How to Calculate Roof Pitch
Roof pitch is the steepness of a roof, expressed as the vertical rise per 12 inches of horizontal run. A "6/12 pitch" means the roof rises 6 inches for every 12 inches of horizontal distance — a 26.57° angle. Roof pitch directly affects rafter length, material quantities, and construction difficulty.
Angle (degrees) = arctan(Rise ÷ 12)
Slope (%) = (Rise ÷ 12) × 100
Rafter multiplier = √((Rise² + 144) ÷ 144)
The "12-inch run" convention is uniquely American — most of the world uses degrees directly. For US construction, framing plans, and building codes, pitch over 12 is standard. Our calculator converts between all four notations: pitch, degrees, slope %, and rise/run.
Worked example: typical residential roof
You measure your existing roof at 6 inches of rise per 12 inches of run:
- Pitch: 6/12
- Angle: arctan(6 ÷ 12) = 26.57°
- Slope %: (6 ÷ 12) × 100 = 50%
- Rafter multiplier: √(36 + 144) ÷ 12 = 1.118
- For a 40 × 30 ft footprint: Surface area = 1,200 × 1.118 = 1,342 sq ft = 13.4 roofing squares
Understanding Roof Pitch Categories
Roof pitches fall into categories that determine roofing material options, building code requirements, and construction methods.
Flat (0/12 to 1/12)
Technically not flat — even "flat" roofs slope at least 1/4 inch per foot (1/48) for drainage. Use only membrane roofing: TPO, EPDM rubber, modified bitumen, or built-up roofing. Cannot use shingles or tile. Common on commercial buildings and modern residential.
Low slope (2/12 to 3/12)
Angle: 9.5° to 14°. Asphalt shingles can be used with special double-overlap installation and ice-and-water shield underlayment. More commonly: metal roofing, rubber membrane, or rolled roofing. Common on additions, porches, and ranch-style homes.
Conventional (4/12 to 9/12)
Angle: 18° to 37°. The standard for residential construction. All standard roofing materials work: asphalt shingles, metal, tile, slate. Walkable for measurement and maintenance with proper footwear (rubber sole). Most cost-efficient pitch range.
Steep slope (10/12 to 12/12)
Angle: 40° to 45°. Requires safety equipment for work (roof jacks, harness). Materials cost more due to greater surface area and labor cost rises significantly. Common in northern climates for snow shed, and in traditional steep-roof architectural styles.
Extreme slope (over 12/12)
Angle: over 45°. Found in Gothic, Tudor, Victorian, and mansard-style architecture. Specialty construction work — requires scaffolding rather than roof access. Limited roofing material choices and significantly higher labor costs. Steep roofs are exceptional architectural features, not standard construction.
Pitch Conversion Reference Table
The most common pitches with all four notations and the rafter multiplier needed for material calculations:
| Pitch | Angle | Slope % | Rafter multiplier | Common use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/12 | 4.76° | 8.3% | 1.003 | Flat / drainage only |
| 2/12 | 9.46° | 16.7% | 1.014 | Low slope; membrane only |
| 3/12 | 14.04° | 25.0% | 1.031 | Low slope; special shingles |
| 4/12 | 18.43° | 33.3% | 1.054 | Minimum for standard shingles |
| 5/12 | 22.62° | 41.7% | 1.083 | Conventional |
| 6/12 | 26.57° | 50.0% | 1.118 | Most common residential |
| 7/12 | 30.26° | 58.3% | 1.158 | Conventional steep |
| 8/12 | 33.69° | 66.7% | 1.202 | Snow country |
| 9/12 | 36.87° | 75.0% | 1.250 | Walkable limit |
| 10/12 | 39.81° | 83.3% | 1.302 | Steep; safety gear needed |
| 11/12 | 42.51° | 91.7% | 1.357 | Steep |
| 12/12 | 45.00° | 100.0% | 1.414 | 45° corner |
| 14/12 | 49.40° | 116.7% | 1.537 | Very steep |
| 16/12 | 53.13° | 133.3% | 1.667 | Extreme; Gothic style |
| 18/12 | 56.31° | 150.0% | 1.803 | Mansard upper section |
| 24/12 | 63.43° | 200.0% | 2.236 | Mansard / steeple |
The rafter multiplier converts horizontal run to rafter length. For a 15-foot run at 8/12 pitch, rafter length = 15 × 1.202 = 18.03 feet (excluding overhang). This same multiplier gives roof surface area from footprint area.
How to Measure Roof Pitch in Practice
There are four practical methods to measure roof pitch, each with different accuracy and safety profiles:
Method 1: From the attic (safest, recommended)
- Climb into the attic with a 12-inch level and tape measure.
