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Concrete Beam Calculator USA — ACI 318 Beam Design & Sizing

All-in-one concrete beam calculator for the USA — calculate minimum beam size (width × depth), required flexural reinforcement (As), shear capacity check (Vn vs Vu), and effective depth (d) per ACI 318-19. Covers simply supported, continuous, and cantilever beams using Grade 60 steel and normal-weight concrete for all US structural concrete projects.

4-in-1
Size · Steel · Shear · Depth — One Tool
φ0.90
ACI 318 Flexure Strength Reduction Factor
φ0.75
ACI 318 Shear Strength Reduction Factor
60ksi
Grade 60 ASTM A615 — Standard US Rebar
📐 Beam Size Calculator 🔩 Required Steel (As) ⚡ Shear Capacity Check 📏 Effective Depth (d) 🏗️ Simply Supported · Continuous · Cantilever ⚖️ ACI 318-19 φMn ≥ Mu
A concrete beam calculator for the USA combines the three essential ACI 318-19 beam design checks into one tool: (1) Minimum beam size — minimum width per ACI 318 Section 25.2 rebar spacing rules and minimum depth per ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 for deflection control; (2) Required flexural steel (As) — the tension reinforcement area needed so that the design moment capacity φMn ≥ Mu per ACI 318 Chapter 22; and (3) Shear capacity check — verifying that the concrete shear strength φVc plus stirrup contribution φVs satisfies φVn ≥ Vu per ACI 318 Section 22.5. Used by structural engineers, EITs, and detailers for preliminary and intermediate-level beam design on US residential, commercial, and infrastructure concrete projects.

🏗️ Concrete Beam Calculator — USA (ACI 318-19)

Select a calculation tab — Beam Sizing, Required Flexural Steel, or Shear Capacity Check — all per ACI 318-19.

Enter the clear span between faces of supports in feet

Both-ends continuous is typical for interior beams in cast-in-place concrete frames

Number of main tension bars in the single bottom layer — typically 2–6 for standard beams

ASTM A615 Grade 60 — #8 is most common for standard US commercial beams

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

Cover measured to the outside face of the stirrup per ACI 318 Table 20.6.1.3

M_u = factored design moment from structural analysis (1.2D + 1.6L per ASCE 7 / ACI 318)

Web width (b_w) of the beam — use minimum beam width calculator above if unknown

Effective depth = h − cover − stirrup dia. − d_b/2 — use effective depth calculator if unknown

4,000 psi (4 ksi) is the most common US commercial concrete specification

Grade 60 (ASTM A615 or A706) is the standard US structural rebar specification

Calculator will determine how many bars of this size are needed to satisfy M_u

V_u = factored design shear from structural analysis (1.2D + 1.6L per ASCE 7) at face of support

Web width of the beam cross-section in inches

Effective depth from compression face to centroid of tension steel

Specified 28-day compressive strength of concrete

Two-legged (closed) stirrups assumed — standard for US beam shear reinforcement

Center-to-center spacing of stirrups in inches — ACI 318 max spacing = d/2 or 24 in., whichever is less

Yield strength of the stirrup steel — Grade 60 is most common for US stirrups

Factored axial compression — enter 0 for beams with no significant axial force

Result
Per ACI 318-19

📏 Calculation Breakdown

    ✅ ACI 318 Compliance

      📐 Concrete Beam Cross-Section — ACI 318-19 Design Components

      Beam Cross-Section
      Top Cover · Compression Zone
      Cover + Stirrup
      Concrete
      Core
      bw × h
      Stirrup + Cover
      Bottom Cover · Tension Steel

