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🇺🇸 ACI 318 · Table 9.3.1.1 · ACI 318-19 · IBC · ASCE 7 · USA ✓ 100% Free

Concrete Beam Depth Calculator USA — ACI 318 Minimum Beam Depth

Calculate minimum concrete beam total depth (h) and effective depth (d) using ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 deflection-based limits for simply supported, one-end continuous, both-ends continuous, and cantilever beams — with effective depth breakdown for any rebar size, stirrup, and cover combination used on US structural concrete projects.

L/16
Min. Depth — Simply Supported Beam (ACI 318)
L/21
Min. Depth — Both Ends Continuous (ACI 318)
L/8
Min. Depth — Cantilever Beam (ACI 318)
d = h−
cover − stirrup − db/2 effective depth
📏 Simply Supported — L/16 🔄 One End Continuous — L/18.5 🔗 Both Ends Continuous — L/21 ↩️ Cantilever — L/8 📐 Effective Depth (d) Calculator ⚖️ fy Correction Factor
A concrete beam depth calculator for the USA determines the minimum total beam depth (h) required to satisfy ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 deflection control limits without requiring detailed deflection calculations — and calculates the effective depth (d) from the compression face to the centroid of the tension steel, which is the critical dimension controlling moment and shear capacity. ACI 318 minimum depth limits apply to beams of normal-weight concrete with Grade 60 reinforcement (fy = 60,000 psi), with correction factors for other steel grades. This tool is used by structural engineers, EITs, and detailers for preliminary beam sizing on US residential, commercial, and infrastructure concrete projects under ACI 318-19, IBC 2021, and applicable state building codes.

📏 Concrete Beam Depth Calculator — USA

Select a calculation method to find minimum beam depth per ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 or calculate effective depth (d) from section geometry.

Enter the clear span in feet between supports — for continuous beams use the longest span

Both-ends continuous is typical for interior beams in frames · Cantilever = overhanging or projecting beams

ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 values are for Grade 60 steel (f_y = 60,000 psi) — a correction factor applies for other grades

ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 applies directly to normal-weight concrete — lightweight concrete requires a depth multiplier

The overall beam depth from top compression face to bottom tension face — as shown on structural drawings

Cover measured to the outside face of the stirrup (not main bar)

#3 stirrups are standard for most US beams up to ~24 in. deep

Effective depth is measured to the centroid of tension steel — d = h − cover − d_stirrup − d_b/2

Clear span between face of supports for the beam being checked

Select the support condition that matches the beam's boundary conditions

Grade 60 is the standard specification for US structural concrete beams

Enter the total beam depth (h) shown on your structural drawings or being considered

Minimum Beam Depth
Per ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1

📏 Depth Breakdown

    ✅ ACI 318 Compliance

      📐 Concrete Beam Elevation & Depth Components — ACI 318-19 USA

      Top Cover + Compression Steel / Stirrup Top
      h
      Total
      Depth
      d
      Effective
      Depth
      L/16
      to
      L/21
      d = h − cover − d_s − d_b/2
      Concrete Compression Zone (top)
      ↕ Neutral Axis
      Tension Zone (bottom) — Steel Carries Tension
      ← Centroid of Steel = Reference for d →
      Bottom Cover to Stirrup · ACI 318 Table 20.6.1.3
      hmin
      = L ÷ Factor
      Round ↑
      to 1-in. incr.
      d = h −
      cover−stirrup−d_b/2
      =
      d (in.)
      Effective Depth
      L/16
      Simply supported min. depth (ACI 318)
      L/21
      Both ends continuous min. depth
      ~d/h
      ≈ 0.85–0.90 for typical US beam sections
      Clear Cover Zone Stirrup Diameter Main Bar (d_b/2 to centroid) Effective Depth d

      What Is Concrete Beam Depth & Why Does ACI 318 Specify Minimums?

      Concrete beam depth is defined by two distinct measurements that engineers use for different purposes: the total depth (h) — measured from the top compression face to the bottom tension face of the beam — and the effective depth (d) — measured from the top compression face to the centroid of the tension steel. ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 specifies minimum total depth (h) values for non-prestressed beams as a fraction of the clear span (L) — these minimums ensure adequate stiffness to control deflection without requiring detailed deflection calculations, which is permissible for beams meeting these thickness limits per ACI 318 Section 9.3.1.

