Last updated: May 04, 2026
Ramp Calculator
A ramp is more than a sloped surface connecting two elevations. It is a carefully engineered structure where rise, run, length, slope, and material all interact to determine whether someone can safely and comfortably use it. Whether you are designing a wheelchair ramp for a home entrance, planning a loading dock for a commercial facility, building a vehicle access ramp for a garage, or specifying a public access route that must comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act, every dimension matters. A ramp that is even slightly too steep can become dangerous for wheelchair users, elderly individuals, or workers moving heavy loads.
The Ramp Calculator at Intelligent Calculator gives you an instant, complete picture of your ramp. Enter the rise and your chosen slope ratio, and the calculator returns the horizontal run, the actual surface length along the slope, the slope angle in degrees, the grade percentage, and an ADA compliance status. You can also work backwards: enter the length and rise to find what slope you have actually built. No manual trigonometry, no unit conversion errors, no guesswork.
This guide explains every concept behind the numbers, walks through real examples, and gives you the industry benchmarks you need to design ramps that are safe, compliant, and built right the first time.
What Is a Ramp Calculator?
A ramp calculator is a mathematical tool that applies the geometry of right triangles to compute the dimensions of a sloped surface. The three sides of the triangle represent the three key measurements of any ramp: the rise (vertical height), the run (horizontal distance), and the length (the actual surface the person or vehicle travels along). From these three values, the calculator also derives the slope angle in degrees and the grade as a percentage.
The relationship between these values is fixed by the Pythagorean theorem. If you know any two, the calculator can find the third. If you know the rise and the desired slope ratio — for example, the ADA standard of 1 inch of rise for every 12 inches of horizontal run — the calculator immediately tells you how long the ramp must be in both its horizontal footprint and its actual surface travel length.
Beyond basic geometry, a quality ramp calculator also checks your design against published safety and accessibility standards. The ADA 1:12 slope ratio, the maximum 30-inch rise between landings, the minimum 36-inch clear width, and the maximum 8.33 percent grade are not arbitrary preferences. They are the result of decades of research into how people with mobility impairments, wheelchair users, and workers with carts and hand trucks can safely traverse inclines. The calculator translates those standards into a simple pass or fail so you know immediately whether your design is compliant.
Key Ramp Terms Explained
Rise
The rise is the vertical distance between the lower surface and the upper surface the ramp connects. If a doorway threshold sits 24 inches above the ground outside, the rise is 24 inches. This is the starting point for every ramp calculation because it is the constraint you cannot change: you must connect two elevations that are a fixed distance apart.
Run
The run is the horizontal distance the ramp covers, measured along the ground rather than along the slope. It is often called the horizontal projection of the ramp. The run is what determines how much floor space the ramp occupies. For a 24-inch rise at the ADA 1:12 standard, the run must be at least 288 inches, or 24 feet. That is a significant amount of space, which is why steep rises often require switchback ramps or intermediate landings.
Ramp Length
The ramp length is the actual distance traveled along the sloped surface from the bottom edge to the top edge. It is always longer than the horizontal run because it includes the vertical component. For a ramp with a 24-inch rise and a 288-inch run, the surface length is approximately 288.99 inches — barely longer than the run because the slope is so gradual. On steeper ramps the difference becomes more significant. This measurement matters for material estimation: your decking, handrail, and nosing all follow the surface length, not the horizontal run.
Slope Ratio
The slope ratio expresses how many units of horizontal run correspond to one unit of vertical rise. A ratio of 1:12 means for every 1 inch of rise, the ramp must extend 12 inches horizontally. A ratio of 1:8 means 8 inches of run per inch of rise — a steeper ramp that is allowed in some residential applications but prohibited for public wheelchair access. A ratio of 1:20 is a very gentle slope often preferred in high-traffic public spaces where comfort and safety for all users is the priority.
Slope Angle
The slope angle is the angle between the ramp surface and the horizontal ground, measured in degrees. It is calculated using the inverse tangent of rise divided by run. A 1:12 slope ratio corresponds to an angle of approximately 4.76 degrees. A 1:8 slope equals about 7.13 degrees. These angles sound small, but even the difference between 5 and 7 degrees makes a noticeable difference in the effort required to propel a wheelchair up a ramp.