      📋 Key Beam Dimensions

      h (Total Depth)= L ÷ ACI Factor
      bw (Min. Width)= 2×(c+ds) + n×db + (n−1)×sclr
      d (Effective Depth)= h − c − ds − db/2
      As,req (Steel Area)= Mu / [φ × fy × (d − a/2)]
      φVc (Conc. Shear)= φ × 2 × √f'c × bw × d
      φVs (Stirrup Shear)= φ × Av × fy × d / s
      φVn (Total)= φVc + φVs ≥ Vu
      φ = 0.90
      Flexure (ACI 318)
      |
      φ = 0.75
      Shear (ACI 318)
      |
      β₁
      0.85 (f'c ≤ 4000 psi)
      |
      ρmin
      max(3√f'c, 200) / f_y
      |
      ρmax
      0.85β₁f'c/f_y × 0.003/0.008
      φMn
      ≥ Mu — Flexure design check (ACI 318 §22.3)
      φVn
      ≥ Vu — Shear design check (ACI 318 §22.5)
      h ≥
      L/16–L/21 — ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 depth limit
      Clear Cover Stirrup (Shear Steel) Tension Bars (Flexure Steel) Effective Depth d

      What Does a Concrete Beam Calculator Include per ACI 318-19?

      A complete US concrete beam design per ACI 318-19 involves five interdependent checks: (1) minimum depth from ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1 for deflection control, (2) minimum width from Section 25.2 for rebar fit, (3) required flexural tension steel area (As) from the factored moment Mu using the rectangular stress block method of ACI 318 Section 22.2–22.3, (4) shear capacity check per ACI 318 Section 22.5, and (5) verification that the provided steel satisfies both the minimum steel ratio (ρmin) and the maximum steel ratio (ρmax) for tension-controlled ductile failure. This calculator covers the three most frequently needed checks — size, flexure, and shear — that define the beam's cross-section and reinforcement for any US structural concrete project.

      🔵 ACI 318-19 Rectangular Stress Block — The Foundation of US Flexural Beam Design

      ACI 318-19 Section 22.2 uses the Whitney rectangular stress block model for flexural design. The concrete compressive stress distribution at ultimate is idealized as a uniform block of intensity 0.85 × f'c over a depth of a = β1 × c, where β1 = 0.85 for f'c ≤ 4,000 psi (reduced by 0.05 for each 1,000 psi above 4,000 psi, minimum 0.65). The nominal moment capacity is Mn = As × fy × (d − a/2), where a = As × fy / (0.85 × f'c × bw). The design must satisfy φMn ≥ Mu with φ = 0.90 for tension-controlled sections.

      ⚖️ Load Combinations — ASCE 7 / ACI 318

      US structural beam design uses ASCE 7-22 factored load combinations to compute Mu and Vu: the governing combination for most floor beams is 1.2D + 1.6L (ACI 318 Section 5.3.1a). For beams supporting roof loads: 1.2D + 1.6W + 1.0L; for seismic: 1.2D + 1.0E + 1.0L. Service-level loads (unfactored D + L) are used only for deflection and crack control checks. Always determine Mu and Vu from a proper structural analysis before entering values into this beam calculator.

      🔩 Minimum & Maximum Steel Ratio

      ACI 318-19 Section 9.6.1.2 requires a minimum steel ratio ρmin = max(3√f'c, 200) / fy — for Grade 60 steel with 4,000 psi concrete: ρmin = max(3×63.2, 200)/60,000 = 200/60,000 = 0.00333. The maximum steel ratio for tension-controlled beams (φ = 0.90) is derived from ACI 318 Section 21.2.2 net tensile strain εt ≥ 0.004: ρmax = 0.85β1 × f'c/fy × [0.003/(0.003+0.004)]. For Grade 60 / 4,000 psi: ρmax0.0181. Design steel ratio should stay between these limits.

      ⚡ ACI 318 Simplified Shear Formula

      The ACI 318-19 simplified shear formula (Section 22.5.5.1 Table 22.5.5.1 — Method 1 for members with Av ≥ Av,min) gives the concrete shear contribution as: Vc = [8λ(ρw)1/3(f'c)1/3 + Nu/6Ag] × bw × d. The more commonly used legacy simplified equation (still used for preliminary design) is Vc = 2λ√f'c × bw × d (in pounds). Stirrup contribution: Vs = Av × fyt × d / s. Total: φVn = φ(Vc + Vs) ≥ Vu, with φ = 0.75.

      ACI 318-19 Concrete Beam Design Formulas (USA)

      The three sets of formulas below cover the complete preliminary beam design sequence used on US structural concrete projects — from initial sizing through steel selection and shear check. All formulas are per ACI 318-19 with ASTM A615 Grade 60 reinforcement and normal-weight concrete.

