Dump truck capacities vary widely by size and type, typically ranging from 1 to 30+ cubic yards depending on the model and load.

Cubic Yard Basics

A cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet (3 ft x 3 ft x 3 ft), the standard for hauling soil, gravel, mulch, or aggregate.

Actual loads often depend on material weight limits (e.g., 10-20 tons legally), not just volume—light mulch fits more yards than dense gravel.

Pro Tip: Calculate any truck bed with: (Length × Width × Height in feet) ÷ 27.

Truck Types and Capacities

Standard full-size dump trucks hold 10-16 cubic yards , ideal for most construction jobs.

Here's a breakdown by common types:

Truck Type| Cubic Yards| Best For
---|---|---
Pickup Truck| 1-3| DIY landscaping1
Standard Dump| 10-16| General hauling17
Tri-Axle| 14-20| Medium-duty dirt/gravel1
Quad-Axle| 18-25| Heavy construction1
End/Semi-Trailer| 20-30+| Large-scale projects13

Tri-axles dominate urban sites for their balance of capacity and road legality.

Real-World Factors

Weight trumps volume: A 20-ton truck hauls ~67-80 yards of light mulch (500-600 lbs/yard) but far less gravel (~2,500-3,000 lbs/yard).

Heavier loads risk fines; always check GVWR and local regs.

Example: A 7x14x3 ft bed = (7×14×3)/27 ≈ 10.9 yards —but density cuts it down.

Planning Your Haul

  • Measure your project volume first, then match truck size.
  • Order 10-20% extra for settling/compaction.
  • For big jobs, tri-axles save trips vs. standards.

TL;DR: Most dump trucks carry 10-16 yards; check type and material density for accuracy.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.