Acoustic insulation tool

Acoustic Insulation Calculator

Estimate acoustic insulation slabs or rolls for partitions and floors.

Updated

March 27, 2026

Reviewed against the current calculator logic, structured content, and internal linking used on BuildCostLab.

Methodology

Planning-first estimate

Use this calculator to build a rough material estimate, then confirm it against product coverage data, site conditions, and supplier pack sizes before you order.

Starter defaults assume slab packs sized for partitions or floor bays with more cut loss than open loft work.

Assumptions

Insulation estimates usually depend on covered area, product thickness, and the fact that boards and rolls are bought to pack coverage, not to neat geometry alone.

Common mistakes

The biggest mistakes are confusing thermal thickness with coverage, ignoring cut loss around framing or rafters, and overlooking staggered joints or offcuts.

Best use cases

Best for early thermal upgrade planning, material comparisons, and checking how many packs or rolls a room, floor, roof, or partition is likely to need.

How to get a better estimate

Choose the exact product format first, then check the pack coverage and thickness because two seemingly similar insulation products can create different buying quantities.

Before you buy

A spare pack is often worth having when cuts are awkward or when the same thickness may be needed for a later phase of the job.

UK and US note

Terminology differs between UK and US buyers, but the practical buying logic still comes down to coverage per pack, thickness, and cut loss.

Final buying check

Before placing an order, compare product coverage, pack size, delivery cost, and whether buying one extra unit is safer than risking a shortfall.

Explore this topic cluster

Open the full Insulation Estimating hub to move from quick estimate to deeper guidance.

How do I use the acoustic insulation calculator?

Enter the job dimensions, choose a realistic waste setting, and use the acoustic insulation calculator to get a planning quantity before checking product-specific coverage or pack rules.

What most affects the acoustic insulation calculator result?

The biggest mistakes are confusing thermal thickness with coverage, ignoring cut loss around framing or rafters, and overlooking staggered joints or offcuts.

Should I round the result up?

A spare pack is often worth having when cuts are awkward or when the same thickness may be needed for a later phase of the job.