Grade Percentage
Grade is the slope expressed as a percentage rather than a ratio. It is calculated by dividing the rise by the run and multiplying by 100. A 1:12 slope equals a grade of 8.33 percent. Road engineers, landscape designers, and many building codes use grade percentage rather than ratios. The two systems express the same relationship, and the calculator displays both so you can work in whichever format your project or local code requires.
The Ramp Length Formula
The core formula for ramp length applies the Pythagorean theorem to the right triangle formed by rise, run, and surface length.
Ramp Length = √(Rise² + Run²)
When working from a slope ratio, the run is calculated first. For a ratio of 1:N, the run equals rise multiplied by N.
Run = Rise × N
Grade % = (Rise ÷ Run) × 100
The slope angle in degrees uses the arctangent function: Angle = arctan(Rise / Run). All of these relationships are baked into the calculator so that entering just two values — rise and slope ratio — instantly produces the complete dimensional picture of your ramp.
How to Use the Ramp Calculator — Step by Step
Step 1: Measure the Rise
Start by measuring the vertical height difference between the two surfaces your ramp will connect. Use a level and tape measure. For a door threshold, measure from the ground outside to the top of the threshold sill. For a loading dock, measure from the ground to the dock floor surface. Be precise — a 2-inch error in the rise measurement at a 1:12 ratio means a 24-inch error in your run calculation.
Step 2: Choose a Slope Ratio
Select the slope ratio appropriate for your application. If the ramp must comply with ADA standards for public or commercial accessibility, select 1:12. If you are building a residential ramp for a personal wheelchair user and space is very limited, 1:10 may be acceptable under some residential codes. If you are designing a vehicle ramp, your ratio is dictated by the vehicle’s approach and departure angles. The calculator supports custom ratios so you can enter any value your project requires.
Step 3: Enter Your Values and Calculate
Enter the rise in your chosen unit — inches, centimeters, feet, or meters. Select the slope ratio from the dropdown or enter a custom run value. Click Calculate. The calculator immediately returns the horizontal run, the surface length along the slope, the slope angle in degrees, the grade percentage, and the ADA compliance status.
Step 4: Check Compliance and Adjust
Review the compliance status. If the calculator flags your design as non-compliant, consider whether you can increase the horizontal run by extending the ramp footprint, adding a switchback, or using intermediate landings to break a tall rise into compliant segments. For a rise of 36 inches — which exceeds the ADA maximum of 30 inches per ramp segment — you would plan two ramp segments of 18 inches each, separated by a landing at least 60 inches long.
Step 5: Estimate Materials
Once you have confirmed your dimensions, use the surface length and width to calculate the area of decking, the linear footage of handrail, and the volume of concrete needed if you are building a poured ramp. The ramp length is always the measurement to use for material take-offs along the slope — not the horizontal run.
ADA Ramp Requirements — What the Standards Actually Require
The Americans with Disabilities Act Standards for Accessible Design govern ramp design in all public accommodations, commercial facilities, and state and local government buildings in the United States. The relevant requirements for ramps are found in Section 405 of the ADA Standards.
| ADA Requirement | Standard | Notes |
| Maximum slope | 1:12 (8.33%) | Maximum for new construction |
| Maximum slope (existing buildings) | 1:10 if space is limited | Where 1:12 is not achievable |
| Maximum slope (existing buildings) | 1:8 absolute maximum | Very limited space only |
| Maximum rise per segment | 30 inches (762 mm) | Requires landing before continuing |
| Minimum clear width | 36 inches (915 mm) | Between handrails if present |
| Landing length (top/bottom) | 60 inches minimum | At each end of every ramp |
| Landing width | At least ramp width | Must not be narrower than ramp |
| Handrails required when? | Rise exceeds 6 inches | Both sides, graspable rail 34–38 in high |
| Surface requirement | Stable, firm, slip-resistant | Textured or gritty surface |
| Edge protection | Required | Curb, wall, or railing at open sides |
These are minimum standards, not recommendations. Many designers exceed them — particularly on slope — to improve comfort and usability for people with limited upper body strength, older adults, and parents with strollers. A 1:16 or 1:20 slope is significantly easier to navigate independently and is worth the additional horizontal space when the site allows it.
