LF Calc

Pond Liner Calculator

By the Linear Feet Calculator Team | Reviewed by landscape and water feature professionals | Updated June 2026

A pond liner is the single most important component of any backyard pond or water feature. Getting the size right means no leaks, no wasted material, and no emergency mid-install trips to the garden center. Use this calculator to find the exact liner dimensions your pond needs.

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Pond Liner Size Calculator

Pond Liner Formula Explained

The formula accounts for the liner wrapping down the sides and across the bottom, plus extra material to anchor the edges above ground level:

Liner Length = Pond Length + (2 × Max Depth) + 2 feet
Liner Width = Pond Width + (2 × Max Depth) + 2 feet

The "2 × Max Depth" accounts for the liner going down one side, across the bottom, and up the opposite side. The "+ 2 feet" gives you 1 foot of extra material on each edge to anchor above the waterline under rocks, soil, or coping stones.

Worked Example: Koi Pond

You want a koi pond that's 12 feet long, 6 feet wide, and 4 feet deep (koi need at least 3-4 feet of depth to overwinter):

  • Liner Length = 12 + (2×4) + 2 = 22 feet
  • Liner Width = 6 + (2×4) + 2 = 16 feet
  • Recommended buy size: 25×20 ft (next standard size up)

Pond Liner Material Comparison

Material Thickness Cost/SF Lifespan
EPDM (45 mil)45 mil$0.75–1.2520-30 yr
EPDM (60 mil)60 mil$1.00–1.5030+ yr
PVC (20 mil)20 mil$0.40–0.708-12 yr
PVC (30 mil)30 mil$0.60–0.9012-15 yr
HDPE30-60 mil$0.50–1.0020+ yr
RPE (Reinforced)20-30 mil$0.80–1.5015-25 yr

Common Pond Sizes and Liner Requirements

Pond Dimensions (L×W×D) Liner Size Buy Size Est. Cost (EPDM)
6×4×2 ft12×10 ft15×15 ft$170–280
8×6×2 ft14×12 ft15×15 ft$170–280
10×8×3 ft18×16 ft20×20 ft$300–500
12×6×4 ft22×16 ft25×20 ft$375–625
15×10×3 ft23×18 ft25×20 ft$375–625
20×12×4 ft30×22 ft30×25 ft$560–940

Installation Tips and Common Mistakes

Mistake: Skipping the Underlayment

Underlayment fabric is not optional. Rocks, roots, and soil pressure will eventually puncture an unprotected liner. Commercial underlayment costs $0.50-1.00 per square foot — negligible compared to the cost of draining, removing, and replacing a punctured liner. Old carpet is a free alternative but ensure it has no staples or chemical treatments.

Mistake: Not Accounting for Shelves

Many ponds have plant shelves — shallow ledges around the perimeter. The liner must drape over these shelves and then continue down to the deepest point. Measure the FULL width of each shelf when determining your liner dimensions. A shelf that adds 12 inches of extra fabric on each side = 2 extra feet of liner width.

Mistake: Ordering Exact Size With No Overlap

Never order a liner that exactly matches your calculated dimensions. The liner must extend above the waterline by at least 6 inches on every side, and you need extra to anchor it. Our calculator already adds 2 feet to each dimension, but always round up to the next standard size after that.

Pro Tip: Let the Liner Relax Before Trimming

EPDM liner is folded in the box and needs time to relax in the sun before installation. Lay it out for 30-60 minutes on a warm day. Fill the pond partially with water and let the liner settle into the contours before making ANY cuts. Once cut, you cannot go back — leave extra material until the pond is fully filled.

Fish Safety and Liner Selection

If you plan to keep fish (especially koi or goldfish), liner material matters:

  • EPDM is universally fish-safe — it's the same material used for drinking water storage. No leaching, no chemical residue. It's the gold standard for koi ponds.
  • PVC must be labeled "fish-safe" — some PVC contains plasticizers that can leach into water. Look for liners specifically marketed for ponds, not roofing membrane.
  • HDPE and RPE are both fish-safe and commonly used in commercial aquaculture.
  • Never use roofing EPDM — it contains fire retardants and anti-fungal chemicals that are toxic to fish. Only use EPDM labeled for pond use.

For koi ponds, go at least 45-mil EPDM. Koi can live 25-50 years — your liner should last as long as your fish. The extra $100-200 for a thicker liner over 20+ years is negligible.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate pond liner size?
Formula: Liner Length = Pond Length + (2 × Max Depth) + 2 feet. Liner Width = Pond Width + (2 × Max Depth) + 2 feet. The extra 2 feet provides 1 foot of overlap on each side for edging and anchoring. For irregular ponds, use the longest and widest points plus the deepest point.
What size pond liner for a 10×8×3 ft pond?
Length = 10 + (2×3) + 2 = 18 ft. Width = 8 + (2×3) + 2 = 16 ft. You need an 18×16 ft liner minimum. Round up to the next available size — most suppliers stock 10×10, 10×15, 15×15, 15×20, 20×20, 20×25, and 25×25 ft sizes. For this pond, order 20×20 ft.
EPDM vs PVC pond liner: which is better?
EPDM (45 mil) is the industry standard for permanent ponds — flexible, UV-resistant, 20+ year lifespan, fish-safe. PVC (20-30 mil) is cheaper but less flexible in cold weather and has a 10-15 year lifespan. HDPE (30-60 mil) is used for large commercial ponds but is stiff and hard to fold. For most backyard ponds, 45-mil EPDM is the best choice.
Do I need underlayment under a pond liner?
Yes. Underlayment protects the liner from roots, rocks, and sharp soil. Use commercial pond underlayment fabric ($0.50-1.00/SF) or old carpet (free but may contain chemicals). Underlayment should match the liner dimensions exactly — it goes directly under the liner. Never skip underlayment; punctures are the #1 cause of pond failure.

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