      🔵 ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 — Minimum Beam Depth for Deflection Control (Grade 60 Steel, Normal-Weight Concrete)

      These minimum depths apply to non-prestressed beams not supporting or attached to partitions or other construction likely to be damaged by large deflections. For Grade 60 reinforcement (fy = 60,000 psi) and normal-weight concrete: Simply Supported = L/16 · One End Continuous = L/18.5 · Both Ends Continuous = L/21 · Cantilever = L/8. For other yield strengths, multiply by the correction factor: (0.4 + fy/100,000). For lightweight concrete below 115 lb/ft³, multiply by: (1.65 − 0.005 × wc) but not less than 1.09, where wc is the unit weight in lb/ft³.

      📏 Total Depth (h) vs. Effective Depth (d)

      The total depth h is what appears on structural drawings as the beam size (e.g. "14 × 24" means 14-inch wide × 24-inch deep). The effective depth d is what engineers use in all structural calculations for moment capacity (Mn), shear capacity (Vn), and deflection calculations. For a typical US beam with 1.5-inch cover, #3 stirrups, and #8 main bars: d = h − 1.5 − 0.375 − 0.5 = h − 2.375 inches. The ratio d/h is typically 0.85 to 0.90 for US beams.

      ⚖️ fy Correction Factor for Non-Grade 60 Steel

      ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 minimum depths are calibrated for Grade 60 reinforcement (fy = 60,000 psi) — the most common US structural rebar. For other yield strengths, multiply the L/factor minimum depth by the ACI 318 correction factor: (0.4 + fy/100,000). For Grade 40 (40,000 psi): factor = 0.8 → beams can be shallower. For Grade 80 (80,000 psi): factor = 1.2 → beams must be deeper. High-strength Grade 100 steel: factor = 1.4 → significantly deeper minimum depths are required.

      📐 Practical Beam Depth Sizing in the USA

      US structural engineers typically size beam depths in 2-inch increments for formwork economy (plywood form lumber is available in even dimensions). The calculated ACI 318 minimum depth is always rounded up to the next 2-inch increment (or next 1-inch increment for depth-critical situations). Common US beam depths: 16, 18, 20, 24, 30, 36 inches. A general preliminary rule: beam depth ≈ L/12 for simply supported, L/15 for continuous beams (more conservative than ACI 318 minimum — often used by experienced designers to ensure a depth that comfortably satisfies both deflection and moment capacity).

      Concrete Beam Depth Formulas — ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 (USA)

      The two key depth calculations for US concrete beam design are: (1) the minimum total depth from ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 based on span and support condition to avoid detailed deflection calculations, and (2) the effective depth (d) from the actual beam cross-section dimensions for structural capacity calculations. Both are required on every US beam design.

      📐 Beam Depth Formulas — ACI 318-19 (USA)

      ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 Min. Total Depth (Grade 60, Normal-Weight Concrete):
      Simply Supported: h_min = L / 16
      One End Continuous: h_min = L / 18.5
      Both Ends Continuous: h_min = L / 21
      Cantilever: h_min = L / 8
      f_y Correction Factor (ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 Note a):
      h_min (adjusted) = h_min × (0.4 + f_y / 100,000)
      Grade 40 (40k psi): ×0.80 | Grade 60: ×1.00 | Grade 80: ×1.20 | Grade 100: ×1.40
      Lightweight Concrete Multiplier (ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 Note b):
      LW Factor = max(1.09, 1.65 − 0.005 × w_c) where w_c = unit weight in lb/ft³
      Effective Depth (d) from Section Geometry:
      d = h − cover_stirrup − d_stirrup − d_b / 2
      Example: h=24", 1.5" cover, #3 stirrup (0.375"), #8 bar (1.0"):
      d = 24 − 1.5 − 0.375 − 0.5 = 21.625 in. → Use d = 21.6 in.

      ⚠️ ACI 318 Minimum Depth Is a Deflection Limit Only — Not a Strength Check

      The ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 minimum beam depth only satisfies the deflection control requirement — it does not guarantee adequate moment capacity, shear capacity, or crack control. In many practical cases, the depth required to provide sufficient flexural moment capacity (Mn ≥ Mu) or shear capacity (Vn ≥ Vu) will be greater than the ACI 318 minimum depth. Always perform full beam design per ACI 318 Chapters 9 and 22 — the minimum depth from Table 9.3.1.1 is a starting point for preliminary sizing, not a final design value.

