6 9.864 118.37 Major infrastructure, dams, bridges

8mm Rebar

Area 50.3 mm²
Weight 0.395 kg/m
Use Slabs, stirrups

10mm Rebar

Area 78.5 mm²
Weight 0.617 kg/m
Use Standard slabs

12mm Rebar

Area 113.1 mm²
Weight 0.888 kg/m
Use Beams, columns

16mm Rebar

Area 201.1 mm²
Weight 1.579 kg/m
Use Main beams

20mm Rebar

Area 314.2 mm²
Weight 2.466 kg/m
Use Heavy columns

Rebar Calculation Formulas

Understanding rebar calculation formulas ensures accurate quantity estimation for structural concrete. Our rebar calculator applies these fundamental formulas adjusted for application type, spacing requirements, and wastage allowances according to construction best practices.

📐 Basic Rebar Calculation Formulas:

  • Number of Bars: (Length or Width / Spacing) + 1
  • Bar Length: Slab dimension - (2 × Concrete cover) + (2 × Hook allowance)
  • Total Length: Number of bars × Bar length
  • Weight Calculation: Total length (m) × Weight per meter (kg/m)
  • Area of Steel: Number of bars × (π × d² / 4), where d = diameter in mm
  • Standard Bar Count: Total length ÷ 12m (standard bar length)

Example Calculations

Example 1: Slab 10m × 8m

Dimensions: 10m length × 8m width

Rebar: 10mm @ 150mm spacing both ways

Longitudinal bars: (10,000 / 150) + 1 = 68 bars

Transverse bars: (8,000 / 150) + 1 = 55 bars

Length each longitudinal: 8m (approx)

Length each transverse: 10m (approx)

Total length: (68 × 8) + (55 × 10) = 1,094m

Total weight: 1,094 × 0.617 = 675 kg

Example 2: Foundation Strip 20m

Length: 20m continuous strip footing

Rebar: 4 bars of 12mm longitudinal

Stirrups: 8mm @ 200mm spacing

Longitudinal: 4 bars × 20m = 80m

Number of stirrups: (20,000 / 200) = 100

Perimeter each: ~1.2m (varies by footing width)

Stirrup length: 100 × 1.2 = 120m

Total weight: (80 × 0.888) + (120 × 0.395) = 118 kg

Rebar Grades and Properties

UK rebar grades are defined by BS 4449:2005 with designations based on characteristic yield strength and ductility class. Grade selection depends on structural requirements, seismic considerations, and welding needs. Our rebar calculator supports all standard UK grades for 2026 construction.

B500B (Most Common)

Yield Strength: 500 MPa (characteristic)

Tensile Strength: Minimum 540 MPa

Ductility Class: B (Medium ductility)

Elongation: Minimum 5.0% (Agt)

Applications: General construction, residential, commercial buildings

Weldability: Limited welding (may require pre-heating)

B500C (High Ductility)

Yield Strength: 500 MPa (characteristic)

Tensile Strength: Minimum 575-750 MPa

Ductility Class: C (High ductility)

Elongation: Minimum 7.5% (Agt)

Applications: Seismic zones, structures requiring high ductility

Weldability: Good weldability without pre-heating

B500A (Standard)

Yield Strength: 500 MPa (characteristic)

Tensile Strength: Minimum 525 MPa

Ductility Class: A (Standard ductility)

Elongation: Minimum 2.5% (Agt)

Applications: Non-seismic structures, basic reinforcement

Weldability: Not recommended for welding

B500B+H (Anti-Corrosion)

Yield Strength: 500 MPa (characteristic)

Coating: Hot-dip galvanized or epoxy-coated

Ductility Class: B (Medium ductility)

Elongation: Minimum 5.0% (Agt)

Applications: Coastal structures, aggressive environments, marine works

Cost Premium: 40-80% more than standard B500B

Stainless Steel Rebar

Grade: Typically 316L or 1.4401

Yield Strength: Minimum 500 MPa

Corrosion Resistance: Excellent (marine, chemical exposure)

Elongation: Minimum 15%

Applications: Bridges, jetties, wastewater treatment, heritage restoration

Cost Premium: 8-10 times cost of carbon steel

Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP)

Material: Glass or carbon fiber composite

Tensile Strength: 600-2,000 MPa (varies by type)

Corrosion Resistance: Completely corrosion-proof

Weight: 75-80% lighter than steel

Applications: MRI facilities, corrosive environments, electromagnetic sensitivity

Cost Premium: 3-5 times cost of steel rebar

Rebar Spacing Requirements 2026

Proper rebar spacing ensures adequate concrete cover, prevents honeycombing, and maintains structural integrity. Eurocode 2 and BS 8110 specify minimum and maximum spacing requirements based on member type, concrete aggregate size, and structural loads. Our rebar calculator considers these requirements for accurate placement specifications.