      📐 Complete ACI 318-19 Beam Design Formula Set — USA

      STEP 1 — MIN. DEPTH (ACI 318 Table 9.3.1.1, Grade 60, NW Concrete):
      h_min = L / 16 (SS) | L/18.5 (1-cont) | L/21 (2-cont) | L/8 (cantilever)
      Adjust: h_min × (0.4 + f_y/100,000) for f_y ≠ 60,000 psi
      STEP 2 — MIN. WIDTH (ACI 318 §25.2.1):
      s_clr = max(1.0 in., 1.5×d_b, 4/3×d_agg)
      b_w,min = 2×(cover + d_stirrup) + n×d_b + (n−1)×s_clr
      STEP 3 — EFFECTIVE DEPTH:
      d = h − cover − d_stirrup − d_b / 2
      STEP 4 — REQUIRED FLEXURAL STEEL (ACI 318 §22.2–22.3):
      Rn = Mu / (φ × b_w × d²) [where φ=0.90, Mu in lb·in]
      ρ_req = (0.85×f'c/f_y) × [1 − √(1 − 2Rn/(0.85×f'c))]
      ρ_req = max(ρ_req, ρ_min) where ρ_min = max(3√f'c, 200) / f_y
      A_s,req = ρ_req × b_w × d
      a = A_s × f_y / (0.85 × f'c × b_w) [stress block depth]
      φMn = φ × A_s × f_y × (d − a/2) ≥ Mu ✓
      STEP 5 — SHEAR CAPACITY (ACI 318 §22.5, simplified legacy method):
      φVc = φ × 2 × λ × √f'c × b_w × d [λ=1.0 NW, φ=0.75]
      φVs = φ × Av × f_yt × d / s
      φVn = φVc + φVs ≥ Vu ✓
      Max φVs = φ × 8 × √f'c × b_w × d (ACI 318 §22.5.1.2)

      ⚠️ ACI 318-19 Updated Detailed Shear Equation — Table 22.5.5.1

      ACI 318-19 introduced a revised detailed shear equation (Table 22.5.5.1) that replaces the legacy 2√f'c formula for members with minimum shear reinforcement. The updated formula: Vc = [8λ(ρw)1/3(f'c)1/3 + Nu/6Ag] × bw × d — this is more accurate but requires knowledge of the longitudinal steel ratio ρw. The simplified legacy formula Vc = 2√f'c × bw × d remains widely used for preliminary design. This calculator uses the simplified legacy method — use the ACI 318-19 detailed method for final design.

      Concrete Beam Quick-Reference — Common US Beam Sizes (ACI 318)

      Pre-calculated minimum beam sizes, effective depths, and estimated steel for the most common US beam configurations — all with Grade 60 steel, 4,000 psi concrete, #3 stirrups, 1.5-inch cover, and 3/4-inch aggregate. Use for preliminary design before entering actual loads into the calculator above.

      Span Support Cond. Min. h (in.) Prac. Size (b×h) Eff. Depth d Max φVc (kips) Use
      16 ftBoth Cont.9.1→10 in.10×129.6 in.14.5 kLight residential beams
      20 ftBoth Cont.11.4→12 in.12×1411.6 in.21.0 kResidential / light commercial
      24 ftBoth Cont.13.7→14 in.14×1613.6 in.28.8 kStandard commercial floor beams
      24 ftSimply Supp.18.0 in.14×2017.6 in.37.3 kSimply supported / transfer beams
      28 ftBoth Cont.16.0→16 in.14×1815.6 in.33.1 kStandard commercial frames
      32 ftBoth Cont.18.3→20 in.16×2219.6 in.47.5 kHeavy commercial beams
      36 ftBoth Cont.20.6→22 in.18×2421.6 in.58.8 kGirders / heavy frames
      12 ftCantilever18.0 in.12×2017.6 in.31.9 kBalconies / cantilever beams

      24 ft — Both Ends Continuous (Most Common)

      Min. Depth (ACI 318)13.7 → 14 in.
      Practical Size14 × 16 in.
      Effective Depth d13.6 in.
      Max φVc (4 ksi)28.8 kips