      ACI 318 Minimum Beam Depth Quick-Reference — Grade 60 Steel, Normal-Weight Concrete

      The table below provides pre-calculated ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 minimum beam depths for the most common US beam spans and support conditions with Grade 60 steel and normal-weight concrete. Values are rounded up to the next 1-inch increment as standard engineering practice. Use for preliminary beam sizing before detailed structural design.

      Span (ft) Simply Supported h_min One End Cont. h_min Both Ends Cont. h_min Cantilever h_min Practical Both-Cont.
      12 ft9.0 in.7.8 in. → 8 in.6.9 in. → 7 in.18.0 in.10 in.
      16 ft12.0 in.10.4 in. → 11 in.9.1 in. → 10 in.24.0 in.12 in.
      20 ft15.0 in.13.0 in. → 13 in.11.4 in. → 12 in.30.0 in.14 in.
      24 ft18.0 in.15.6 in. → 16 in.13.7 in. → 14 in.36.0 in.16 in.
      28 ft21.0 in.18.2 in. → 19 in.16.0 in. → 16 in.42.0 in.18 in.
      32 ft24.0 in.20.8 in. → 21 in.18.3 in. → 19 in.48.0 in.20 in.
      36 ft27.0 in.23.4 in. → 24 in.20.6 in. → 21 in.54.0 in.24 in.
      40 ft30.0 in.26.0 in.22.9 in. → 23 in.60.0 in.24 in.

      20 ft Span — ACI 318 Min. Beam Depths

      Simply Supported15 in.
      One End Continuous13 in.
      Both Ends Continuous12 in.
      Cantilever30 in.

      24 ft Span — ACI 318 Min. Beam Depths

      Simply Supported18 in.
      One End Continuous16 in.
      Both Ends Continuous14 in.
      Cantilever36 in.

      30 ft Span — ACI 318 Min. Beam Depths

      Simply Supported22.5 in. → 23 in.
      One End Continuous19.5 in. → 20 in.
      Both Ends Continuous17.1 in. → 18 in.
      Cantilever45 in.

      36 ft Span — ACI 318 Min. Beam Depths

      Simply Supported27 in.
      One End Continuous24 in.
      Both Ends Continuous21 in.
      Cantilever54 in.

      Key Beam Depth Design Concepts for US Structural Concrete

      🏗️

      When ACI 318 Min. Depth Does NOT Apply

      ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 minimum depths cannot be used when: (1) the beam supports or is attached to partitions or other construction likely to be damaged by deflections (must compute deflections per ACI 318 Section 24.2), (2) the beam is a prestressed or post-tensioned member (different limits apply), or (3) the structure is classified as requiring deflection control by the owner or design professional beyond ACI 318 defaults.

      🔄

      Continuous Beam Span for Depth Calc

      For continuous beams, ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 uses the clear span (ln) of each individual span. Use the longest span in a continuous frame to find the governing minimum depth — that same depth should be used for all spans in the frame for economy and formwork consistency. For beams with varying span lengths, the engineer may use different depths for different spans if formwork is reconfigured between bays.

      🔥

      Fire Resistance & Beam Depth

      IBC Table 722.5.2(4) specifies minimum beam width for fire resistance — but beam depth is also implicitly controlled by the minimum cover requirement for fire ratings. Increasing cover for 2-hour or 3-hour fire ratings reduces the effective depth (d) for the same total depth (h). When fire ratings require cover > 1.5 inches, the engineer must account for the reduced effective depth in moment and shear calculations — or increase the total depth h to compensate.

      ⚖️

      Depth-to-Width Ratio Guidance

      ACI 318 does not specify a maximum depth-to-width ratio for ordinary beams, but practical US design guidelines recommend keeping the depth-to-width ratio between 1.5 and 3.5 for stability and efficient concrete placement. Very deep, narrow beams (ratio > 4) may require lateral bracing checks per ACI 318 Section 9.2.3. Shallow, very wide beams (ratio < 1.0) are typically classified as wide-shallow beams or band beams, which have different behavioral characteristics and detailing requirements.

