Drainage Estimating

Use covered area and overlap allowance to estimate geotextile membrane

Membrane orders usually fail on overlap waste, awkward edges, and optimistic roll coverage. Use this page to turn the measured area into a safer roll count before you buy.

Last checked

May 12, 2026

We checked the page logic, support notes, and related links on this page.

How to use it

Planning before buying

Use this guide for a planning check, then confirm the final order or quote against live product data and site conditions.

Quick answer

Work out geotextile membrane rolls from covered area, effective roll coverage, and practical overlap waste.

When this guide helps

Turn covered area into a safer membrane order once overlaps, roll width, and awkward edges matter more than the neat rectangle.

Watch most

Overlap allowance, roll coverage after trimming, curves, and trench edge detail usually move the membrane order most.

Best next move

Check the effective roll coverage after overlaps first, then compare whether the selected membrane grade still suits the job.

Use the calculator first

The fastest route is to use this page to isolate the core area, volume, or run measurement, then confirm the rounded buying total in the Geotextile Membrane Calculator.

What this page isolates

It strips the job back to the measured area, volume, or run so you can check the core quantity logic before supplier format, pack rounding, or quote wording changes the answer.

Measurement assumption to keep straight

Geotextile membrane estimates work best when the covered area, effective roll coverage after overlaps, and the membrane role in the build-up are all clear before buying.

Where the measurement usually drifts

The common misses are ignoring overlap waste, using the nominal roll coverage instead of the effective installed coverage, and forgetting turn-ups, trench edges, or awkward cuts.

Measurement rules that change the answer

These are the checks that usually move the clean area, volume, or run figure before it turns into a real order.

Nominal roll coverage vs effective coverage

The label coverage can look generous until overlaps, turn-ups, and trimming reduce the real installed area.

Lighter membrane vs tougher membrane

A cheaper roll can still lose if puncture resistance, stability, or drainage performance are wrong for the job.

Exact roll count vs safer spare

A spare roll can be easier to justify than a shortfall once the trench or driveway layout is more awkward than expected.

Where the neat measurement usually moves

Use these examples to see when the first measured number stops being enough on its own.

Simple rectangular area

Straight rectangles usually behave closest to the base overlap allowance, especially if the roll width suits the layout well.

Trench, curve, or stepped level

Curves, trench edges, and stepped ground can create more trimming and overlap waste than the neat area suggests.

Coverage check

Use the effective roll coverage after overlaps rather than the label headline before you finalise the roll count.

Practical checks before you buy or brief

Use these prompts to move from a neat guide answer into a cleaner real-world decision.

  • Confirm the effective roll coverage after overlaps, the membrane grade, and whether the roll width suits the layout.
  • Check edges, turn-ups, trench details, and awkward cuts before trusting the neat covered area alone.
  • Pressure-test whether the membrane order also needs pins, tape, and linked aggregate quantities above or below it.

Next buying guide to open

Once the measurement looks right, use the buying guide to pressure-test pack sizes, spare stock, and the real ordering decision.

Next step links

Open the full Drainage Estimating project hub or go straight to the Geotextile Membrane Calculator.

Ready to turn this guide into a quote request?

Once you understand the assumptions and buying choices, send builders or merchants the same measured scope so the prices are easier to compare fairly.

  • Confirm what the quote should include: materials only, labour only, or both.
  • State access, finish level, timing, and any unknowns clearly.
  • Ask each supplier or installer to price the same scope and exclusions.

You can also open the wider Drainage Estimating project hub if the quote depends on more than one material.

How should I use Geotextile Membrane Calculator by Area?

Use it with the Geotextile Membrane Calculator to pressure-test overlap waste, effective roll coverage, and whether the selected grade fits the job.

What usually changes the Geotextile Membrane Calculator by Area answer most?

Overlap allowance, effective roll coverage, awkward edges, and the membrane grade usually move the final roll count most.

Should I round up the result?

Usually yes. Overlaps, trimming, and trench details can use more membrane than the neat covered area suggests, so a spare roll is often safer.