Fence post tool

Fence Post Calculator

Estimate fence post counts and rough cost from total fence run and post spacing.

Last checked

March 28, 2026

We checked the calculator logic, page links, and support content used on this page.

How to use it

Use it as a planning estimate

Use this calculator to build a rough material estimate, then confirm the final order against product data and site conditions.

Starter defaults assume a straightforward garden run with regular panel spacing and a small spare-post margin.

Assumptions

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 mistakes

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 use cases

Best for trim, drainage, roofline, pipework, and edging products where the real order is based on whole stock lengths.

How to get a better estimate

Measure the full run, add realistic waste for cuts and joints, then check whether fittings and corners need to be costed separately.

Before you buy

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 note

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.

Final buying check

Before placing an order, compare stock lengths, join requirements, fittings, delivery charges, and whether one extra length is safer than running short on site.

Explore this tool set

Open the full Fence Estimating tool set to move from quick estimate to deeper guidance.

How do I use the Fence Post Calculator?

Enter the total run, stock length, and a realistic waste setting, then use this calculator to plan the buying quantity before you check joins, fittings, and extra detail pieces.

What changes the Fence Post Calculator estimate most?

The biggest drivers are the measured run, the stock length, and the extra waste created by cuts, corners, joints, and awkward end details.

Should I round the result up?

A slightly higher stock-length overage is often cheaper than losing time to a short final piece or making an extra delivery run.