Slope Ratios by Application — Which One to Use
| Slope Ratio | Grade % | Angle (°) | Best Application | ADA Compliant? |
| 1:20 | 5.0% | 2.86° | ISO preferred, high-comfort public access | Yes |
| 1:16 | 6.25% | 3.58° | Comfort standard, elderly care, hospitals | Yes |
| 1:14 | 7.14% | 4.09° | EU standard, many European public spaces | Yes |
| 1:12 | 8.33% | 4.76° | ADA maximum, US public/commercial standard | Yes |
| 1:10 | 10.0% | 5.71° | IRC residential alteration, limited space | No (ADA) |
| 1:8 | 12.5% | 7.13° | Residential max, not for wheelchair access | No (ADA) |
| 1:6 | 16.7% | 9.46° | Vehicle ramps, loading docks | No (ADA) |
| 1:4 | 25.0% | 14.04° | Steep vehicle ramps, parking structures | No (ADA) |
Ramp Calculator Example Calculation
The Scenario
A homeowner needs a wheelchair ramp for the front entrance. The door threshold sits 18 inches above the exterior landing. They want to meet ADA standards for a 1:12 slope.
Step-by-Step Calculation
| Measurement | Formula | Result |
| Rise | Given | 18 inches |
| Run (horizontal distance) | Rise × 12 = 18 × 12 | 216 inches (18 feet) |
| Ramp surface length | √(18² + 216²) = √(324 + 46,656) | 216.75 inches (18.06 feet) |
| Slope angle | arctan(18 ÷ 216) | 4.76 degrees |
| Grade percentage | (18 ÷ 216) × 100 | 8.33% |
| ADA compliant? | Slope ≤ 8.33%, Rise ≤ 30 inches | Yes — Compliant |
The ramp needs an 18-foot horizontal footprint. If the front yard does not allow a straight 18-foot run, the designer might consider an L-shaped ramp with a landing at the turn, or a switchback design. Both approaches keep each ramp segment compliant while fitting into a tighter space.
Extending the Example: Adding Handrails
Because the rise of 18 inches exceeds 6 inches, ADA requires handrails on both sides. Handrails must be graspable — a circular cross-section of 1.25 to 2 inches in diameter — and must be mounted between 34 and 38 inches above the ramp surface measured vertically. They must extend 12 inches horizontally beyond the top and 12 inches plus the slope distance of the rise beyond the bottom. For this ramp, the bottom extension adds approximately 18 inches along the slope to account for the rise, so handrail total length on each side is approximately 216.75 inches plus the top extension of 12 inches plus the bottom horizontal run of 12 inches plus the diagonal extension — plan on ordering at least 22 feet of rail per side.
Types of Ramps and Their Specific Design Considerations
Wheelchair and Accessibility Ramps
Wheelchair ramps for residential and commercial use must prioritize the effort required to self-propel a manual wheelchair. Research consistently shows that slopes steeper than 1:12 are difficult or impossible for many wheelchair users to ascend independently. Surfaces must be non-slip — broom-finished concrete, aluminum with grip strips, or composite decking with textured surface — and must drain properly so water does not pond. Edge protection prevents wheels from slipping off the sides.
Loading Dock Ramps
Loading dock ramps must support the weight of forklifts, pallet jacks, and loaded trucks. Slope ratios for vehicle access typically range from 1:6 to 1:10, and the design is governed by vehicle approach and departure angles rather than wheelchair access standards. Concrete is the standard material, with a minimum compressive strength of 4,000 PSI for vehicle loading applications. The transition at top and bottom must be smooth to prevent high-centering of vehicles with limited ground clearance.
Portable and Modular Ramps
Portable ramps for temporary wheelchair access are typically aluminum and fold or section for transport. Because they are not permanent construction, they have more flexibility in slope — though users still benefit from gentler grades. Modular ramp systems from suppliers like EZ-Access or Amramp are engineered to meet ADA standards and bolt together on-site. The calculator helps verify that a specific combination of ramp modules achieves the required slope for a given rise.