      24 ft — Simply Supported

      Min. Depth (ACI 318)18 in.
      Practical Size14 × 20 in.
      Effective Depth d17.6 in.
      Max φVc (4 ksi)37.3 kips

      32 ft — Both Ends Continuous

      Min. Depth (ACI 318)18.3 → 20 in.
      Practical Size16 × 22 in.
      Effective Depth d19.6 in.
      Max φVc (4 ksi)47.5 kips

      12 ft — Cantilever

      Min. Depth (ACI 318)18 in.
      Practical Size12 × 20 in.
      Effective Depth d17.6 in.
      Max φVc (4 ksi)31.9 kips

      Key ACI 318-19 Concrete Beam Design Concepts — USA

      🏗️

      Tension-Controlled vs. Compression-Controlled

      ACI 318-19 Section 21.2.2 classifies beam sections based on the net tensile strain εt in the extreme tension steel at nominal strength. Tension-controlled sections (εt ≥ 0.005, but ACI 318 requires εt ≥ 0.004 for φ = 0.90) are ductile and are the target for beam design. Compression-controlled sections (εt ≤ 0.002) are brittle and not permitted for beams. Good US beam design keeps the steel ratio well below ρmax to ensure ductile failure mode under overloading.

      🔩

      Minimum Stirrup Requirements

      ACI 318-19 Section 9.6.3.3 requires minimum shear reinforcement when Vu > φVc/2. The minimum stirrup area is: Av,min/s = max(0.75√f'c/fyt, 50/fyt) × bw. Maximum stirrup spacing: smax = d/2 (for Vu ≤ φVc + 4φ√f'cbwd), reduced to d/4 for higher shear demands. Even when minimum stirrups are not required by shear, most US engineers provide nominal stirrups for bar cage stability and constructability.

      📋

      T-Beam Effective Flange Width

      When concrete beams are cast monolithically with slabs, they behave as T-beams with an effective flange width per ACI 318-19 Section 6.3.2. The effective overhanging flange width on each side of the web is the lesser of: 8 times the slab thickness, half the clear distance to the next web, or 1/8 of the beam span. T-beam action increases the effective compression area, reducing the required steel area As compared to a rectangular beam of the same depth — use the T-beam design formulas for final design of floor beams.

      🔥

      Seismic Beam Design — ACI 318 Ch. 18

      For beams in Special Moment Frames (SMF) in Seismic Design Categories D–F, ACI 318-19 Chapter 18 requires: maximum steel ratio ≤ 0.025 at any section, minimum 2 bars top and bottom throughout the length, beam width ≥ 10 in. and ≥ 0.3h, hoops (closed stirrups with 135° hooks) in plastic hinge zones with maximum spacing of d/4 or 6×db or 6 inches — whichever is smallest. These seismic requirements significantly affect both beam sizing and detailing compared to ordinary gravity beam design.

      ✅ Pro Tip — The ACI 318 Beam Design Sequence Used by US Structural Engineers

      Experienced US structural engineers follow this proven preliminary design sequence: Step 1 — Set beam depth using h ≈ L/12 (conservative, usually satisfies both deflection and moment); Step 2 — Set beam width equal to column width (12–18 in. for typical frames); Step 3 — Calculate Mu and Vu using 1.2D + 1.6L load combination; Step 4 — Calculate required As and select bar quantity/size; Step 5 — Check that the selected width can fit the bars (minimum width check); Step 6 — Check shear and provide stirrups. This sequence minimizes iteration and usually produces a final beam in one design cycle.

      🚨 For Licensed Engineering Use Only — This Calculator Does Not Replace Full ACI 318 Design

      This tool uses simplified ACI 318-19 formulas for preliminary and intermediate design checks only. It does not perform: T-beam analysis, two-way shear, torsion design (ACI 318 Chapter 22.7), seismic special detailing (Chapter 18), deflection calculations (Section 24.2), crack control (Section 24.3), development length checks (Chapter 25), or lap splice design. All US structural concrete members must be designed, detailed, and stamped by a licensed Professional Engineer (PE) per ACI 318-19, IBC 2021, and all applicable state and local codes before construction.

