Roofing Materials for a 30 x 30 Ft Roof
Based on a default 6/12 pitch and 10% waste factor.
Estimated Total Cost
$3,874
Example
A 30×30 ft roof footprint (900 sq ft) at a 6/12 pitch has an actual roof area of about 1,006 sq ft — 11.1 squares including a 10% waste allowance, needing roughly 33.2 bundles of shingles and costing an estimated $3,874 installed.
Roof Area (with waste)
1,107 sq ft
Roofing Squares
11.1
Shingle Bundles
33.2
Underlayment Rolls
3
Roofing Nails
27.7 lbs
Roof area vs. waste allowance
- Actual Roof Area: 1,006 sq ft
- Waste Allowance: 101 sq ft
How Roofing Materials Are Estimated
Roofing is measured in "squares," where one square equals 100 square feet of actual roof surface. Because a sloped roof has more surface area than its flat footprint, the pitch (slope) must be factored in before converting to squares — a steeper roof needs meaningfully more material than a flat one covering the same footprint.
A waste factor is added on top of the raw roof area to account for cuts around edges, valleys, hips, and vents, plus material lost to mistakes — simple gable roofs typically need less waste allowance than complex roofs with many angles.
Roof Area by Pitch
Using your footprint dimensions, here's how much actual roof area results from different pitch (slope) values.
| Pitch | Roof Area | Squares |
|---|---|---|
| 2/12 | 912 sq ft | 10 |
| 4/12 | 949 sq ft | 10.4 |
| 6/12 | 1,006 sq ft | 11.1 |
| 8/12 | 1,082 sq ft | 11.9 |
| 10/12 | 1,172 sq ft | 12.9 |
| 12/12 | 1,273 sq ft | 14 |
How Is Roofing Material Calculated?
The footprint area (length × width) is multiplied by a pitch (slope) factor derived from the roof's rise-over-run ratio, giving the true sloped roof area. A waste percentage is added, and the result is divided by 100 to get roofing squares — the standard unit shingles and other materials are sold and estimated by.
Squares = Roof Area × (1 + Waste %) ÷ 100
Why Pitch Changes the Material Needed So Much
A flat roof (0/12 pitch) has a slope factor of exactly 1 — the roof area equals the footprint. A steep 12/12 pitch (a 45-degree angle) has a slope factor of about 1.41, meaning the actual roof surface is 41% larger than the footprint for the same building.
Why Shingles Come in "Bundles" and "Squares"
Standard 3-tab or architectural shingles are packaged in bundles, with three bundles typically covering one square (100 sq ft) — a packaging convention chosen because a single bundle is a manageable weight for one person to carry up a ladder.
Waste Factor Depends on Roof Complexity
A simple rectangular gable roof might only need a 5-10% waste allowance, while a roof with many hips, valleys, dormers, and penetrations (chimneys, vents, skylights) can require 15-20% or more, since each cut around an angle or obstruction wastes a portion of a shingle.
Example — Your Current Inputs
A 30×30 ft roof footprint (900 sq ft) at a 6/12 pitch has an actual roof area of about 1,006 sq ft — 11.1 squares including a 10% waste allowance, needing roughly 33.2 bundles of shingles and costing an estimated $3,874 installed.
Additional Example — A Simple 24x36 Garage Roof
A 24×36 ft garage footprint (864 sq ft) with a 4/12 pitch has a slope factor of about 1.054, giving a roof area of roughly 911 sq ft. With a 10% waste allowance, that's about 10 squares — around 30 bundles of shingles.
About These Parameters
- Roof Footprint Length & Width
- The horizontal dimensions of the building or roof outline, as if viewed from directly above — not the sloped surface distances.
- Roof Pitch
- Expressed as rise per 12 inches of run. A 4/12 pitch is fairly shallow, 6/12-8/12 is a common moderate slope, and 12/12 (a 45-degree angle) is quite steep.
- Waste Factor & Price per Square
- Waste factor scales up the material estimate for cuts and mistakes. Price per square should reflect your local installed cost, which varies significantly by material type and region.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a roofing "square"?
A square is 100 square feet of actual roof surface — the standard unit contractors and material suppliers use for estimating and pricing roofing jobs.
How many shingle bundles are in a square?
Most standard shingles are packaged three bundles to a square, though some heavier architectural shingles use four or five bundles per square — check the specific product's coverage rating.
Does this account for roof complexity like hips and valleys?
Only indirectly, through the waste factor — this calculator assumes a simple rectangular footprint. Complex roof shapes with multiple planes should use a higher waste percentage or a detailed contractor measurement.