01What this calculator estimates
This calculator turns a single floor-area figure into a full construction and demolition (C&D) waste picture: the total tonnes generated, how that splits between material diverted from landfill (recycled or reused) and material sent to landfill, the number of skips you will need, and a rough landfill disposal cost. It then rates your target diversion rate against the recognised 50% and 75% benchmarks so you can see at a glance whether the plan is on track.
The method follows the material-stream accounting used across the industry, including the EPA construction and demolition debris programme: estimate waste from floor area multiplied by a generation rate that depends on the project type, then plan how much of it you will divert. For related sustainability tools, see our embodied carbon calculator and energy efficiency upgrade calculator.
02Waste generation rates and diversion bands
The waste a project produces per square metre varies enormously with the activity. New construction is relatively clean; renovation strips out existing finishes as well as installing new ones; demolition converts an entire structure into debris. The representative rates below are typical planning figures — your real numbers depend on the structure, materials and how carefully waste is segregated.
The diversion rate — diverted weight divided by total weight — is the headline sustainability metric. Green-building programs reward clearing 50% and then 75%. Those two thresholds appear as ticks on the result meter so you can see how your target compares. Choosing recycled-content and reused products, verified against EPA greener-products guidance, is part of pushing the rate higher.
03What changes the result
The estimate is a robust early-planning figure, but several factors move the final tonnage and split:
- Project type and structure. A concrete-framed demolition produces far more waste — and heavier waste — than dismantling a light timber-framed building of the same area.
- Source separation. Keeping concrete, metal, wood and drywall in separate skips on site is the single biggest lever on the diversion rate; mixed loads are far harder to recycle.
- Local markets and gate fees. Recycling outlets and landfill charges vary by region, so both the achievable diversion and the disposal cost differ. The ~$100/tonne used here is a planning placeholder — check your local rate.
- Reuse before recycling. Salvaging fixtures, doors, steel sections and clean fill for reuse counts toward diversion and often costs less than recycling.
- Reporting alignment. If you report project emissions or waste, align your boundaries with a recognised protocol such as the EPA Center for Corporate Climate Leadership, and note that avoided landfill also has a greenhouse-gas benefit you can quantify with the EPA greenhouse gas equivalencies calculator.
- Enter the project floor area in square metres (the area being built, renovated or demolished).
- Choose the project type — new build, renovation or demolition — which sets the waste generation rate.
- Set your target diversion rate (the default 75% matches the upper LEED threshold).
- Press Calculate to see total tonnes, the diverted vs landfill split, skips needed and disposal cost.
- Raise the diversion target to see how many skips and how much cost extra separation removes.
Planning the wider fit-out? Our conduit fill calculator helps size electrical containment during construction.
This is an early-stage estimate for planning and comparison, not a substitute for a site-specific waste management plan or a weighbridge record. It uses representative generation rates and a single blended disposal cost, and it does not account for:
- Structure- and material-specific quantities (a quantity take-off is more accurate than a per-m² rate)
- Regional variation in recycling markets, gate fees and skip sizes
- Hazardous materials (asbestos, contaminated soil) that need specialist handling and separate costing
- The difference between reuse, downcycling and true recycling within the diverted fraction
01The construction waste formula
Every C&D waste estimate is built from one relationship: floor area multiplied by a waste generation rate gives the total tonnage, which is then split by the diversion rate into recycled/reused material and landfill.
Where:
- floor area= gross floor area being built, renovated or demolished, in m².
- rate= waste generation rate in kg/m² for the project type.
- diversion rate= target share of waste recycled/reused, as a percentage.
- Landfill= total minus diverted — the tonnage sent to landfill.
02Worked example
A 1,000 m² building is being demolished (rate ~1,000 kg/m²) with a target diversion rate of 75%. Here is the calculation carried through to skips and cost:
At 75% diversion this demolition clears the top LEED threshold, sending just 250 t of 1,000 t to landfill for a rough $25,000 disposal cost. If diversion slipped to the 50% baseline, landfill would double to 500 t and the disposal cost to about $50,000 — which is why separating concrete and metal on site pays for itself. The avoided landfill also carries a greenhouse-gas benefit you can estimate with the EPA greenhouse gas equivalencies calculator.