✅ Standard Spacing Requirements:

  • Minimum Spacing: Greater of bar diameter, (aggregate size + 5mm), or 20mm
  • Maximum Spacing (Slabs): Lesser of 3 × slab thickness or 400mm
  • Maximum Spacing (Beams): Lesser of 300mm or beam depth
  • Distribution Bars: Maximum spacing 400mm or 5 × slab thickness
  • Crack Control: Spacing may be limited to 150-200mm in tension zones
  • Standard Spacings: 100mm, 125mm, 150mm, 200mm, 250mm, 300mm (preferred)

Spacing by Application Type

Application Typical Spacing Minimum Spacing Maximum Spacing Notes
Residential Slab (100mm) 150-200mm 100mm 300mm Both directions, 10mm bars typical
Commercial Slab (150mm) 125-150mm 100mm 400mm Heavier loading, 12mm bars typical
Foundation / Footing 150-200mm 125mm 300mm 12mm minimum diameter recommended
Beam Main Bars 50-100mm 40mm 300mm Depends on beam width and loads
Beam Stirrups 150-250mm 100mm 0.75 × beam depth Closer spacing near supports
Column Main Bars Corner + intermediate 50mm clear 300mm (between bars) Minimum 4 bars, typically 6-12 bars
Column Ties/Links 150-300mm Lesser of 12×bar dia or 300mm 450mm Closer spacing at lap locations
Wall Vertical 200-300mm 150mm 400mm or 3×wall thickness Both faces for walls >200mm thick
Wall Horizontal 200-300mm 150mm 400mm or 3×wall thickness Distribution reinforcement

Residential Slab (100mm)

Typical Spacing 150-200mm
Max Spacing 300mm
Bar Size 10mm typical

Foundation / Footing

Typical Spacing 150-200mm
Max Spacing 300mm
Bar Size 12mm minimum

Beam Main Bars

Typical Spacing 50-100mm
Max Spacing 300mm
Bar Size 16-25mm typical

Column Main Bars

Configuration Corner + intermediate
Clear Gap 50mm minimum
Typical 6-12 bars per column

Concrete Cover Requirements

Concrete cover protects reinforcement from corrosion, fire, and mechanical damage. Cover requirements depend on exposure class, member type, and design fire resistance according to Eurocode 2 (BS EN 1992). Adequate cover ensures durability and structural performance throughout the design life.

Exposure Class Environment Minimum Cover (mm) Nominal Cover (mm)
XC1 Dry or permanently wet (internal) 15 25
XC2 Wet, rarely dry (foundations) 25 35
XC3 Moderate humidity (sheltered external) 25 35
XC4 Cyclic wet/dry (external surfaces) 30 40
XD1 Moderate humidity with chlorides 35 45
XD2 Wet with chlorides (de-icing salts) 40 50
XD3 Cyclic wet/dry with chlorides 45 55
XS1 Marine exposure (airborne salt) 40 50
XS2 Marine submerged 45 55
XS3 Marine tidal/splash zone 50 60

XC1 - Internal Dry

Environment Dry or permanently wet
Minimum 15mm
Nominal 25mm

XC4 - External

Environment Cyclic wet/dry
Minimum 30mm
Nominal 40mm

XD2 - De-icing Salts

Environment Wet with chlorides
Minimum 40mm
Nominal 50mm

XS3 - Marine Splash

Environment Tidal/splash zone
Minimum 50mm
Nominal 60mm

Rebar Lap Length and Anchorage

Lap splices transfer forces between reinforcement bars through bond stress in the surrounding concrete. Proper lap lengths prevent bond failure and ensure continuity of reinforcement. Lap requirements are specified in Eurocode 2 based on bar diameter, concrete grade, and stress conditions.

⚠️ Standard Lap Length Formula:

  • Basic Formula: Lap length = α × Basic anchorage length (lb)
  • Basic Anchorage: lb = (ϕ × σsd) / (4 × fbd), where ϕ = bar diameter
  • Simplified Rule: Minimum 40 × bar diameter in tension
  • Typical Laps: 40-50 × bar diameter for most applications
  • 10mm Bar: Minimum lap = 400-500mm (40-50 × 10mm)
  • 16mm Bar: Minimum lap = 640-800mm (40-50 × 16mm)
  • Stagger Laps: Not more than 50% of bars lapped at same location

Rebar Cost Estimates 2026

Rebar prices in the UK vary based on grade, quantity, diameter, and supplier. Understanding 2026 pricing helps create accurate construction budgets. Prices include standard B500B grade delivered in bulk quantities; expect premiums for small orders, cut-and-bent services, or specialized grades.

