Rebar Weight Per Foot: The Hyper-Detailed Technical Manual
Precision derivation | Environmental effects | Seismic design | Cost analytics | QA/QC
📏 1. Ultra-Precise Definition & Metrology of #5 Rebar
#5 rebar (imperial size #5) corresponds to a nominal diameter of exactly 5/8 inch = 0.625 in = 15.875 mm. The cross-sectional area is computed as A = π × (0.3125)² = 0.306796 in² (197.93 mm²). The weight of #5 rebar per foot is not an arbitrary value — it derives from the fundamental density of carbon steel (7.85 g/cm³ or 0.2836 lb/in³). For certification, ASTM A615 / A615M specifies that the mass per unit length shall not deviate more than ±6% for individual cuts, and the average of a bundle must be within ±3% of the theoretical 1.043 lb/ft. High-precision laser micrometry confirms diameter tolerance of +0/-0.019 inches for #5 bars.
Historical note: The #5 rebar designation originated from the early 20th-century “round bar” numbering system in the US, where the number is eighths of an inch. Weight standardization came with the 1950s ASTM specifications.
⚙️ 2. Advanced Calculation Methods for Weight Per Foot
General formula: \( W_{lb/ft} = \frac{\pi}{4} \times d^2 \times \rho_{steel} \times 12 \)
For #5: \( W = 0.785398 \times (0.625)^2 \times 0.2836 \times 12 = 1.04344 \) lb/ft.
Alternative empirical rule (CRSI): Weight (lb/ft) = (diameter in inches)² × 2.67 → 0.390625 × 2.67 = 1.043 (exactly).
For metric: \( W_{kg/m} = A_{mm^2} \times 7.85 \times 10^{-6} \). #5 area = 198 mm² → 198 × 7.85e-6 × 1000? Actually: weight (kg/m) = area (mm²) × 0.00000785 × 1000? The correct: kg/m = (A_mm² × 7850 kg/m³)/1e6 = 198 × 0.00785 = 1.554 kg/m (small rounding). Official = 1.552 kg/m.
🌡️ 3. Environmental Factors: Temperature, Corrosion, and Weight Variations
Thermal expansion: The coefficient of thermal expansion for steel is 6.5×10⁻⁶ in/in/°F (11.7×10⁻⁶ m/m/°C). For a 100°F rise, a #5 bar’s length increases by 0.00065 ft per ft, thus the weight per foot decreases by ~0.065% (mass constant, but length expands). This change is negligible for structural design.
Corrosion allowance: Rust (Fe₂O₃) adds mass but reduces cross-section. A 10% section loss due to corrosion reduces tensile capacity but increases actual weight by ~2-3% due to oxide scale. Engineers designing for aggressive environments often add 1.5 mm sacrificial layer but do not modify the weight of 5 rebar per foot in calculations.
Humidity & weight: Surface moisture can temporarily add up to 0.2% weight; dry weight is the specified 1.043 lb/ft.
🧪 4. Detailed Rebar Types & Weight Deviation Table
| Type | Base #5 weight (lb/ft) | Coating / alloy | Net weight (lb/ft) | Use case / durability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black carbon steel (Grade 60) | 1.043 | None | 1.043 | General interior, dry conditions |
| Epoxy-coated | 1.043 | Epoxy ~0.2 mm thick | 1.046–1.048 | Bridge decks, parking structures |
| Galvanized (hot-dip) | 1.043 | Zinc coating (85 µm) | 1.052–1.056 | Coastal, wastewater treatment |
| Stainless steel (Type 316LN) | 1.043 | Higher density (0.289 lb/in³) | 1.062 ±0.003 | Chemical plants, marine splash zone |
| GFRP (non-metallic) | N/A | Fiberglass | 0.31 lb/ft | Electromagnetic neutrality, lightweight |
| MMFX (micro-composite) | 1.043 | High-strength steel (100 ksi) | 1.043 | Seismic / blast resistance |
✔️⛔ 5. In-Depth Advantages, Disadvantages & Seismic Considerations
• High ductility (Grade 60: elongation ≥ 9%)
• Bond strength: rib pattern yields development length ~30–40 diameters.
