LF Calc

Linear Feet Calculator for Roofing

By the Linear Feet Calculator Team | Reviewed by roofing contractors | Updated June 2026

While shingles are sold by the square (100 sq ft), most roofing trim — starter strips, ridge caps, drip edge, and valley flashing — is sold by the linear foot. This calculator helps you estimate the linear footage of all roof edges.

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Linear Feet for Roofing

Calculate linear feet for roofing

Select your roof type and enter the dimensions of each edge. This calculator sums up all edges where trim materials are needed.

Measured along the bottom of the roof

Measured along the angled side

The horizontal peak

Total of all hips and valleys (0 for gable)

Roof Trim Materials Measured in Linear Feet

Trim Material Where It Goes Typical Unit
Drip EdgeAlong eaves and rakes to prevent water damage10-foot lengths
Starter StripFirst row along eaves, seals edge against windRoll or 36" strips
Ridge CapAlong ridges and hips, covers the peak~35 LF per bundle
Valley FlashingWhere two roof planes meet at an inside corner10-foot lengths
Rake EdgeAlong the sloped gable ends10-foot lengths

How Roofers Calculate Linear Edge Materials

The total linear footage of roof trim is the sum of all edges. Here's what professional roofers measure:

  • Drip edge goes on every eave and rake — that's the full perimeter of each roof plane. On a gable roof, LF = (2 × eave length) + (2 × rake length).
  • Starter strip only goes on the eaves (bottom edges), not the rakes. One row of starter shingles seals the first course.
  • Ridge cap covers the peak. On a hip roof, each hip line also needs ridge cap, so the total is ridge + all hips.
  • Valley flashing runs the full length of each valley. If a valley is 16 feet long, you need a 16-foot piece of metal flashing (plus a few inches of overlap).

Always add 10% for waste, overlaps, and cuts. Standard drip edge and valley flashing come in 10-foot lengths, so round quantities up.

Frequently Asked Questions

What roofing materials are sold by linear foot?
Starter strips, ridge caps, drip edge, rake edge, and valley flashing are all sold by the linear foot. Standard 3-tab shingle starter strips come in 10-foot rolls or 36-inch lengths. Ridge cap shingles cover about 12 inches of ridge per piece.
How many linear feet of drip edge does a roof need?
Drip edge is installed along the eaves and rakes. For a simple gable roof, you need LF = (2 × eave length) + (2 × rake length). For a hip roof, multiply the total perimeter by 1.0. Add a bundle factor: drip edge comes in 10-foot lengths, buy 10% extra for overlaps.
How many bundles of ridge cap per linear foot?
One bundle of standard ridge cap shingles covers approximately 35 linear feet of ridge. If you have 60 feet of ridge, you need 2 bundles. Hip roofs need more — each hip adds to the total linear footage.
What's the difference between square and linear foot in roofing?
Roof area is measured in squares (1 square = 100 sq ft). But the edges — starter strips, ridge caps, drip edge, valley flashing — are all measured in linear feet along the edge. A roof's square count tells you how many shingles to buy; its linear edges tell you trim quantities.

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