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Wheelchair Ramp Slope Calculator

Enter your vertical rise and horizontal run, or a target ratio, to get the slope ratio (1:N), percent grade, angle and required ramp length — plus a live ADA check against the 1:12 (8.33%) maximum, the 30-inch single-run limit and handrail triggers.

ADA 2010 §4051:12 = 8.33%Pass/fail built in

ADA maximum slope

1:12 = 8.33% = 4.76°

The ADA caps a ramp's running slope at 1 inch of rise per 12 inches of run. This tool flags anything steeper and shows the run you need to comply.

Ramp slope from rise & run

Rise and run can use different units (e.g. rise in inches, run in feet). Results and the ADA check update as you type.

run 24 ftrise 24 inramp 24.08 ft4.76°

Slope ratio

1 : 12

Percent grade

8.33%

Angle

4.76°

Fall per foot

1 in/ft

Ramp surface length

24 ft 1 in (24.08 ft)

Rise

24 in

ADA compliant

At or below the 1:12 (8.33%) maximum for new construction.

  • Handrails required on both sides — the rise exceeds 6 in (ADA §405.8).
Required ramp length for a rise

Pick the slope you want to build to and get the horizontal run and total ramp length needed for your rise.

Required run

30 ft 0 in (30 ft)

Ramp surface length

30 ft 1.2 in (30.1 ft)

Percent grade

8.33%

Angle

4.76°

Fall per foot

1 in/ft

Single runs needed

1 (30 in max each)

How to calculate wheelchair ramp slope

Ramp slope is the ratio of vertical rise to horizontal run, and the single number that decides whether a wheelchair ramp is legal, safe and usable. The ADA 2010 Standards set the maximum running slope at 1:12 — one inch of rise for every twelve inches of run, which works out to an 8.33% grade or 4.76 degrees (§405.2). This calculator takes your measured rise and run (or a target ratio) and returns all four representations at once — ratio, percent, degrees and fall-per-foot — so you never have to convert by hand or guess whether 8.5% is over the line. It is.

Passing the slope test is necessary but not sufficient. A compliant ramp also caps each single run at 30 inches of rise before a 60-inch landing (§405.6, §405.7), keeps cross slope at or under 1:48 (§405.3), holds a clear width of at least 36 inches (§405.5), and adds handrails on both sides once the rise tops 6 inches (§405.8). This tool checks the slope, handrail and landing thresholds against your inputs so a designer, contractor or family member planning a home ramp can size the run, count the landings and confirm the build before pouring concrete or ordering modular sections.

Good to know

  • ADA 1:12 (8.33%) is a maximum, not a target — gentler slopes like 1:16 or 1:20 are easier to self-propel and safer in rain or ice.
  • A single run can rise at most 30 inches; anything taller needs a 60-inch level landing to break it into multiple runs.
  • The steeper 1:10 and 1:8 slopes are permitted only when altering existing sites with limited space, and only for rises of 6 inches and 3 inches respectively — never for new construction.
  • Slope alone isn't compliance: also confirm 36-inch minimum width, 1:48 max cross slope, and handrails on both sides whenever the rise exceeds 6 inches.

Worked ramp examples

Real situations showing how rise and slope decide the run, landings and handrails you need.

Home front porch, 24-inch rise

A porch sits 24 inches above the walkway. At the ADA 1:12 maximum the ramp needs a 24-foot run (rise in inches = run in feet). Result: slope 1:12, 8.33%, 4.76°, sloped surface about 24 ft. One run is allowed because 24 in is under the 30 in single-run cap, but handrails are required on both sides since the rise exceeds 6 in.

Tight garage step, 6-inch rise

A single 6-inch step with limited space. New-construction ADA requires 1:12 = 6 ft of run. If this is an alteration to an existing building with no room, §405.2's exception permits 1:10 (5 ft) because the rise is 6 in or less. No handrails are required at exactly 6 in of rise.

Commercial loading dock, 48-inch rise

A 48-inch dock exceeds the 30-inch single-run limit, so the ramp must be split. At 1:12 the total run is 48 ft, divided into two runs with a 60-inch level landing between them. Verdict: compliant only with the intermediate landing; handrails required throughout.

Threshold ramp, 2-inch door sill

A 2-inch raised threshold at a doorway. At 1:12 the ramp needs just 24 inches of run — slope 1:12, 8.33%, 4.76°. Because the rise is 6 in or under, no handrails are triggered. A gentler 1:16 option would need 32 inches of run for an easier push.

