How to Count Blocks and Symbols in CAD
Build a frequency table from block names, click legend rows to flash every instance — faster than manual PDF counting.
Free online tool
CAD Block / Symbol Statistics
Use the tool first, then follow the steps below for detail.
Recommended blogs
In this guide
Introduction
Many plans use block inserts for equipment and fixtures. See which block names appear in the drawing, how many instances, and click legend entries to highlight all matching symbols on the sheet.
Before you spend an hour hunting for missing heads on a 40-layer shop drawing, it helps to know what you're looking at: layer count, which fire layers actually have stuff on them, rough entity totals. That's what the CAD block counter statistics is for.
None of this replaces a full plan review. It's the quick look you do while the file is still downloading to your brain.
What you learn before opening every layer
A typical sprinkler sheet might show 600 layers and tens of thousands of entities. You don't need to isolate every one on day one. You need to know: are the fire layers populated? How many blocks look like heads or devices? Is there text on the sheet worth exporting later?
The analysis panel answers that in one pass. Click a heavy fire layer and jump straight to it on the drawing instead of scrolling the layer list alphabetically.
When Rev 2 lands Friday afternoon, compare entity counts to Rev 1. If the sprinkler layer dropped from 4,200 objects to 900, something got frozen or xref'd wrong worth a phone call before install week.
Device quantity from drawings
Equipment symbols, fixtures, and annotations are often block inserts with project-specific names. Block statistics help verify quantities against specs without manual counting.
Where this shows up on a real job
Foreman on site gets Rev 3 on a phone and needs to confirm head count on Level 2 before Monday's walkthrough open the DWG, run CAD block counter statistics, no trip back to the trailer PC with the only AutoCAD license.
Owner rep during tenant improvement doesn't own CAD but needs to see alarm device layout share link or walk them through the viewer in a meeting.
BIM coordinator gets consultant DWG Friday at 4pm; Revit import is Monday. Validate or convert over the weekend in the browser instead of waiting for IT to install TrueView.
Commissioning agent building a tag list for sign-off extract text once, filter in Excel, attach to the report.
Plan reviewer comparing two revisions side by side same tool, two browser tabs, or export between steps if your process requires saved files.
Field notes
Run analysis the moment a new revision hits your inbox. Two minutes now beats finding a missing valve layer during the walkthrough.
Block counts won't match purchase order quantities exactly blocks get mirrored, multi-inserted, or buried on frozen layers. Use counts as a sanity check, not an invoice.
If text count is zero but the PDF clearly has tags, the labels might be exploded geometry or on a non-standard layer. That's a signal to call the engineer, not a tool bug.
Step by step
The tool page has a live workspace at the top same engine as the full viewer. Upload there or use Upload DWG in the header if you want the whole screen.
Free launch limit is 15 MB per file. That's most single-floor fire plans. Campus packs may need to be split by sheet annoying, but still faster than shipping drives.

- Upload shop drawing: DWG/DXF with block inserts.
- Open symbol legend: Block names listed by frequency.
- Highlight on drawing: Click legend item to locate all instances.
File prep checklist
Confirm the attachment opens corrupt zips and truncated downloads happen on mobile hotspots.
Note the AutoCAD version if the inspector asks; file inspector shows it without opening desktop software.
If xref paths are broken, you may see empty sheets until the sender binds xrefs. Browser viewers can't fix missing xref files on your machine.
For CAD block counter statistics, work on a copy if your contract requires preserving the received file byte-for-byte in the project folder.
After you're done, archive what you exported (DXF, Excel, report text) next to the share link URL in your project log. Future you will forget which link was which.
If the GC asks "can you send that again?" you already know which revision you processed your filename discipline pays off here.
When in doubt, call the engineer before you re-export. Five minutes on the phone beats a wrong file in the record set.
Things that still bite you
Tianzheng and some plugin DWGs open partial in any web viewer, not just ours. If the sheet looks empty or blocks won't explode, ask for standard DWG/DXF from AutoCAD we've seen that more on imports from overseas consultants than domestic shops.
Always check units before measuring. We've seen metric files opened with feet assumed and spacing "violations" that were just a units mistake.
Keep the sender's original filename when you export. "ProjectX_from_MEP_rev2.dxf" beats "download(1).dxf" when the engineer calls back asking which file you used.
Custom objects may flatten to lines and arcs on export. Most fire plans are 2D lines, blocks, and text that's fine. Weird MEP solids might not convert cleanly.
Sharing is upload-by-choice. If the drawing is sensitive, review locally and only share redacted sheets or specific floors.
Do you still need AutoCAD?
Yes, if you're editing geometry moving heads, rerouting pipe, updating the model. No, if you're reviewing, converting, counting, measuring, or sending a link to someone who will never edit.
Autodesk's web viewer needs an account and uploads to their cloud. DWG TrueView is free but Windows-only and a chunky install. CadPeek is aimed at fire plan review: layer filters, block counts, text export, measure without a monthly seat for every person who touches the drawing.
Lots of shops keep a few AutoCAD licenses for production and use browser tools for everyone else in the chain.
Quick answers
Is CAD block counter statistics free right now?
Yes no account needed during launch. There's a per-file size cap; see the tool page for the current limit.
Bottom line
Many plans use block inserts for equipment and fixtures. See which block names appear in the drawing, how many instances, and click legend entries to highlight all matching symbols on the sheet.
Open the CAD Block / Symbol Statistics tool page, drop in your DWG or DXF, and run it. If the file won't open cleanly, try the file inspector or DXF validator first saves time versus debugging a bad attachment downstream.
Bookmark the page if you get repeat work from the same GC or engineer. The related tools in the sidebar cover layer audit, text export, and share links when this job turns into the next one.
Standard US sprinkler and alarm sheets from mainstream consultants usually open fine. Weird plugin files are the exception and those are painful in desktop CAD too.
Open the free tool
Guide FAQ
Can I try the tools mentioned in this article?
- Yes. Each article links to free tool pages and the viewer open a DWG/DXF and follow along without AutoCAD.
Is this article updated for 2026?
- We refresh articles when workflows or supported AutoCAD versions change. Check the date at the top of the post.
Do I need a paid plan to follow along?
- Most workflows in our articles work on the free tier. Excel export and larger files require Starter or above.
Where can I ask follow-up questions?
- Use account feedback or email support. Popular questions become new Resource Center guides.
Are Chinese-labeled drawings covered?
- Yes. The viewer detects non-English layer names and renders common CAD fonts used on imported drawings.
Can I share this article with my team?
- Link freely to cadpeek.com/blog full republication requires permission.