March 27, 2026
Reviewed against the current calculator logic, structured content, and internal linking used on BuildCostLab.
Estimate fascia board lengths and rough cost from roofline runs.
Reviewed against the current calculator logic, structured content, and internal linking used on BuildCostLab.
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.
See the calculator methodology and editorial policy for the standards behind these pages.
Linear calculators assume materials are bought in stock lengths and the job can be reduced to a total run with a reasonable cut allowance.
Common misses include forgetting joints, corners, mitres, end conditions, and the waste created when standard stock lengths do not divide neatly into the run.
Best for trim, drainage, roofline, pipework, and edging products where the real order is based on whole stock lengths. This one is tuned for fascia jobs.
Measure the full run, add realistic waste for cuts and joints, then check whether fittings and corners need to be costed separately.
A slightly higher stock-length overage is often cheaper than losing time to a short final piece or making an extra delivery run.
UK and US buyers often use different unit language and pack conventions, but the geometry, waste, and whole-unit rounding logic are still the foundation.
Before placing an order, compare product coverage, pack size, delivery cost, and whether buying one extra unit is safer than risking a shortfall.
Open the full Roofline Estimating hub to move from quick estimate to deeper guidance.
Enter the job dimensions, choose a sensible waste setting, and use the fascia calculator as a buying guide rather than an exact order.
Usually the job dimensions, waste allowance, and the product coverage or stock-length assumption used to convert geometry into whole buying units.
Usually yes, because most materials are bought in whole units and small site losses are common.