Ramp slope reference tables

Convert between ratio, fall-per-foot, percent grade and angle, and see the run each rise needs at the ADA 1:12 maximum.

Slope conversions and ADA/IBC use — ratio, drop per foot, percent, angle
Slope ratio (1:N)Fall per footPercent gradeAngleWhere it's allowed
1:81.5 in/ft12.5%7.13°IRC non-egress residential max; ADA alteration only for rise ≤ 3 in
1:101.2 in/ft10.0%5.71°ADA alteration only for rise ≤ 6 in
1:121.0 in/ft8.33%4.76°ADA & IBC new-construction MAXIMUM
1:160.75 in/ft6.25%3.58°Recommended for comfort / manual wheelchairs
1:200.6 in/ft5.00%2.86°Below this, not classified as a ramp
Rise to required ramp run at the ADA 1:12 maximum
Vertical riseMin run at 1:12Runs / landingsHandrails?
2 in24 in (2 ft)1 runNo (rise ≤ 6 in)
6 in6 ft1 runNo (rise = 6 in)
12 in (1 ft)12 ft1 runYes (rise > 6 in)
24 in (2 ft)24 ft1 runYes
30 in (2.5 ft)30 ft1 run (at the max)Yes
36 in (3 ft)36 ft2 runs + one 60 in landingYes
48 in (4 ft)48 ft2 runs + one 60 in landingYes

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about wheelchair ramp slope, ADA limits and ramp length.

What is the maximum slope for a wheelchair ramp under ADA?

1:12 — one inch of vertical rise for every 12 inches of horizontal run. That equals an 8.33% grade or about 4.76 degrees. It is the hard maximum for new construction under ADA 2010 Standards §405.2; anything steeper fails.

What does a 1:12 ramp slope actually mean?

For every 1 inch the ground rises, the ramp must run 12 inches (1 foot) horizontally. So 1:12 is a drop of exactly 1 inch per foot of ramp, which is an 8.33% grade. A 24-inch rise needs 24 feet of run.

How long does a wheelchair ramp need to be for a given rise?

At the ADA 1:12 maximum, run length in feet equals the rise in inches: a 6-inch rise needs 6 feet, a 30-inch rise needs 30 feet. For a gentler, more comfortable 1:16 ramp, multiply the rise in inches by 1.33 feet.

What is the ADA ramp slope in degrees?

The 1:12 maximum is 4.76 degrees (arctan of 1/12). A gentler 1:16 ramp is 3.58 degrees and 1:20 is 2.86 degrees. Steeper 'alteration only' slopes are 5.71 degrees (1:10) and 7.13 degrees (1:8).

What is the maximum rise for a single ramp run?

30 inches. ADA 2010 §405.6 caps any single ramp run at 30 inches of rise; beyond that you must break the ramp with a level landing. At 1:12 that means a single run tops out at 30 feet long before a landing is required.

Do I need handrails on a wheelchair ramp?

Yes if the ramp rise is greater than 6 inches. ADA 2010 §405.8 requires handrails on both sides in that case, mounted 34 to 38 inches above the ramp surface. A short threshold ramp with 6 inches of rise or less does not require handrails.

What is the steepest ramp slope allowed?

For new ADA construction, 1:12 is the limit. ADA allows steeper slopes only when altering existing sites with no room: 1:10 for a rise up to 6 inches, and 1:8 for a rise up to 3 inches (§405.2 Exception). IRC lets non-egress residential ramps reach 1:8 (12.5%).

What is the maximum cross slope on an ADA ramp?

1:48, which is about 2.08%. Cross slope is the side-to-side tilt measured perpendicular to travel; ADA 2010 §405.3 caps it at 1:48 so a wheelchair does not drift sideways.

How big must a ramp landing be?

Landings must be at least 60 inches long and as wide as the ramp, at the top and bottom of every run. Where the ramp changes direction, the landing must be at least 60 by 60 inches (ADA 2010 §405.7).

How much slope per foot is a handicap ramp?

The ADA 1:12 maximum is exactly 1 inch of drop per foot of ramp. A comfortable 1:16 ramp drops 0.75 inch per foot, and a 1:20 ramp drops 0.6 inch per foot.

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