      ❓ Concrete Beam Calculator FAQ — USA (ACI 318)

      How do I calculate the required steel area (As) for a concrete beam per ACI 318? +
      The ACI 318-19 rectangular stress block method for required As:
      • Step 1: Calculate Mu (factored moment) from structural analysis using 1.2D + 1.6L
      • Step 2: Calculate the nominal moment coefficient: Rn = Mu / (φ × bw × d²) — with Mu in lb·in, φ = 0.90
      • Step 3: Calculate required steel ratio: ρ = (0.85 × f'c/fy) × [1 − √(1 − 2Rn/(0.85×f'c))]
      • Step 4: Apply minimum steel ratio: ρ ≥ ρmin = max(3√f'c, 200) / fy
      • Step 5: As,req = ρ × bw × d
      • Step 6: Select bar quantity: N = As,req / Abar — round UP to next whole number
      • Step 7: Verify φMn ≥ Mu with actual As provided: a = As×fy/(0.85×f'c×bw), φMn = 0.90×As×fy×(d−a/2)
      • Example: Mu=120 k-ft, bw=14 in., d=21.6 in., f'c=4 ksi, fy=60 ksi → Rn=493 psi → ρ=0.00878 → As=2.65 in² → 4 × #8 bars (3.16 in²) ✓
      What is the ACI 318 shear capacity formula for a concrete beam? +
      ACI 318-19 beam shear capacity — simplified legacy method (widely used for preliminary design):
      • Concrete contribution: Vc = 2λ√f'c × bw × d (in lb, with f'c in psi, bw and d in inches)
      • λ = 1.0 for normal-weight concrete, 0.75 for lightweight concrete
      • Stirrup contribution: Vs = Av × fyt × d / s (Av = total stirrup area for both legs)
      • Design requirement: φVn = φ(Vc + Vs) ≥ Vu, φ = 0.75
      • Maximum Vs: Vs ≤ 8√f'c × bw × d — if exceeded, increase beam size
      • Max stirrup spacing: s ≤ d/2 ≤ 24 in. when Vu ≤ φVc + 4φ√f'cbwd; reduced to d/4 ≤ 12 in. for higher shear
      • Example: bw=14", d=21.6", f'c=4000 psi → Vc=2×1×63.2×14×21.6=38,260 lb=38.3 k → φVc=0.75×38.3=28.7 kips
      • ACI 318-19 detailed method (Table 22.5.5.1): Vc = [8λ(ρw)1/3(f'c)1/3+Nu/6Ag]×bw×d — use for final design
      What is β₁ in ACI 318 beam design and how does it affect calculations? +
      β1 is the ACI 318-19 stress block factor (Section 22.2.2.4.3) that converts the depth to the neutral axis (c) to the equivalent rectangular stress block depth (a = β1 × c):
      • f'c ≤ 4,000 psi: β1 = 0.85
      • f'c = 5,000 psi: β1 = 0.85 − 0.05×(5000−4000)/1000 = 0.80
      • f'c = 6,000 psi: β1 = 0.75
      • f'c = 8,000 psi: β1 = 0.65 (minimum value)
      • β1 affects: (1) the stress block depth a = As×fy/(0.85×f'c×bw), (2) the maximum reinforcement ratio ρmax, and (3) the net tensile strain calculation εt
      • For most US commercial work with 4,000 psi concrete, β1 = 0.85 and the effect on required steel area is minor — the stress block depth a is typically only 15–25% of the effective depth d for well-proportioned beams
      What is the difference between Mn and φMn in ACI 318 beam design? +
      • Mn (Nominal Moment Capacity): The theoretical moment capacity calculated from section geometry and material strengths — no safety factor applied. Mn = As × fy × (d − a/2)
      • φMn (Design Moment Capacity): The reduced moment capacity after applying the ACI 318 strength reduction factor φ. For tension-controlled sections (beams): φ = 0.90, so φMn = 0.90 × Mn
      • Mu (Factored Design Moment): The maximum moment from factored loads (1.2D + 1.6L) from structural analysis
      • ACI 318 design requirement: φMn ≥ Mu must be satisfied at all critical sections
      • The φ factor accounts for: material strength variability, construction tolerances, approximations in analysis, and the consequences of failure
      • For transition zone sections (0.002 ≤ εt ≤ 0.005): φ interpolates between 0.65 and 0.90 — ensure εt ≥ 0.004 for φ = 0.90 to apply
      How do I size a concrete beam for a 30-foot span with 80 kip-ft factored moment? +
      Step-by-step ACI 318 beam sizing for 30 ft span, Mu = 80 k-ft, both-ends continuous, Grade 60, 4 ksi concrete:
      • Min. depth: h_min = (30×12)/21 = 17.1 in. → use h = 18 in. (round to 2-in. increment)
      • Trial width: bw = 0.5 × h = 9 in. → use bw = 12 in. (practical minimum for 3+ bars)
      • Effective depth: d = 18 − 1.5 − 0.375 − 0.5 = 15.625 in.
      • Rn: Mu = 80×12,000 = 960,000 lb·in → Rn = 960,000/(0.90×12×15.625²) = 289 psi
      • ρ: (0.85×4,000/60,000)×[1−√(1−2×289/(0.85×4,000))] = 0.0567×[1−√0.830] = 0.00499
      • As,req: 0.00499 × 12 × 15.625 = 0.935 in²
      • ρmin check: max(3√4000, 200)/60,000 = 200/60,000 = 0.00333 → ρreq=0.00499 governs ✓
      • Bar selection: 0.935/0.79 = 1.18 → use 2 × #8 bars (1.58 in²) → verify φMn: a=1.58×60/(0.85×4×12)=2.32", φMn=0.90×1.58×60×(15.625−1.16)/12=108.4 k-ft ≥ 80 k-ft
      • Final beam: 12 × 18 in., 2 × #8 tension bars, #3 stirrups at d/2 ≈ 7.5 in. max spacing
      When does concrete shear capacity (φVc) alone satisfy ACI 318 — when are stirrups required? +
      ACI 318-19 Section 9.6.3 stirrup requirements:
      • No stirrups needed: Vu ≤ φVc/2 — concrete alone carries shear, no minimum stirrups required (rare for structural beams)
      • Minimum stirrups required: Vu > φVc/2 — Av,min/s = max(0.75√f'c/fyt, 50/fyt) × bw
      • Design stirrups required: Vu > φVc — stirrups must be designed to carry the excess shear: Vs ≥ (Vu/φ) − Vc
      • Required stirrup spacing: s = Av×fyt×d / Vs
      • Beam size increase required: If Vu/φ − Vc > 8√f'c×bw×d — stirrups alone cannot carry the shear, beam must be enlarged
      • Practical rule: if Vu > 2×φVc, consider increasing bw or d rather than using very closely spaced stirrups
      • Example: 14×24 beam, 4 ksi → φVc=42.5 k. If Vu=60 k → stirrups required for Vs=(60/0.75)−56.7=23.3 k → #3 @6" provides Vs=0.22×60×21.6/6=47.5 k ✓

