20×24 Concrete Slab Cost
A 20×24 slab covers 480 square feet. Here's the concrete, bags and cost for 2026 — a common size for a two-car garage.
Concrete (4", waste in)
6.52 yd³
294 × 80 lb bags
Materials (ready-mix)
$875 – $1,414
delivered, 4" slab
Installed by a pro
$2,640 – $5,760
4" slab, national average
20×24 slab cost calculator
Adjust thickness, waste or region — the cost updates live.
Waste & region
Order extra for spillage & uneven subgrade. 10% is typical.
Installed cost estimate
$2,640 – $5,760
480 sq ft · 6.52 yd³ concrete
Bags of concrete needed (rounded up)
294
80 lb
392
60 lb
470
50 lb
587
40 lb
- Ready-mix (delivered)
- $875 – $1,414
- Bagged mix (80 lb, DIY)
- $1,617 – $2,646
- Installed by a pro
- $2,640 – $5,760
Estimate only — not a quote. Bag counts are rounded up and include a 10% waste allowance.
20×24 slab cost by thickness
| Thickness | Concrete | 80 lb bags | Ready-mix | Installed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4" | 6.52 yd³ | 294 | $875 – $1,414 | $2,640 – $5,760 |
| 5" | 8.15 yd³ | 367 | $1,079 – $1,723 | $3,000 – $6,120 |
| 6" | 9.78 yd³ | 440 | $1,282 – $2,033 | $3,360 – $6,480 |
Includes a 10% waste allowance; bag counts rounded up. National US averages, January 2026.
You'll also need
Sized for this exact slab — tap any item to open its calculator with your measurements already filled in.
20×24 concrete slab: what to expect
A 20×24 slab covers 480 square feet. At the standard 4" thickness it takes about 6.52 cubic yards of concrete once you allow 10% for waste, which is roughly 294 × 80 lb bags if you mix by hand. Stepping up to 6" — sensible if it'll carry a vehicle — raises that to about 9.78 cubic yards.
Budget around $2,640 – $5,760 to have a 4" slab this size poured and finished by a contractor, or roughly $875 – $1,414 in ready-mix if you're doing the labor yourself. On top of the concrete you'll need about 6.82 yd³ of gravel base and 34 sticks of rebar.
Compare nearby sizes
Planning something bigger or smaller? Jump straight to the cost for a nearby size.
Volumes use standard bag yields and a 10% waste allowance; costs are national US averages that vary by region, mix and finish. See our methodology for exactly how each figure is worked out, or check the reference sources: