How to calculate pipe slope
Pipe slope (also called fall, grade, pitch or gradient) is the vertical drop of a drain or sewer line divided by its horizontal length. Gravity drainage needs enough slope to keep waste moving without running so fast that liquid separates from solids. The three numbers plumbers and inspectors actually use are inch-per-foot fall, percent, and the 1:N ratio — and they are just different ways of writing the same value. A quarter inch per foot is 2.08% and 1:48; an eighth inch per foot is 1.04% and 1:96. This calculator converts between all of them and works out the total drop across your specific run so you can mark the trench or hangers to the exact number.
The governing rule in most U.S. jurisdictions is IPC Section 704.1 and Table 704.1, which set the minimum slope by pipe diameter: 1/4 inch per foot for pipe 2.5 inches and smaller, 1/8 inch per foot for 3 to 6 inch pipe, and 1/16 inch per foot for 8 inch and larger. Any piping upstream of a grease interceptor must be at least 1/4 inch per foot. The code sets no maximum slope, but very steep lines can outrun solids, so sewers are designed to hit a self-cleansing velocity of roughly 2 ft/s at design flow. Enter your pipe size and this tool loads the correct minimum and flags a pass or fail instantly.
Good to know
- IPC minimum slope depends on diameter: 1/4 in/ft up to 2.5 in, 1/8 in/ft for 3–6 in, 1/16 in/ft for 8 in and up (IPC 704.1).
- 1/4 in/ft = 2.08% = 1:48; 1/8 in/ft = 1.04% = 1:96; 1/16 in/ft = 0.52% = 1:192 — the same slope, three notations.
- Under the UPC the default is stricter: 1/4 in/ft for every size, with 1/8 in/ft allowed only for pipe 4 in and larger and only where the authority approves it.
- There is no code maximum, but keep an eye on runs steeper than about 1/2 in/ft — liquid can outpace solids and leave deposits.