Board-on-Board Fence Calculator

Use this board-on-board fence calculator to estimate the number of posts, sections, rails, pickets, and the post length required for a privacy fence layout.

Fence Material Estimate

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Quick Answer: Omni's formulas estimate posts and sections from fence length and post spacing, while pickets are estimated from fence length, picket width, and overlap.

How to Calculate

  1. Enter fence length: Use the total fence run you want to build.
  2. Set the post spacing: Typical post spacing falls between 6 and 8 feet, or about 2 to 3 meters.
  3. Set the picket layout: Provide the fence height, picket width, overlap, and rails per section.
  4. Review counts: The calculator returns posts, sections, rails, pickets, and a recommended post length estimate.

Formula

posts = ceil(fence length / post space + 1)
Variable Meaning Unit
fence length Total planned fence run length
post space Spacing between fence posts length
picket width Width of one picket length
picket overlap Overlap between adjacent pickets length

Worked Examples

Privacy fence - Typical backyard fence
  • Fence length: 60 ft
  • Post spacing: 8 ft
  • Fence height: 6 ft

Result: Roughly 9 posts, 8 sections, and post length of 9 ft

The 1.5x rule for post length helps account for burying roughly one-third of the post.

Interpretation Table

Range Meaning Action
More sections Longer fence or tighter post spacing Expect more rails, more posts, and more labor.
More pickets Wider fence or less overlap efficiency Double-check your overlap and gate openings before ordering.
Longer posts Taller fence Confirm embedment depth, frost-line requirements, and local code.

Frequently Asked Questions

A board-on-board fence uses overlapping pickets to improve privacy and reduce direct sightlines through the fence.

That rule of thumb allows roughly one-third of the post to be buried for support.

No. Add gate materials separately because hinges, frames, and openings change the picket and rail layout.
Note: This calculator gives estimating values only. Soil conditions, footing depth, local code, and gate framing can all change the final material takeoff.

References

Last reviewed: March 14, 2026