Free Lumber Waste Estimator
Enter base board feet and waste % — adjusted total updates instantly.
Order Buffer Tool
Add a waste percentage to your board feet total so you never run short on lumber. Account for saw kerf, defects, grain matching, and cutting errors.
Enter base board feet and waste % — adjusted total updates instantly.
Values update as you enter data above.
Every lumber order should include a waste buffer. This interactive diagram shows how much of your total order is usable vs. wasted.
| Project Type | Waste % | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Simple framing (studs, joists) | 5–8 % | Straight cuts, minimal defects |
| Deck building | 10 % | End trimming, length matching |
| Furniture (hardwood) | 15 % | Grain matching, joinery waste |
| Cabinetry | 15–20 % | Complex cuts, door/drawer parts |
| Curved/irregular work | 20–25 % | Template cutting, scrap from curves |
💡 When using premium hardwood like walnut or cherry, budget extra waste for grain selection.
Each cut removes ⅛ in of material. Multiple cuts on one board add up quickly.
Knots, splits, bark inclusions, and wane require cutting around bad areas.
Bookmatching and sequential grain patterns create offcuts that can't be reused.
Boards are trimmed for square ends, losing 1–3 inches per end.
List every part needed with exact dimensions before buying lumber.
Software tools nest your parts onto standard board lengths to minimize scrap.
Higher-grade hardwood has fewer defects, reducing waste from cutting around flaws.
Scrap pieces work for drawer parts, small boxes, test joints, and jig material.
10 % for simple projects, 15 % for furniture, 20 %+ for complex or curved work.
Saw kerf, wood defects (knots, splits), grain matching, measurement errors, and end-trimming.
Total = Base BF × (1 + Waste% / 100). Example: 350 BF + 10% waste = 385 BF.
Yes — use a cut list, a cut optimizer, select clear-grade lumber, and save offcuts for smaller parts.
Yes, add 10–15 % waste to plywood sheet counts as well, especially for projects with many cutouts.
Each saw blade cut removes ⅛ in (3 mm) of material. Over many cuts, this can account for 3–5 % of your total lumber.
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Never run short — add waste percentage to your board feet total.
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