Elastic Length Calculator
Calculate the unstretched elastic length needed for a waistband, cuff, or any garment opening.
Avoid too-tight or too-loose results.
The basic formula
Elastic length = finished circumference ÷ stretch ratio + seam allowance
If your waist measurement is 72 cm, you want 2.5 cm of ease, you are using a 1.5x stretch elastic, and you need 1.5 cm seam allowance to join the ends:
(72 + 2.5) ÷ 1.5 + 1.5 = 49.7 + 1.5 = 51.2 cm of elastic
When sewn into a loop and stretched to fit, that elastic recovers and pulls the fabric into a comfortable waistband. The trick is that “stretch ratio” varies hugely by elastic type.
Stretch ratios you can actually trust
The number on the package is often optimistic. Real wearable stretch (the amount you can stretch the elastic without making it uncomfortable or shortening its lifespan) is lower:
| Elastic type | Total stretch | Wearable (used in calc) |
|---|---|---|
| Knit elastic (soft, narrow) | 2.0x | 1.4 to 1.5x |
| Braided elastic (most common) | 1.8x | 1.4x |
| Woven elastic (wide waistbands) | 1.5x | 1.3x |
| Clear elastic (lingerie / activewear) | 2.5 to 3x | 1.8 to 2.0x |
| Fold-over elastic (FOE) | 1.8x | 1.4x |
| Powermesh / control panels | 1.4x | 1.2x |
Stretching elastic to 90% of its theoretical limit shortens its life and makes the waistband uncomfortable. Use the wearable numbers, not the package numbers.
Where each type goes
- Soft knit for pyjama waists and kids’ pull-on pants where comfort wins
- Braided for visible elastic in casing on dresses, where the elastic narrows when stretched
- Woven for wide waistbands on skirts and athletic shorts, where elastic should hold its width
- Clear for lingerie and activewear seams — invisible under thin fabric, no fraying
- Fold-over to finish raw edges on knit garments — neckbands on T-shirts
Two assembly methods
The casing method: sew a tube on the garment, thread the elastic through, sew the ends together, close the casing. The elastic distributes itself with the natural gathers. Best for skirts and pyjama waists.
The direct stitch method: cut elastic to length, stitch into a loop, quarter both the loop and the garment opening, pin matching quarters, then stretch elastic to match each quarter while sewing. Best for athletic wear, swimwear, and any garment where you want the gathers controlled.
Common mistakes
- Forgetting seam allowance entirely (waistband comes out too small)
- Doubling seam allowance (waistband too loose)
- Using the elastic’s total stretch instead of wearable stretch (cuts off circulation)
- Cutting elastic from a stretched bolt (it relaxes when you cut it, so you get less than measured)
Always measure elastic in its relaxed state, on a flat surface, with the strip lying naturally. Tug-stretching while cutting is the most common cause of “the waistband is too tight” complaints.