Gutter Calculator: Estimate Length, Downspouts & Cost

Use this free gutter calculator to estimate how much gutter material, how many downspouts, hangers, and end caps you need for your home, plus a total cost estimate based on your chosen material.

How to Use This Calculator

Enter your house's length and width (the footprint dimensions). Select how many sides of your home need gutters - most homes only need gutters along the two longer sides where the roof slopes (gable ends usually don't need them), while hip roofs typically need gutters on all four sides. Choose a gutter material or enter your own price per linear foot, then select your home's height or number of stories to estimate downspout length. Click Calculate to see your full estimate.

How Gutter Quantities Are Calculated

Total gutter length is based on the sides of your home that need coverage - for a 2-sided gable setup, this is simply your house length doubled (one run along each eave). For a 4-sided hip roof setup, it's the full perimeter (length plus width, doubled).

Downspouts are calculated at roughly one per 35-40 feet of gutter run, with a minimum of one per side. This spacing ensures water drains effectively without overwhelming any single downspout during heavy rain. Downspout length is based on your home's eave height - a single-story home (around 10 ft) needs less downspout material than a two-story home (around 20 ft).

Hangers or brackets are estimated at one every 2 feet along the total gutter length, which is the standard spacing for most aluminum and vinyl gutter systems. End caps are calculated at 2 per gutter run, since each continuous run of gutter has two open ends that need capping.

Diagram of a house corner showing gutter, downspout, end cap, and hanger placement along the roofline

What Is the Average Cost of Gutters?

Gutter material costs vary widely depending on what you choose. Vinyl gutters are the most budget-friendly option, typically running around $4-8 per linear foot installed, and are a popular choice for DIY installation. Aluminum is the most common material for professional installations, offering good durability at around $6-12 per linear foot. Steel gutters are more durable and better suited to areas with heavy snow or ice, typically priced $10-20 per linear foot. Copper gutters are the premium option, offering a distinctive appearance and decades of lifespan, but cost $20-30+ per linear foot - often used on higher-end homes where the cost is justified by both aesthetics and longevity.

For an average home with 150 feet of total gutter run, material costs alone can range from roughly $600 for vinyl to over $4,000 for copper, before labor and accessories like hangers and downspouts.

Top down comparison of a gable roof needing gutters on two sides versus a hip roof needing gutters on all four sides

Frequently Asked Questions

As a general rule, one downspout per 35-40 feet of gutter run is sufficient for most residential applications. A typical single-story home with two gutter runs of 40-50 feet each usually needs 2-4 downspouts total.

Not necessarily. Gable-end walls (the triangular sides where the roof peaks) typically don't have an eave for water to run off, so gutters usually aren't needed there. Gutters go along the eaves - the horizontal edges where the roof slopes down.

Most residential homes use 5-inch K-style gutters, which handle typical rainfall adequately. Homes with larger roof areas or in regions with heavy rainfall may need 6-inch gutters, which have significantly more capacity.

Vinyl gutters typically last 10-20 years, aluminum 20-30 years, steel 20-25 years (longer if galvanized or coated), and copper can last 50+ years with proper maintenance.

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