CALCULATOR

Self-levelling compound calculator

Estimate bags required by area and thickness. Built for floor levelling over concrete, timber subfloors and screed correction across the Hunter.

Self-levelling compound consumption scales linearly with area and thickness. A 30 m² pour at 5 mm needs roughly 240 kg; the same area at 10 mm needs 480 kg. The calculator below estimates kilograms required by area and thickness, and recommends the right pack count for your job.

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How self-leveller coverage is calculated

Most cement-based self-levellers cover at approximately 1.6 kg per square metre per millimetre of thickness. To work out total kilograms required:

  • Area × thickness × 1.6 = kg of dry product needed
  • Round up to the next whole bag, then add one extra for unexpected dips
  • For pours over 30 m², add two spare bags — running out mid-pour breaks the join line

Self-levellers have a strict working time window — usually 20–30 minutes from mixing. On big pours you’ll need a continuous mixer or two crews mixing in parallel, otherwise the leading edge skins before the trailing edge is poured.

Typical coverage rates we use

Thicknesskg / m²30 m² pour50 m² pour
3 mm (feather)4.8 kg144 kg (8 × 20 kg)240 kg (12 × 20 kg)
5 mm (standard)8.0 kg240 kg (12 × 20 kg)400 kg (20 × 20 kg)
10 mm (deep correction)16.0 kg480 kg (24 × 20 kg)800 kg (40 × 20 kg)
20 mm (heavy correction)32.0 kg960 kg (48 × 20 kg)1600 kg (80 × 20 kg)
Round up to whole bags and add one spare. Confirm against the current TDS for your batch before ordering.

Substrate prep is 90% of the job

Self-levellers are unforgiving of bad substrate prep. The pour looks foolproof — and on a properly primed, clean, mechanically prepared slab it more or less is. On a contaminated slab without proper bond test and primer, the leveller debonds inside 12 months and lifts under load.

Bond test

Tape polythene to the slab for 24 hours. Condensation underneath = the slab is releasing moisture. Pouring on that = guaranteed debond.

Mechanical prep

Grind or shotblast to CSP 2–3. Removes surface contamination and gives the leveller a profile to mechanically key into.

Primer

Porous primer on porous slabs. Seals porosity, prevents mix water from being drained into the slab, creates a clean bond surface.

Our most common self-levelling substrate mistakes covers the four prep failures we see most often.

Order one spare bag — always

The single most expensive mistake on a self-levelling job is running short mid-pour. The leading edge skins, the join line is visible forever, and on tile finishes the bond can fail above it. A spare 20 kg bag is roughly $35 retail; the cost of stopping the job to source one is at least an hour of crew time plus delivery — and frequently the difference between a one-day pour and a two-day pour.

For pours over 30 m², bring a second mixer and a second labourer. Self-levellers have a 20–30 minute working window; one crew can lay maybe 15 m² in that window before the join lines start to show.

Frequently asked questions

How thick can I pour self-leveller in one pass?

Most cement-based self-levellers pour up to 30 mm in one pass. For thicker corrections, use a deep-pour formulation or pour in lifts with a primer between coats. The 1.6 kg/m²/mm rate is the same regardless of thickness — but mix water ratio and working time both vary, so check the TDS.

Can I tile or vinyl over self-leveller the next day?

Foot traffic at 4 hours, tile at 24 hours, vinyl typically at 48–72 hours pending moisture test. Always confirm against the TDS for your product. Pouring on a wet substrate and tiling too soon are the two most common callbacks.

Do I need to prime before self-levelling?

Yes. Porous primer on porous slabs; non-porous primer on dense substrates like terrazzo or ceramic. The primer also acts as a visual check — if it beads up rather than absorbing, the substrate has surface contamination that needs to be ground off.

Can I pour self-leveller over timber subfloors?

Yes, with the right primer and a separation layer for thick pours. Timber subfloors flex; the leveller needs to be installed in a way that decouples it from substrate movement. Talk to us before ordering — we’ll match the product to the deflection.

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