      Trusted US Concrete Beam Design Standards & Resources

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

      📘

      ACI 318-19 Building Code

      Chapters 9 · 22 · 25 · Table 9.3.1.1

      ACI 318-19 is the primary US structural concrete design code. Chapter 9 covers beam design requirements including minimum depth (Table 9.3.1.1) and minimum steel (Section 9.6); Chapter 22 covers flexural and shear strength; Chapter 25 covers reinforcement spacing and development lengths. Required on all US structural concrete projects.

      View ACI 318-19
      🏛️

      CRSI Design Handbook

      Beam Design Tables · Bar Selection

      The CRSI Design Handbook provides pre-calculated beam capacity tables, bar selection charts, and standard beam details for all common US beam sizes. Includes moment capacity tables for b×h combinations with standard Grade 60 reinforcement — an essential shortcut tool for US structural engineers performing preliminary and final beam design.

      Visit CRSI.org
      ⚖️

      ASCE 7-22 Load Standard

      Load Combinations · 1.2D + 1.6L

      ASCE 7-22 Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures specifies the factored load combinations used to determine Mu and Vu for ACI 318 beam design. Section 2.3 covers LRFD load combinations; Chapter 4 covers live loads; Chapter 26–31 covers wind loads; Chapter 11–23 covers seismic loads for all US seismic zones.

      View ASCE 7-22