Convert Square Feet to Linear Yards Calculator

Convert project area into the length of rolled material you should order. This calculator is built for carpet, vinyl, turf, fabric, upholstery, runners, mats, and other materials sold by linear yard.

Roll width aware
Waste factor included
Feet, inches, yards supported
Copy ready estimate

Square Feet to Linear Yards Calculator

Enter your area, choose a roll width, add waste, and get linear yards, linear feet, square yards, roll coverage, and a safe purchase recommendation.

Use the net area before waste. For multiple rooms, add all square feet together first.
Enter an area greater than zero.
The result will always show linear yards plus supporting units.
Width is the fixed roll width. Linear yards are the length you buy from that roll.
Enter width using the unit selected below.
Enter a width greater than zero.
Typical plain jobs use 5 to 10 percent. Pattern matching, nap direction, seams, and odd layouts often need more.
Most retailers require purchasing by fixed increments. Rounding up helps avoid short orders.
Recommended order length
30.56 yd
Linear yards of 12 ft wide material
Raw linear yards 30.56 yd
Linear feet 91.67 ft
Total area with waste 1,100.00 sq ft
Square yards 122.22 sq yd
Coverage per linear yard 36.00 sq ft
Suggested extra 100.00 sq ft
For rooms wider than the roll, seams or multi-strip layout may increase yardage beyond a simple area conversion.

Material Length Visualizer

Start of roll Cut point Recommended length: 30.56 yd

The bar is scaled for quick comparison only. Always order by the numeric result above.

What Is a Square Feet to Linear Yards Calculator?

A convert square feet to linear yards calculator turns an area measurement into the length of rolled material you need to buy. This matters because many materials are not purchased as loose square footage. Carpet, upholstery fabric, artificial turf, sheet vinyl, runners, mats, and many textiles are sold by the linear yard, meaning one yard of length cut from a roll with a fixed width.

For example, one linear yard of a 12 foot wide carpet roll covers 36 square feet because the cut is 12 feet wide and 3 feet long. One linear yard of 54 inch fabric covers only 13.5 square feet because the width is 4.5 feet. The roll width changes the answer, which is why a simple square feet to square yards conversion is not enough.

Quick rule: Linear yards equal square feet divided by roll width in feet, then divided by 3. Add waste before the division when you are estimating a real project.

Square Feet to Linear Yards Formula

Linear Yards = Total Square Feet With Waste ÷ Roll Width In Feet ÷ 3
Total Square Feet With Waste = Net Square Feet × (1 + Waste Percentage ÷ 100)
Variable Meaning Unit Why It Matters
Net area The area you need to cover before extra material Square feet This is usually room area, fabric surface area, or project coverage area.
Roll width The fixed width of the material roll Feet, inches, yards, or meters Wider rolls need fewer linear yards for the same area.
Waste factor Extra material for cuts, seams, mistakes, pattern repeat, and direction Percent Complex rooms and patterned materials can require much more extra material.
Linear yard A 3 foot long cut from a roll Yards of length The purchase unit for many rolled goods.

Common Roll Widths for Materials Sold by Linear Yard

Broadloom carpet in North America is commonly sold in 12 foot widths, with 13 foot 6 inch and 15 foot widths also available. Upholstery and decorator fabric commonly appears in widths such as 45 inches, 54 inches, and 60 inches. Artificial turf is often planned around 15 foot wide rolls. Exact widths vary by product, so always check the manufacturer specification before ordering.

Material Type Common Widths Good Default Waste Factor Estimator Notes
Residential carpet 12 ft, 13 ft 6 in, 15 ft 5 to 10 percent Rooms wider than the roll require seams or a multi-strip layout.
Sheet vinyl flooring 6 ft, 12 ft, sometimes wider 8 to 15 percent Doorways, alcoves, and seam placement can change the cut plan.
Upholstery fabric 45 in, 54 in, 60 in 10 to 20 percent Pattern matching and nap direction can increase yardage significantly.
Artificial turf 12 ft or 15 ft 10 to 15 percent Keep blade direction consistent across seams for uniform appearance.
Runners and narrow goods 24 in, 30 in, 36 in 5 to 10 percent Best for hallways, aisles, mats, and narrow coverage strips.

Example Calculations

Example 1: Carpet for a 450 Square Foot Living Area

You have 450 square feet to cover with 12 foot wide carpet and want a 10 percent waste allowance.

  • Area with waste: 450 × 1.10 = 495 square feet
  • Linear feet: 495 ÷ 12 = 41.25 linear feet
  • Linear yards: 41.25 ÷ 3 = 13.75 linear yards
  • Recommended order: 14 linear yards if the retailer requires whole-yard purchasing

Example 2: Upholstery Fabric for 120 Square Feet

You need 120 square feet of fabric coverage. The fabric is 54 inches wide, which equals 4.5 feet. You add 15 percent for curves and cutting.