Pool Entry Ramps
Pool entry ramps are governed by both ADA pool access requirements and additional considerations around water safety and slip resistance. ADA requires at least one accessible means of entry for new pool construction, and ramps are one option. Pool ramps must have handrails on both sides, a maximum slope of 1:12, and surfaces that remain slip-resistant when wet. The materials must resist pool chemicals and UV degradation.
Landing Requirements — The Often-Overlooked Dimension
Landings are the level platforms at the top and bottom of a ramp, and at any change of direction. They are not optional extras — they are a fundamental part of accessible ramp design. A wheelchair user reaching the top of a ramp needs space to maneuver before opening a door. A user stopping partway up needs a level platform to rest without the chair rolling backward.
| Landing Location | Minimum Length | Minimum Width | Notes |
| Bottom landing | 60 inches | Ramp width or wider | At base of every ramp segment |
| Top landing | 60 inches | Ramp width or wider | Required before any door swing |
| Intermediate landing (straight ramp) | 60 inches | Ramp width or wider | Every 30 inches of rise |
| Intermediate landing (change of direction) | 60 × 60 inches | 60 × 60 minimum | Allows 90° or 180° turns |
| Door landings | 60 inches + door swing | 60 inches minimum | If door opens onto landing |
The 60-inch minimum landing length is the most commonly underestimated dimension in ramp design. Many builders focus on getting the slope right and then discover the landing is too short to allow a wheelchair user to reach the door handle and open the door without the chair being pushed back onto the ramp. Always plan landings generously.
Ramp Materials and Their Trade-offs
The choice of ramp material affects durability, maintenance, slip resistance, load capacity, installation cost, and appearance. No single material is ideal for every application.
| Material | Load Capacity | Slip Resistance | Maintenance | Best Application |
| Concrete | Very high | High (broom finish) | Low | Permanent commercial/residential |
| Aluminum | High | High (grip strips) | Very low | Modular, portable, marine |
| Pressure-treated wood | Medium-high | Medium (add strips) | Medium (annual sealing) | Residential, temporary |
| Steel grating | Very high | Very high | Low (paint required) | Industrial, loading docks |
| Composite decking | Medium | Medium-high | Very low | Residential, aesthetics priority |
| Rubber/foam threshold ramps | Low | High | Very low | Minor threshold transitions |
Common Ramp Design Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: Measuring Rise to the Wrong Point
The rise must be measured to the finished floor or surface level at the top, not to the door frame or the bottom of a threshold. Measuring even a half-inch too low means your ramp arrives at a level below the surface it needs to connect to, creating a hazardous bump at the top transition.
Mistake 2: Confusing Run With Length
Run is the horizontal ground projection. Length is the actual slope surface. These are close in value for gentle slopes but diverge more at steeper grades. Material quantities — decking boards, handrail stock, non-slip strips — must be calculated from the surface length, not the run. Using the run for material orders results in ordering too little material.
Mistake 3: Ignoring the Bottom Landing
Many DIY builders focus entirely on the ramp slope and forget that a minimum 60-inch flat landing is required at the bottom before the ramp begins. This landing must be level and must not slope more than 2 percent in any direction. Without it, the ramp does not comply with ADA standards regardless of how perfect the slope is.
Mistake 4: Skipping Edge Protection on Open Sides
Any open side of a ramp where a wheelchair wheel could slip off requires edge protection. This can be a 4-inch minimum curb, a railing system that extends to within 4 inches of the floor, or an extended surface. Many residential ramps omit this and are therefore not fully ADA compliant even when the slope is correct.
Mistake 5: Using Slippery Materials Without Treatment
Smooth painted wood or untextured concrete becomes extremely dangerous when wet. All ramp surfaces must have documented slip resistance. Concrete should receive a broom finish perpendicular to travel direction. Wood surfaces should have aluminum oxide strips or mineral-grit applied strips every few inches. Smooth aluminum sections should have grip tape or punched-metal inserts.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the maximum slope for a wheelchair ramp?