      ✅ Pro Tip — Use h = L/12 for Conservative Preliminary Sizing

      While ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 permits beams as shallow as L/21 for continuous spans, experienced US structural engineers often use the rule of thumb h ≈ L/12 (in feet to inches, so a 24-ft span → 24 inches deep) for preliminary beam sizing on commercial projects. This more conservative estimate almost always satisfies both deflection limits AND provides adequate moment capacity for typical floor loading (80–100 psf live load), reducing the likelihood of redesign after full analysis. The ACI 318 minimum is a code floor, not a design target.

      🚨 This Calculator Is for Preliminary Sizing Only — Not a Substitute for Full Beam Design

      The minimum depths calculated here satisfy only the ACI 318 deflection control provision of Table 9.3.1.1. They do not verify moment capacity (Mn ≥ Mu), shear capacity (Vn ≥ Vu), torsion, crack control, or seismic detailing requirements. All concrete structural members on US construction projects must be designed by a licensed Professional Engineer (PE) in accordance with ACI 318-19, the IBC, and all applicable state and local building codes and project-specific requirements.

      ❓ Concrete Beam Depth Calculator FAQ — USA

      What is the minimum beam depth per ACI 318 for a 24-foot simply supported span? +
      For a 24-foot simply supported beam with Grade 60 steel and normal-weight concrete:
      • ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1: h_min = L / 16
      • L = 24 ft × 12 in/ft = 288 inches
      • h_min = 288 / 16 = 18.0 inches
      • Practical size: round up to next 2-inch increment = 18 inches (already even)
      • Effective depth (d) with 1.5" cover, #3 stirrups, #8 main bars: d = 18 − 1.5 − 0.375 − 0.5 = 15.625 inches
      • Note: This is the minimum for deflection control only — full moment and shear design may require a deeper beam for heavy loading
      • If the same 24-ft beam were both-ends continuous: h_min = 288/21 = 13.7 → 14 inches
      How does Grade 40 or Grade 80 steel change the minimum beam depth per ACI 318? +
      ACI 318-19 Table 9.3.1.1 Note (a) provides a correction factor for reinforcement yield strength other than 60,000 psi:
      • Correction Factor = (0.4 + f_y / 100,000)
      • Grade 40 (40,000 psi): Factor = 0.4 + 0.40 = 0.80 → beams can be 20% shallower than Grade 60 minimums
      • Grade 60 (60,000 psi): Factor = 0.4 + 0.60 = 1.00 → no adjustment (base case)
      • Grade 75 (75,000 psi): Factor = 0.4 + 0.75 = 1.15 → beams must be 15% deeper
      • Grade 80 (80,000 psi): Factor = 0.4 + 0.80 = 1.20 → beams must be 20% deeper
      • Grade 100 (100,000 psi): Factor = 0.4 + 1.00 = 1.40 → beams must be 40% deeper
      • Higher-strength steel is more flexible (higher strain at yield), causing more deflection under service loads — hence the deeper minimum depth requirement
      What is effective depth (d) and why is it different from total depth (h)? +
      • Total depth (h): The overall beam height from top face to bottom face — what is shown on structural drawings as the beam size (e.g. 14 × 24)
      • Effective depth (d): The distance from the extreme compression fiber (top) to the centroid of the tension reinforcement — the working dimension used in ALL beam capacity calculations
      • Formula: d = h − c_cover − d_stirrup − d_b/2 (for single layer of tension steel)
      • For two-layer steel: d = h − c_cover − d_stirrup − d_b − s_clear/2 − d_b/2 (to centroid of combined steel area)
      • Why it matters: Moment capacity M_n = A_s × f_y × (d − a/2) — every inch of effective depth loss directly reduces moment capacity. A beam design that ignores the difference between h and d (approximately 2–3 inches for typical US beams) will underestimate required moment steel by 10–15%
      • Typical ratio: d/h ≈ 0.85 to 0.90 for most US beam sections
      When must beam deflections be calculated rather than using ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1? +
      Per ACI 318-19 Section 9.3.1, the Table 9.3.1.1 minimum depths may be used without computing deflections UNLESS the member supports or is attached to:
      • Partitions or non-structural walls that could be damaged by large deflections (brittle masonry walls, glass partitions, gypsum board on metal stud)
      • Mechanical / plumbing systems with fixed connections that could be damaged by beam movement
      • Glazing or curtain wall systems sensitive to differential movement
      • Sensitive flooring systems such as large-format tile, terrazzo, or raised access floors
      • When deflections must be checked, use ACI 318 Section 24.2 — calculate immediate deflection using effective moment of inertia (I_e per ACI 318 Eq. 24.2.3.5a) and long-term deflection multiplier per ACI 318 Section 24.2.4
      • ACI 318 Table 24.2.2 specifies maximum permissible deflection limits: L/360 for floors supporting non-structural elements susceptible to damage, L/240 for roofs, L/480 after installation of non-structural elements
      What beam depth is required for seismic Special Moment Frames (SMF) in high seismic zones? +
      ACI 318-19 Chapter 18 Special Moment Frame (SMF) provisions for Seismic Design Categories D, E, F:
      • Minimum width: b_w ≥ 0.3 × h AND b_w ≥ 10 in. (governs width, not depth directly)
      • Depth implications: SMF beams must develop ductile hinging — beams that are too shallow relative to their reinforcement ratio develop non-ductile failure modes. Practical SMF beams are typically sized so the reinforcement ratio ρ is between 0.5ρ_max and 0.8ρ_max for optimal ductility
      • Span-to-depth ratio limit: ACI 318 Section 18.6.2.1 requires the clear span/depth ratio ≥ 4 for SMF beams to ensure beam (not column) hinging under seismic loading
      • Longitudinal bar diameter limit: The smallest beam dimension must be ≥ 20 × d_b for bars passing through column-beam joints (per ACI 318 Section 18.8.2.3) — this can effectively govern minimum beam depth in high seismic zones
      • West Coast US (California, Oregon, Washington) and other high seismic zones: SMF beam depths in the range of 24–48 inches are typical for 20–35 ft spans
      How do I convert the ACI 318 minimum depth from inches to a practical beam size designation? +
      Standard US procedure for converting calculated minimum depth to a practical beam size:
      • Step 1: Calculate h_min = (span in inches) / (ACI 318 factor) × (f_y correction) × (LW correction if applicable)
      • Step 2: Round UP to the next whole inch minimum — never round down
      • Step 3: Round to the next even 2-inch increment for standard formwork economy (e.g. 13.7 in. → 14 in.)
      • Step 4: Set the beam width using the beam width calculator (typically width = 0.4 to 0.6 × depth, minimum from rebar spacing)
      • Step 5: Designate the beam as: Width × Depth (e.g. 14 × 20) on structural drawings — width first, depth second, both in inches
      • Standard US beam size designations: 10×18, 12×20, 12×24, 14×20, 14×24, 16×24, 18×30, 18×36, 20×36, 24×42 — these correspond to standard plywood form lumber cuts
      • Always verify the selected depth satisfies the structural design requirements (Mn, Vn) under the actual factored loads before finalizing

