Standard shingle packaging and fastening conventions
These are published packaging and fastening conventions for standard three-tab and many architectural asphalt shingles, not physical constants — always check the coverage and fastening instructions printed on the specific product being purchased.
| Item | Typical convention |
|---|---|
| Roofing square | 100 sq ft = 9.290304 m² |
| Bundles per square | 3 (standard asphalt shingle packaging) |
| Nails per square | ≈320 (4 nails per shingle, standard fastening pattern) |
| High-wind fastening | Manufacturers commonly specify 6 nails per shingle in high-wind zones, raising nail count roughly 50% above the standard pattern |
- Bundle coverage varies by shingle type and manufacturer — some architectural (laminated) shingles are packaged at a different weight or count per bundle, so confirm coverage per bundle on the specific product's data sheet before ordering.
- This calculator estimates material quantity only; wind rating, fastening pattern and underlayment requirements are set by the shingle manufacturer's installation instructions and the applicable local building code.
What does a shingle calculator do?
A shingle calculator converts a roof's surface area into the number of shingle bundles and roofing nails needed for the job, using the standard US asphalt-shingle packaging convention of 3 bundles per roofing square. One roofing square equals 100 square feet (9.290304 m²) of actual roof surface, and it is the unit shingles are commonly sold and estimated by.
Nail count is estimated using a typical convention of about 4 nails per shingle at roughly 80 shingles per square, giving approximately 320 nails per square — though actual nail count depends on the shingle type, exposure, and whether the installer follows a standard 4-nail or a high-wind 6-nail fastening pattern specified by the manufacturer or local code.
How to use this shingle calculator
- Enter the total roof area in square meters (use the roof area calculator first if you only know the building footprint and pitch).
- Enter a waste allowance percentage — 10% is a common default for cutting, hips, valleys and starter courses.
- Read the area with waste applied, the number of roofing squares this equals, and the recommended number of shingle bundles.
- Check the estimated nail count against the fastening pattern (standard 4-nail or high-wind 6-nail) specified for your shingle product and local code before ordering fasteners.
The formula behind shingle quantity
Area with waste equals roof area × (1 + waste %). Roofing squares equal that area divided by 9.290304 m² (the exact metric equivalent of 100 sq ft). Bundles equal squares × 3, rounded up, following the standard three-bundles-per-square asphalt shingle packaging convention. Nails equal squares × 320, rounded up, following a typical 4-nails-per-shingle, ~80-shingles-per-square estimate.
Worked example: a 100 m² roof area with a 10% waste allowance gives an area of 110 m², equal to 110 ÷ 9.290304 ≈ 11.84 squares. That requires ⌈11.84 × 3⌉ = 36 bundles and ⌈11.84 × 320⌉ = 3,789 nails.
Common mistakes
- Ordering exactly the calculated bundle count with no waste allowance, risking a shortfall on a roof with hips, valleys or dormers.
- Assuming every shingle product uses 3 bundles per square — some architectural or premium shingles are packaged differently and should be checked against the product data sheet.
- Using the standard 4-nail fastening estimate in a high-wind zone where the manufacturer or local code requires 6 nails per shingle.
- Estimating from the flat footprint area instead of the true sloped roof area, which under-orders material.
Часто задаваемые вопросы
How many bundles of shingles do I need per square?
Standard asphalt shingles are packaged 3 bundles per roofing square (100 sq ft / 9.29 m²), the conventional US packaging figure used for material estimating — always confirm against the coverage stated on your specific product.
How many nails per square of shingles?
A common estimate is about 320 nails per square, based on roughly 80 shingles per square fastened with the standard 4-nails-per-shingle pattern. Manufacturers commonly require 6 nails per shingle in designated high-wind zones, which raises the count.
How much waste should I allow for a shingle roof?
10% is a common default waste allowance for cutting, starter courses, hips and valleys; more complex roofs with many hips, valleys or dormers typically need a higher allowance.
What is a roofing square?
A roofing square equals 100 square feet (9.290304 m²) of actual sloped roof surface — the standard US unit shingles, underlayment and related materials are estimated and priced by.
Does bundle count differ by shingle type?
Yes. The 3-bundles-per-square figure applies to standard three-tab and many architectural asphalt shingles, but coverage per bundle can vary by product weight and style, so the manufacturer's data sheet is the authoritative source for a specific product.
Источники
- Asphalt shingle manufacturer installation and packaging guides — standard 3 bundles per 100 sq ft square convention used across major US shingle manufacturers.
- National Roofing Contractors Association (NRCA) — Roofing Manual, standard fastening patterns and roofing-square terminology.
- International Code Council (ICC) — International Residential Code (IRC), fastener schedule provisions including high-wind fastening requirements.