  • Area with waste: 120 × 1.15 = 138 square feet
  • Linear feet: 138 ÷ 4.5 = 30.67 linear feet
  • Linear yards: 30.67 ÷ 3 = 10.22 linear yards
  • Recommended order: 10.5 or 11 linear yards depending on store increments

Example 3: Artificial Turf for a 30 ft by 40 ft Yard

A 30 by 40 foot yard is 1,200 square feet. With 15 foot wide turf rolls, the simple area conversion gives 26.67 linear yards before waste. In practice, the layout is often two 15 foot wide strips running the 40 foot length, which is 80 linear feet or 26.67 linear yards before trimming. Add waste for cuts, grain direction, and edge shaping.

How to Use This Calculator Correctly

  1. Measure the area. For flooring, multiply room length by room width, then add all rooms together. For upholstery, use a fabric yardage chart or surface estimate.
  2. Confirm the roll width. Do not guess. A small width difference can change the final yardage.
  3. Choose the correct unit. If the product width is 54 inches, either select the 54 inch preset or enter 54 and set the unit to inches.
  4. Add waste. Use more waste for diagonal layouts, pattern repeat, nap, seams, closets, stairs, and irregular room shapes.
  5. Round up. Running short is usually more expensive than ordering slightly too much, especially when dye lots or product batches can vary.
Important: This calculator converts area into length. It does not automatically create a professional cut plan. If a room is wider than the roll, or if seams must be hidden in specific locations, actual material requirements may be higher than the area-based estimate.

Linear Yard vs Square Yard vs Square Foot

A square foot is an area unit. A square yard is also an area unit and always equals 9 square feet. A linear yard is a length unit and equals 3 feet of length. The amount of area in one linear yard depends entirely on the material width.

Roll Width Area in 1 Linear Yard Area in Square Yards
3 ft 9 sq ft 1 sq yd
4.5 ft 13.5 sq ft 1.5 sq yd
5 ft 15 sq ft 1.67 sq yd
12 ft 36 sq ft 4 sq yd
15 ft 45 sq ft 5 sq yd

Factors That Can Change Your Final Yardage

  • Pattern repeat: Matching large patterns can add 20 percent or more in some fabric and carpet projects.
  • Nap or pile direction: Velvet, corduroy, turf, and carpet pile may need all cuts aligned in the same direction.
  • Seam strategy: Seams placed away from traffic or sight lines can require longer cuts.
  • Odd room shapes: L-shaped rooms, closets, stairs, bay windows, and angled walls increase offcuts.
  • Retailer increments: Some stores sell only by whole yard, half yard, or minimum roll length.
  • Dye lot risk: Reordering later can produce a visible color mismatch, so rounding up is often safer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert square feet to linear yards?

Divide square feet by the roll width in feet, then divide by 3. If you need waste, add the waste percentage to the area before converting.

Why is roll width required?

Linear yards are a length measurement, not an area measurement. The same 10 linear yards covers different square footage depending on whether the roll is 3 feet, 4.5 feet, 12 feet, or 15 feet wide.

Is one linear yard the same as one square yard?

No. One square yard is always 9 square feet. One linear yard is 3 feet of length from a roll. Its area depends on the roll width.

How many square feet are in one linear yard of 12 foot carpet?

One linear yard of 12 foot wide carpet covers 36 square feet because 12 feet × 3 feet = 36 square feet.

How many linear yards do I need for 1,000 square feet with 12 foot carpet?

Before waste, 1,000 ÷ 12 ÷ 3 = 27.78 linear yards. With 10 percent waste, the answer is 30.56 linear yards.

What waste factor should I use?

Use 5 to 10 percent for simple rectangular layouts. Use 10 to 20 percent for rooms with seams, stairs, closets, irregular shapes, upholstery curves, or patterned materials. Large pattern repeats and directional nap may require even more.

Does this calculator work for fabric?

Yes. Enter the fabric width, such as 54 inches or 60 inches, and select inches as the width unit. The calculator will convert it to feet internally.

Does this calculator work for artificial turf?

Yes. Enter the turf roll width, commonly 15 feet for many products, then add waste for trimming, seams, and blade direction.

What if my room is wider than the roll?

You may need multiple strips and seams. A simple area conversion can understate the material needed if the layout forces inefficient cuts. Use this calculator for a starting estimate, then confirm the cut plan.

Should I round up?

Yes for real purchases. Choose half-yard or whole-yard rounding in the calculator to match common retailer ordering increments.

This tool provides an educational estimate. Final ordering should consider actual product width, roll direction, seam placement, pattern repeat, installer recommendations, and retailer minimums.

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