USDA Soil Texture Triangle Calculator

USDA Texture Triangle

Soil Texture Triangle Calculator

Classify sand, silt, and clay with the USDA triangle. Compare boundary samples, optional sand fractions, and quick reference tables for faster field calls.

Presets10 samplesreal texture mixes
Results4 cardsclass, family, fit, mix
References4 tablesclasses and cues
📌Preset Soil Mixes

Pick a sample that behaves like a real USDA triangle point. Each preset fills the main fractions, the normalization mode, the tolerance band, and a sand-fraction sketch.

Calculator Inputs

Triangle rule: the class uses normalized sand, silt, and clay percentages that add to 100. When totals drift, the calculator corrects them and reports the adjustment.

Optional sand fraction detail
Optional note: these five inputs should total the sand share. They refine the sandy end of the triangle and help flag coarse or fine-leaning sand mixes.

Soil Triangle Output

USDA-style classing from the normalized sample, with boundary notes and the closest broad family.

USDA class
Loam
Exact triangle match
Broad family
Medium
USDA grouping
Dominant fraction
Balanced
Top two are close
Fit score
100/100
Boundary margin
Calculation breakdown
Sample-
Raw total-
Normalized mix-
Normalize mode-
Class rule-
Boundary band-
Closest neighbors-
Triangle point-
Sand detail total-
Sand sort bias-
Confidence note-
📊Texture Family Comparison
Coarse texturesSandDrains fast and warms early.
Moderately coarseSandy loamEasier to work than sand.
Medium texturesLoamBalanced water and tilth.
Fine texturesClayHolds water and compacts.
📑USDA Reference Tables
Class guide: these are quick cues for the 12 USDA texture classes used by the triangle. They are not lab reports, but they map cleanly to the class logic in this calculator.
ClassClay cueSand or silt cueFamily
Sand0-10%85%+ sandCoarse
Loamy sand0-15%70-89% sandCoarse
Sandy loamUnder 20%43-85% sandModerately coarse
Loam7-27%23-52% sandMedium
Silt loam0-27%50-88% siltMedium
SiltUnder 12%80%+ siltMedium
Sandy clay loam20-35%45-65% sandModerately fine
Clay loam27-40%20-45% sandModerately fine
Silty clay loam27-40%40-73% siltModerately fine
Sandy clay35-55%45%+ sandFine
Silty clay40-60%40%+ siltFine
Clay40%+0-45% sandFine
Family guide: the USDA groups classes into broad texture families. That helps you compare samples without losing the exact triangle match.
FamilyCommon classesWater feelWorkability
CoarseSand, loamy sandVery quick drainageLoose and dry
Moderately coarseSandy loamFast but usableEasy to dig
MediumLoam, silt loam, siltBalanced storageFlexible tilth
Moderately fineSandy clay loam, clay loam, silty clay loamMore water holdNeeds care
FineSandy clay, silty clay, claySlow drainageSticky when wet
Boundary cues: when a sample sits near a border, use the nearest neighbors to check if the texture is really one class away or just touching the edge.
Border zoneExample mixWatch forNear neighbors
Sand corner90/5/5Little clay holdLoamy sand, silt
Silt edge10/80/10Smooth feelSilt loam, loam
Clay edge20/20/60High plasticitySilty clay, clay
Balanced center40/40/20Two fractions tieLoam, clay loam
Sand fractions: the USDA calculator can refine sandy samples with sand-size breakdowns. These notes show how each fraction tilts the feel of a sandy mix.
FractionSize bandTexture cueUse
Very fine sandLowest bandFiner feelSoftens mix
Fine sandSmall bandClose packingAdds smoothness
Medium sandMiddle bandNeutral biasMain sand core
Coarse sandLarger bandMore gritRaises drain speed
Very coarse sandTop bandVery grittySharpens drainage
For exact USDA work, laboratory percentages are best. This calculator normalizes field values, highlights the nearest class, and keeps the triangle math easy to compare.
Tip: recheck any sample near 27% clay.
Tip: add sand detail for sandy soils.

Soil texture are a classification of soil based on the different sizes of particles within that soil. Soil contain three different types of primary particles: sand, silt, and clay. Sand is the largest of these particles, allowing for the movement of water and air through the soil.

Silt particles is medium sized and feel smoothly when dry. Clay particles are the smallest of the three primary soil particles, allowing the soil to hold onto water and nutrients very effective. Because sand, silt, and clay have different sizes, the combination of those three different particles within soil determine it’s texture.

Soil Texture and How to Test It

To determine the texture of soil, the USDA soil texture triangle can be use. The USDA soil texture triangle is a visual diagram that use the percentages of sand, silt, and clay within the soil sample to find the classification of that soil. To use the USDA soil texture triangle, the user must enter the percentage of sand, silt, and clay in the soil sample into a calculator.

If the percentages of those three soil particle types does not add up to 100%, the calculator will perform a process called normalization. Normalization is the mathematical process of adjusting the raw numbers of sand, silt, and clay percentages to ensure they fits within the requirements of the soil texture triangle. Soil of different textures will exhibit different behaviors when managing the soil.

Soils with coarse textures, such as sand or loamy sand, will have a high percentage of sand within them. Coarse textures will allow water to drain at a very fastly rate through the soil due to the gaps between sand particles. Soils with fine textures, like clay, will have a high percentage of clay within the soil sample.

Fine textures will hold large amount of water and nutrients within the soil due to the tight packing of clay particles. Medium textures, like loam, has a balanced amount of sand, silt, and clay within the soil sample. Soils of this texture is often considered to be ideal for agriculture.

Soils with fine textures must be manage with care, as these soils may become waterlogged. Waterlogged soil prevents the exchange of gas between the soil and plant roots, preventing the roots from receiving the oxygen they need to perform crucial cellular function. Beyond using the USDA soil texture triangle to determine soil texture, there is other details that can help to understand soil texture.

One of these detail is information on the physical feel of sand. Sand can be very coarse or very fine in texture. Very coarse sand will allow water to drain at a fasterer rate than very fine sand.

Additionally, soil sample may fall into boundary zone within the soil texture triangle. Boundary zones are area within the triangle where the soil sample fall on the line between two different types of soil texture. In these cases, a boundary tolerance can be use to determine if the soil sample is of one type or if it is close to being another type of soil.

Finally, you can physically feel soil texture to determine if the information from the soil texture calculator is accurate. For example, if the soil sample feels like clay but the calculator read sandy loam soil, the soil sample should of been examined once more for accuracy. By understanding the texture of the soil in which plants will be grow, farmers can better predict how that soil will react to water and fertilizer, and better manage that soil.

USDA Soil Texture Triangle Calculator

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