The maximum slope for a wheelchair ramp under ADA standards for new construction is 1:12, which equals a grade of 8.33 percent and an angle of 4.76 degrees. This means for every inch of vertical rise, the ramp must extend at least 12 inches horizontally. For existing buildings where space constraints make 1:12 impossible, the ADA allows up to 1:10 if the rise does not exceed 6 inches, or up to 1:8 if the rise does not exceed 3 inches. These exceptions are for existing structures only and should not be applied to new construction.
How long does a ramp need to be for a 12-inch rise?
For a 12-inch rise at the ADA standard of 1:12, the ramp needs a minimum horizontal run of 144 inches (12 feet). The actual surface length along the slope will be approximately 144.5 inches. If you are using a steeper slope — say 1:10 for a residential installation — the run would be 120 inches, and at 1:8 it would be 96 inches. The gentler the slope, the longer and safer the ramp.
What is a 5% slope on a ramp?
A 5 percent slope means the ramp rises 5 inches for every 100 inches of horizontal run, which is equivalent to a slope ratio of 1:20. This is a very gentle and comfortable slope, preferred by ISO 21542 international accessibility standards and well within ADA requirements. A 5 percent grade corresponds to an angle of approximately 2.86 degrees. Many high-quality public ramp installations target this slope when site conditions allow.
Does a ramp need handrails on both sides?
Under ADA standards, handrails are required on both sides of a ramp when the rise exceeds 6 inches. Handrails must be graspable, with a circular cross-section between 1.25 and 2 inches in diameter or an equivalent non-circular profile. They must be mounted between 34 and 38 inches above the ramp surface. Extensions are required at the top (12 inches horizontally) and at the bottom (12 inches horizontally plus the diagonal equivalent of the ramp rise). Handrail ends must return to a wall or post so they do not catch on clothing or present a hazard.
Can I build a ramp over stairs?
Yes, ramps can be built over existing stairs as a temporary or semi-permanent accessibility solution, provided the slope achieved is within acceptable limits. For most residential stair configurations — a typical step is about 7 to 8 inches in rise over 10 to 11 inches of run — covering stairs with a ramp requires a surface that extends well beyond the stair base to achieve an acceptable slope. Always calculate the actual rise from bottom to top of the covered stairs and verify the resulting slope before building.
What is the difference between ramp slope and ramp grade?
Ramp slope is typically expressed as a ratio such as 1:12, where the first number is the rise and the second is the run. Grade is the same relationship expressed as a percentage: rise divided by run, multiplied by 100. A 1:12 slope equals an 8.33 percent grade. A 1:20 slope equals a 5 percent grade. Both describe the same steepness in different formats. Building codes and ADA standards primarily use the ratio format for slope requirements and the percentage format for cross-slope limits.
Final Thoughts
Every ramp calculation begins with a single measurement — the rise — and expands outward from there into a complete picture of slope, length, compliance, and material need. The Ramp Calculator at IntelCalculator handles all of that geometry instantly, so you can focus on designing a ramp that is safe, compliant, and built for the people who will use it every day. Enter your rise, select your slope, and let the calculator tell you everything you need to know.
| Parameter | Your Value | ADA Required | Status |
|---|
| Criteria | Ramp | Steps | Lift |
|---|
| Specification | ADA Standard | IBC 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Max Slope | 1:12 (8.33%) | 1:12 |
| Max Rise Per Run | 30 in | 30 in |
| Min Clear Width | 36 in | 44 in (occ.) |
| Landing Size | 60 × 60 in | 60 × 60 in |
| Handrail Height | 34-38 in | 34-38 in |
| HR Diameter | 1.25-2 in | 1.25-2 in |
| HR Extension | 12 in horiz. | 12 in |
| Cross Slope Max | 1:48 (2.08%) | 2% |
| Edge Protection | 4 in curb | 4 in |
| Concrete Min PSI | 3000 PSI | 3000 PSI |
| Surface DCOF Min | 0.42 (wet) | 0.42 |
| Lighting (fc) | 1 fc min | 1 fc min |
This calculator is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Consult a licensed advisor before making decisions.