• Predictable weight-per-foot facilitates crane lifts & cost control.
• Compatible with couplers and welding (for certain grades).
• Recycled content >90% → low carbon footprint.
• Weight (1.043 lb/ft) still requires mechanical handling for long bundles.
• Uncoated bars rust quickly in high humidity.
• Thermal elongation similar to concrete but may cause spalling if cover < 1.5 in.
• Higher cost than #4 bars, but necessary for medium-heavy loads.
#5 rebar is commonly used in special moment frames (ACI 318 Chapter 18). The weight per foot influences seismic mass, but steel’s strength-to-weight ratio makes it favorable. For high seismic zones, detailing (hook bends, confinement) matters more than weight.
🛡️ 6. Safety & Handling: OSHA Guidelines for #5 Rebar
Weight-related safety: A 20-ft #5 bar weighs 20.86 lb (9.46 kg). OSHA recommends that loads over 50 lb require mechanical lifting. For bundles, use rebar lifting hooks or spreader beams. Always cap exposed ends to prevent impalement (OSHA 1926.701(b)). The weight of 5 rebar per foot directly influences transport: a standard truck load of 4,000 ft of #5 weighs ~4,172 lb (2.1 tons). Ensure proper tie-downs.
In cold weather, rebar weight unchanged but can be slippery. Use gloves and safety glasses when cutting/bending.
🌍 7. Global Equivalents: #5 Rebar vs. Metric Bars
In European standards (EN 10080), the closest equivalent is 16 mm bar (diameter = 16 mm ≈ 0.630 in). Weight per meter for 16 mm = (π/4 × 0.016²) × 7850 = 1.579 kg/m ≈ 1.061 lb/ft. Slightly heavier than #5. In UK, T16 rebar weight = 1.58 kg/m. For Australian standards, N16 bar = 1.58 kg/m. Thus, #5 is unique to imperial regions; always convert with caution.
💰 8. Cost Analytics: Using #5 Rebar Weight for Budgeting
As of 2025–2026, rebar prices average $900–$1200 per ton (US). For #5 rebar: cost per linear foot = (1.043 lb/ft ÷ 2000) × price per ton. Example: $1000/ton → cost per ft = (1.043/2000)×1000 = $0.5215/ft. For a 5,000 ft foundation: $2,607.50 for material only. Labor, shipping extra. The weight of 5 rebar per foot allows instant conversion from length to cost.
Real-world project: 300 ft retaining wall with #5 @ 12″ OC vertical and horizontal. Total length ≈ 2,200 ft → weight = 2,294 lb = 1.147 tons → material cost ~$1,200. Using #4 would be lighter (0.668 lb/ft) but not enough strength for 8-ft wall. So #5 is the economical choice.
🔬 9. Field QA/QC: How to Verify Weight of #5 Rebar Per Foot
Procedure: 1) Cut a 3-ft sample (clean, dry). 2) Weigh on certified scale (precision 0.01 lb). 3) Divide by 3. Acceptable range: 1.00 – 1.09 lb/ft (per ASTM tolerance). For a 20-ft bar, total weight should be 20.86 lb ± 6% = 19.6 to 22.1 lb. Also check diameter: 0.625 in +/- 0.019 in. Incoming inspection: Weigh entire bundle and divide by total length. Bundle weight tolerance ±3% of theoretical.
♻️ 10. Sustainability: Carbon Footprint of #5 Rebar Weight
The weight of 5 rebar per foot correlates directly to material intensity. For each ton of rebar, CO₂ emissions from EAF steelmaking average ~0.4 metric tons. Therefore, specifying #5 instead of #6 for lighter loads reduces environmental impact. Using high-recycled content (up to 97% post-consumer) is common. Optimized design with #5 at proper spacing (e.g., 12″ OC) reduces total steel weight by 15-20% compared to #4 at 6″ OC.