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Roof Pitch Calculator: Convert Roof Pitch Between Rise/Run and Degrees

Convert between rise/run, pitch ratio, degrees, and percentage

ConstructionBy Numora teamReviewed by Numora engineering review team, Certified Building InspectorUpdated 

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Assumptions
cm
cm
m
Pitch (rise per 12)
6

Rise-over-run slope

A 6cm/12cm pitch is 6/12 = 26.57° = 50%.

Standard residential
Pitch in degrees26.57
Pitch as percentage50
Decimal ratio0.5
Rafter length (per side)17.89
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Quick takeaway

This Roof Pitch Calculator offers comprehensive conversions for all standard roof pitch formats: rise-over-run (e.g., 6/12), degrees, and percentage. It also accurately computes the total rafter length required for one side of your roof. Designed to align with International Residential Code (IRC) Chapter 9, the tool helps users understand if their roof falls into low-slope (under 2/12), standard residential (4-9/12), or steep-slope categories, guiding material selection and compliance. Essential for homeowners, contractors, and DIY enthusiasts, it simplifies complex roofing geometry, ensuring precise planning and material estimates for any project.

What is a roof pitch?

This roof pitch calculator provides comprehensive conversions between all four standard formats: rise-over-run (e.g., 6/12), decimal ratio, degrees, and percentage. Enter your roof's rise and run in inches, and the tool calculates the pitch in each format, alongside the crucial rafter length per side using the Pythagorean theorem. Designed in alignment with the International Residential Code (IRC) Chapter 9 roofing requirements and standard framing-square geometry, the calculator also features clear interpretation bands. These bands help users identify low-slope (under 2/12), standard residential (4–9/12), and steep (over 9/12) pitches, ensuring compliance and material suitability. It's an essential tool for homeowners, contractors, and DIY enthusiasts planning or assessing roofing projects.

The formula

pitch = rise / run degrees = atan(pitch) percent = pitch × 100 rafter = √(rise² + run²)
  • θpitch in degrees
  • risevertical change (inches per 12 in run, conventionally)
  • runhorizontal distance (12 inches in standard format)

Source: International Residential Code (IRC) Chapter 9 Roof Assemblies; standard framing-square geometry.

Worked examples

1Standard 6/12 residential pitch

Inputs
rise: 6run: 12totalRun: 16
Walkthrough

Pitch ratio: 6/12 = 0.500. Angle: arctan(0.5) = 26.57°. Percent: 50%. Rafter length over 16 ft of horizontal span: √(16² + 8²) = √320 = 17.89 ft. Eaves typically add 1–2 ft of overhang, bringing the cut rafter to 18–19 ft. 6/12 is the most common modern US residential pitch — sheds snow well, allows attic space, and is easy to walk for installation.

2Low-slope 2/12

Inputs
rise: 2run: 12totalRun: 20
Walkthrough

Pitch: 2/12 = 0.167 = 9.46° = 16.67%. Below the 4/12 minimum recommended for standard asphalt shingles, so this roof needs ice-and-water shield over the entire deck or a single-ply membrane. Rafter length over 20 ft of run: √(20² + 3.33²) = 20.28 ft. Low-slope roofs are easier to walk and shorter on materials but require more thoughtful drainage and waterproofing.

3Steep 12/12 (45°)

Inputs
rise: 12run: 12totalRun: 12
Walkthrough

12/12 = 1.0 ratio = 45° exactly = 100% slope. Common in colonial-era and Tudor-style homes. Rafter length over 12 ft of run: √(12² + 12²) = 16.97 ft. Steep pitches shed snow and shed water rapidly but cost ~30% more in materials and require fall-protection harnesses for installation. The aesthetic is dramatic — and the attic space gained makes the upper level usable as living space.

How to use this calculator

  1. Rise (vertical)How many inches the roof rises per 12 inches of horizontal run. Standard residential is 4–9; below 2 is 'low slope' and needs different roofing materials.
  2. Run (horizontal)Horizontal distance. Construction industry standard is to express pitch over a 12-inch run.
  3. Total horizontal span (optional)Half the building width — for one rafter run from ridge to outside wall. Used to compute total rafter length.
  4. Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.