      Trusted US Concrete Beam Design Standards & Resources

      Official ACI codes, ASTM specifications, and structural engineering references for US concrete beam depth design

      📘

      ACI 318-19 Building Code

      Table 9.3.1.1 · Section 24.2

      ACI 318-19 is the governing US structural concrete design code. Table 9.3.1.1 provides minimum depths for deflection control; Section 24.2 covers detailed deflection calculation procedures; Chapter 18 addresses seismic beam design requirements for Special and Intermediate Moment Frames in all US seismic zones. Section 9.3.1 defines when Table 9.3.1.1 minimum depths may be used without detailed deflection calculations.

      View ACI 318-19
      🏛️

      ACI 318 Commentary (R318)

      Table R9.3.1.1 · Deflection Notes

      The ACI 318-19 Commentary (published alongside the code) provides the technical background and research basis for Table 9.3.1.1 minimum depth limits, including the derivation of the f_y correction factor (0.4 + f_y/100,000) and the lightweight concrete multiplier. Essential reading for engineers who need to understand why these limits exist and when they are conservative or unconservative for specific loading conditions.

      View ACI Commentary
      📐

      CRSI Design Handbook

      Beam Design Tables — USA

      The Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute (CRSI) Design Handbook provides pre-calculated beam design tables for standard US beam sizes, including moment and shear capacity tables for common beam widths, depths, and reinforcement combinations using Grade 60 steel and normal-weight concrete — an essential reference for structural engineers and detailers on US concrete projects.

      Visit CRSI.org