Gable Roof Calculator
A gable roof is the most common roof style in North America — two equal slopes meeting at a central ridge. Use this calculator to find your roof area, number of squares, shingle bundles, and underlayment rolls from your footprint dimensions and pitch.
How to use this calculator
- Enter your roof's length and width — measure the outer footprint of the building, not the slope length.
- Select your roof pitch (rise:12). If unsure, see the pitch reference table below or count the rise in inches for every 12 inches of horizontal run.
- Choose your shingle type and adjust the waste factor (add more for complex rooflines).
- Read your squares, bundles, and underlayment rolls from the result panel — use these numbers to get supplier quotes.
How we calculate this
Roof area equals footprint length × width × the pitch multiplier, where the pitch multiplier is √(1 + (rise÷12)²). For a 6:12 pitch that's 1.118, so a 40 × 30 ft footprint gives 1,341 sq ft of roof surface. One 'square' equals 100 sq ft; most shingles come 3 bundles per square. A waste factor (typically 10–15%) is added to cover cuts at ridges, hips, and eaves.
Pitch multiplier reference
The pitch multiplier converts your flat footprint to actual sloped roof area. A steeper roof means more material.
| Pitch | Multiplier | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1:12 | 1.0035 | Almost flat — commercial membrane |
| 2:12 | 1.0138 | Low slope — common on additions |
| 3:12 | 1.0308 | Low pitch — walkable |
| 4:12 | 1.0541 | Moderate — ranch homes |
| 5:12 | 1.0833 | Standard |
| 6:12 | 1.118 | Standard — most common in US |
| 7:12 | 1.1577 | Moderate-steep |
| 8:12 | 1.2019 | Steep — requires toe boards |
| 9:12 | 1.25 | Very steep |
| 10:12 | 1.3017 | Very steep — safety harness required |
| 12:12 | 1.4142 | 45° — high-end residential |
Example material estimates — Gable Roof at 6:12 pitch
Pre-calculated for common house footprints. Click any row to pre-fill the calculator above.
| Footprint | Roof Area | Squares | Bundles (arch.) | Underlayment | Ridge Cap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 800 sq ft (33 × 24 ft) | 894 sq ft | 10 | 31 bundles | 3 rolls | 1 bundles |
| 1,000 sq ft (37 × 27 ft) | 1,118 sq ft | 12.5 | 38 bundles | 3 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 1,200 sq ft (40 × 30 ft) | 1,342 sq ft | 15 | 46 bundles | 4 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 1,500 sq ft (44 × 34 ft) | 1,677 sq ft | 18.8 | 57 bundles | 5 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 1,800 sq ft (49 × 37 ft) | 2,012 sq ft | 22.5 | 68 bundles | 6 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 2,000 sq ft (51 × 39 ft) | 2,236 sq ft | 25 | 76 bundles | 6 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 2,400 sq ft (57 × 42 ft) | 2,683 sq ft | 30.1 | 91 bundles | 7 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 2,500 sq ft (58 × 43 ft) | 2,795 sq ft | 31.3 | 94 bundles | 7 rolls | 2 bundles |
| 3,000 sq ft (64 × 47 ft) | 3,354 sq ft | 37.6 | 113 bundles | 9 rolls | 2 bundles |
Includes 12% waste. Architectural shingles, 3 bundles/square.
What this calculator doesn't include
This calculator does not account for dormers, skylights, or chimneys (which reduce net shingle area but require flashing and extra cuts). Local building codes may require additional underlayment or ice-and-water shield beyond the defaults. Always add a minimum of 10% waste; complex rooflines may need 20%+.
Frequently asked questions
A 1,500 sq ft single-story home with a 6:12 gable roof has roughly 18 squares of roof surface (1,500 × 1.118 ÷ 100 ≈ 16.8, plus waste). A two-story home with the same footprint has about half the roof area because the upper floor is covered by the same exterior roof.
Standard 3-tab and architectural (dimensional) shingles both require 3 bundles per square. Premium or designer shingles typically require 4 bundles per square. Always verify the coverage on the shingle package, as this can vary slightly by manufacturer.
A simple gable roof with no dormers or complex cuts typically needs 10–12% waste. Add more (15–20%) if you have multiple valleys, a steep pitch, or numerous penetrations like skylights and chimneys. It is always better to buy one extra bundle than to run short mid-job.
The pitch multiplier converts your flat footprint area into the actual sloped roof surface area you need to cover. A 6:12 pitch has a multiplier of 1.118, meaning your actual roof is 11.8% larger than the flat footprint. A 12:12 (45°) pitch gives a multiplier of 1.414 — a 41% larger surface.
No — material prices vary significantly by region, brand, and current market conditions. Use the bundle count from this calculator and get current quotes from your local supplier (Home Depot, Lowe's, or a roofing distributor) for an accurate material cost estimate.