Common roof pitches with conversions

Rise/RunDecimalDegreesPercent
1/120.08334.76°8.33%
3/120.25014.04°25.0%
4/120.33318.43°33.3%
6/120.50026.57°50.0%
8/120.66733.69°66.7%
12/121.00045.00°100.0%

The 'pitch' name in some traditions also refers to the rise/span ratio (e.g. 'half pitch' = 12/12). Rise/run is the modern US convention.

Frequently asked questions

What's the standard residential roof pitch?
4/12 to 9/12 covers the vast majority of US residential roofs. 6/12 is the modern norm — steep enough to shed snow and rain reliably, walkable for installation, and works with all common roofing materials.
How do I measure my roof pitch?
Place a 12-inch level horizontally on the roof and measure how many inches lower the far end of the level is — that gives you the rise per 12 inches of run. From inside the attic, measure the vertical distance from the rafter top to a horizontal mark 12 inches out from the wall.
How do I convert pitch to degrees?
Take the arctangent of rise/run. So 6/12 → arctan(0.5) = 26.57°. Most calculators have an arctan or tan⁻¹ button; just confirm it's in degrees not radians.
What's the lowest pitch for asphalt shingles?
2/12 is the absolute minimum per IRC code, with double-layer underlayment. 4/12 is the recommended minimum for standard installation. Below 2/12, use single-ply membrane (TPO, EPDM, PVC) or built-up roofing.
What's a 'flat' roof?
Roofing terminology calls anything below 2/12 'low slope' rather than truly flat. True 0/0 is rare even on flat-roofed buildings — they typically have a 1/4 inch per foot slope (about 1/48 pitch) for drainage.
Why is pitch expressed over 12?
Carpenters' framing squares are 12 inches × 24 inches with markings at 1-inch intervals. Using 12 as the run reference makes layout work directly off the square without conversion math, which is why the convention dates back centuries.
How does pitch affect roofing cost?
Steeper roofs cost more — typically 10% more at 8/12, 25%+ at 12/12 — because of greater material area (more roof per square foot of floor), slower installation, and required fall-protection equipment. Pitches above 9/12 also require staging or roof jacks.
Does pitch affect attic space?
Yes, dramatically. A 4/12 pitch on a 32-foot wide house gives only about 5 ft of headroom under the ridge. A 9/12 gives 12 ft — enough for full second-story living space (Cape Cod style).

Roof Pitch glossary

Pitch
The slope of a roof, expressed as rise over run. In the US, conventionally given per 12 inches of run (e.g. '6/12').
Rise
The vertical height of the roof from eave to ridge over a given run distance.
Run
The horizontal distance over which the rise is measured. Standard US construction uses 12 inches of run as the reference.
Rafter
A sloped structural beam from the ridge to the eave. Length follows the Pythagorean diagonal of rise and run.
Low slope
Roof pitch below 2/12 (about 9.5°). Requires waterproof membrane rather than shingles.
Slope
Synonym for pitch in most contexts. Engineers prefer 'slope' (in degrees or percent); contractors prefer 'pitch' (rise over run).

How we built this calculator

Methodology

All four pitch expressions describe the same slope. The conversions:

This calculator was written by Numora team and reviewed by Numora engineering review team, Certified Building Inspector before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.

Formula source
International Residential Code (IRC) Chapter 9 Roof Assemblies; standard framing-square geometry
Last reviewed
2026-05-03
Reviewer
Numora engineering review team, Certified Building Inspector
Calculation runs
Client-side only
NT
WRITTEN BY
Numora team
NE
REVIEWED AND APPROVED BY
Numora engineering review team, Certified Building Inspector
In this review:
  • Verified the formula matches International Residential Code (IRC) Chapter 9 Roof Assemblies; standard framing-square geometry (ICC IRC 2024).
  • Confirmed the rounding rule applied by the engine: pitch and rafter length to 2 decimal places; degrees to 2 decimal places.
  • Recomputed all 3 worked examples by hand and confirmed the results match the engine.
  • Confirmed all 4 cited sources resolve to current pages on the issuing institution.
  • Cross-checked the 6-row comparison table for arithmetic consistency at the baseline scenario.

Reviewed on 2026-05-03 · Next review: 2027-04-29

See editorial policy

Sources & references

Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.

  1. International Code Council — IRC Chapter 9USA
  2. Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association — slope requirementsUSA
  3. National Roofing Contractors Association — Roofing ManualUSA
  4. Engineering Toolbox — roof pitch and slope conversionsINT
  5. Numora Editorial Policy. numora.net/editorial-policy