- Hold the level horizontally against the vertical face of a rafter.
- Measure vertically from the far end of the level up to the rafter.
- That measurement is your rise over 12 inches of run.
Pros: completely safe, accurate, takes 5 minutes. Cons: requires attic access; cathedral ceilings don't have accessible rafters.
Method 2: From the gable end
- Use a 12-inch level held horizontally against the outside gable trim where it meets the roof line.
- Measure vertically from the far end of the level up to the roof line.
- Repeat at multiple points to confirm consistency.
Pros: no roof access needed, no attic needed. Cons: requires a ladder and steady hands; accuracy depends on trim alignment.
Method 3: Smartphone app
Modern smartphones have built-in clinometers (level apps). Place the phone flat on the roof surface to read the angle directly. Convert to pitch using our calculator. Accuracy: ±0.5° which translates to about ±0.1 on the pitch ratio. Very fast for accessible roofs.
Method 4: Pitch gauge / speed square
Carpentry tool with marked pitch increments. Hold it against the rafter at the gable end and read the pitch directly. Accuracy depends on tool quality. Speed squares have a "pitch" feature that works the same way.
Calculating Roof Surface Area from Pitch
Roof surface area is always larger than the footprint area below — and the steeper the pitch, the larger the difference. This matters because roofing materials (shingles, metal, tile) are sold based on surface area, not footprint.
The math
Or: Footprint × √((rise² + 144) ÷ 144) for rise per 12 inches
Examples by pitch
For a 1,000 sq ft building footprint with a standard gable roof:
- 3/12 pitch: 1,000 × 1.031 = 1,031 sq ft surface (10.3 squares)
- 4/12 pitch: 1,054 sq ft (10.5 squares)
- 6/12 pitch: 1,118 sq ft (11.2 squares)
- 8/12 pitch: 1,202 sq ft (12.0 squares)
- 10/12 pitch: 1,302 sq ft (13.0 squares)
- 12/12 pitch: 1,414 sq ft (14.1 squares)
Note: this assumes a simple gable roof. Hip roofs, mansards, and complex multi-pitch roofs require breaking the roof into planes and calculating each separately. For complex roofs, an aerial measurement service (drone or GIS-based) is more accurate than hand measurement.
Why Roof Pitch Matters
Material requirements
Pitch determines what roofing materials you can use. Below 2/12: membrane only. 2/12 to 4/12: special shingles or membrane. 4/12+: standard asphalt shingles, metal, tile, slate. Steeper than 18/12: limited specialty materials only.
Cost impact
Higher pitches multiply project costs in three ways: (1) more surface area to cover, (2) more labor due to safety equipment and slower work, (3) more waste from cuts at hip/valley intersections. A 12/12 roof costs about 50-70% more to install than a 4/12 roof for the same building footprint.
Climate appropriateness
Snow regions (US Northeast, Midwest, mountain states): 8/12+ preferred for snow shed. Hot dry climates (Southwest): 4-6/12 typical, often with tile for thermal mass. Hurricane regions (Gulf, Florida): 6-7/12 best for wind performance — too low catches wind under shingles, too steep catches sail force.
Attic space
Steeper roofs create more usable attic space. A 12/12 pitch on a 32-foot wide house gives a full second story; a 4/12 pitch gives barely 4 feet of headroom at the peak. Bonus rooms and attic conversions need 7/12 minimum for practical headroom under standard codes.
Aesthetic and architectural style
Modern/contemporary: 1/12 to 3/12 low slope. Traditional ranch: 4/12 to 6/12. Cape Cod / colonial: 8/12 to 10/12. Victorian / Gothic: 12/12 to 24/12. Tudor: 10/12 to 14/12. Pitch is one of the most defining architectural features of a house.
Common Roof Pitch Mistakes
- Using nominal lumber pitch in real measurements: "Built for 6/12" might be 5.8/12 actual. Measure your specific roof.
- Forgetting overhang in rafter length: Total rafter = run × multiplier + overhang length. Common 1-2 ft overhang adds significantly.
- Confusing pitch (x/12) with grade (%): 6/12 pitch is 50% slope, not 6% slope. Different references.
- Using wrong pitch for shingles: Standard asphalt shingles fail below 4/12. Check manufacturer specs.
- Calculating wrong area for complex roofs: Hip roofs, valleys, and dormers require plane-by-plane calculation, not single multiplier.
- Ignoring local snow load codes: Some regions require 8/12+ for residential. Check before designing.
- Assuming pitch consistency: Old houses often have inconsistent pitches between sections. Measure each plane separately.