Diameter Price per Tonne (£) Price per 12m Bar (£) Typical MOQ
6mm £750 - £950 £2.00 - £2.50 1 tonne (350+ bars)
8mm £700 - £900 £3.30 - £4.30 1 tonne (200+ bars)
10mm £650 - £850 £4.80 - £6.30 1 tonne (135+ bars)
12mm £650 - £850 £6.90 - £9.00 1 tonne (95+ bars)
16mm £650 - £850 £12.30 - £16.10 1 tonne (53+ bars)
20mm £650 - £850 £19.20 - £25.15 1 tonne (34+ bars)
25mm £650 - £850 £30.00 - £39.30 1 tonne (22+ bars)
32mm £700 - £900 £53.00 - £68.20 1 tonne (13+ bars)

10mm Rebar

Per Tonne £650-£850
Per 12m Bar £4.80-£6.30
MOQ 1 tonne (135 bars)

12mm Rebar

Per Tonne £650-£850
Per 12m Bar £6.90-£9.00
MOQ 1 tonne (95 bars)

16mm Rebar

Per Tonne £650-£850
Per 12m Bar £12.30-£16.10
MOQ 1 tonne (53 bars)

20mm Rebar

Per Tonne £650-£850
Per 12m Bar £19.20-£25.15
MOQ 1 tonne (34 bars)

💰 Additional Cost Considerations:

  • Cut and Bent: Add £100-£200 per tonne for cutting and bending services
  • Small Quantities: Less than 1 tonne: expect 20-40% premium pricing
  • Delivery: Free within 50 miles for 1+ tonne; £50-£150 for smaller loads
  • Mesh: A142 to A393 mesh: £4-£12 per m² (alternative to loose bars)
  • Bar Chairs/Spacers: £0.20-£1.50 each depending on height and type
  • Tie Wire: £15-£25 per 25kg coil (sufficient for ~500-800 ties)

Rebar Calculator FAQs

How do I calculate how much rebar I need?
Calculate number of bars by dividing slab dimension by spacing and adding 1. For a 10m slab with 150mm spacing: (10,000mm / 150mm) + 1 = 68 bars. Calculate both directions for slabs. Multiply number of bars by their length, then by weight per meter to get total weight. Add 10-15% for laps and wastage.
What size rebar should I use for a concrete slab?
For residential slabs (100-125mm thick), use 10mm rebar at 150-200mm spacing in both directions. For commercial or industrial slabs (150mm+ thick), use 12mm or 16mm rebar at 125-150mm spacing. Foundation slabs require minimum 12mm rebar. Always check structural calculations for specific requirements.
What is the standard spacing for rebar in concrete?
Standard rebar spacing for slabs is 150mm to 200mm center-to-center. Minimum spacing must be greater than bar diameter, aggregate size + 5mm, or 20mm. Maximum spacing is limited to 3× slab thickness or 400mm. Common spacings are 100mm, 125mm, 150mm, 200mm, and 300mm.
How much does rebar weigh per meter?
10mm rebar weighs 0.617 kg/m, 12mm weighs 0.888 kg/m, 16mm weighs 1.579 kg/m, and 20mm weighs 2.466 kg/m. To calculate: Weight = (π × d² / 4) × 7850 kg/m³, where d is diameter in meters. A 12m length of 10mm rebar weighs approximately 7.4kg.
What is B500B rebar grade?
B500B is the most common UK rebar grade defined by BS 4449:2005. It has 500 MPa characteristic yield strength with medium ductility (Class B). B500B provides minimum 5% elongation and is suitable for general construction including residential, commercial buildings, and infrastructure. It's the standard grade for most structural applications in 2026.
How far should rebar be from the edge of concrete?
Concrete cover depends on exposure class. Internal elements require 25-35mm, external moderate exposure needs 40mm, severe exposure requires 50mm, and marine environments need 50-60mm cover. Cover protects rebar from corrosion and fire. Measure from the concrete surface to the nearest rebar surface, accounting for links/stirrups.
What is the minimum lap length for rebar?
Minimum lap length is typically 40-50 times the bar diameter in tension zones. For 10mm bars: 400-500mm lap, 12mm bars: 480-600mm, 16mm bars: 640-800mm. Actual lap length depends on concrete grade, cover, and stress conditions per Eurocode 2. Always stagger laps so no more than 50% of bars lap at the same location.
Do I need rebar in a 4-inch concrete slab?
Yes, residential slabs (100mm/4 inches) typically require reinforcement, usually 10mm rebar at 150-200mm spacing or A142 or A193 mesh. Reinforcement controls cracking from shrinkage and temperature changes. For light-duty applications (patios, paths), mesh may be sufficient. For driveways or structural slabs, proper rebar design is essential.
Can I use mesh instead of rebar?
Steel mesh (fabric reinforcement) can replace rebar in slabs and some applications. Common mesh types: A142 (6mm @ 200mm), A193 (7mm @ 200mm), A252 (8mm @ 200mm), A393 (10mm @ 200mm). Mesh is quicker to install and provides uniform reinforcement but may cost more per kg. Use rebar for beams, columns, and where specific bar sizes/spacing are required.
How much does rebar cost in the UK in 2026?
Standard B500B rebar costs £650-£850 per tonne in 2026. Individual 12m bars: 10mm costs £4.80-£6.30, 12mm costs £6.90-£9.00, 16mm costs £12.30-£16.10. Prices include delivery for 1+ tonne orders. Cut-and-bent rebar adds £100-£200 per tonne. Small quantities (less than 1 tonne) attract 20-40% premium pricing.