Measurement & Volume

Slope Calculator (%, degrees, ratio)

Convert between percent grade, degrees, and ratio slope for driveways, roofs, drainage, ramps, and accessibility calculations — all three formats in one calculator.

Slope Calculator

Enter project dimensions below — results update instantly. Switch units freely.

Try a real example:
Percent Slope 0 %
Angle
Ratio (rise:run) 0

Estimates assume typical industry density and waste factors. Always verify with your supplier and local building code before purchasing material.

Why this matters

Why Slope Is Expressed Three Different Ways

Slope can be expressed as percent, degrees, or rise:run ratio — and different industries use different conventions:

  • Percent — civil engineering, drainage, driveways, ADA ramps. Example: ‘2% cross-slope’.
  • Degrees — general geometry, ski slopes, angular measurements. Example: ‘45-degree slope’.
  • Rise:Run ratio — roofing, stairs, ramps, construction. Example: ‘4:12 roof pitch’ or ‘1:12 ramp’.

Conversion logic:

  • Percent = (rise ÷ run) × 100
  • Degrees = arctan(rise ÷ run)
  • Rise:Run = rise / run (e.g., 1:12 = 1 unit rise per 12 units run)

Common equivalences:

  • 1% = 0.57° = 1:100
  • 2% = 1.15° = 1:50 (standard patio drainage)
  • 5% = 2.86° = 1:20 (ADA max ramp)
  • 8.33% = 4.76° = 1:12 (wheelchair accessible)
  • 25% = 14° = 1:4 (maximum car driveway)
  • 33% = 18.4° = 1:3 (max steep driveway with 4WD)
  • 100% = 45° = 1:1
The formula

Slope Math for Real Projects

Slope Calculator (%, degrees, ratio) — variable relationship
Slope Calculator (%, degrees, ratio) — variable relationship
Percent slope = (Rise ÷ Run) × 100
Degrees = arctan(Rise ÷ Run)
Rise:Run = Rise ÷ Run

Critical slopes by application:

  • Drainage minimum: 1% (1/8" per foot) for paved surfaces, 2% for lawns
  • ADA wheelchair ramp: max 8.33% (1:12). Max 30 ft length before landing.
  • Patio drainage: 2% slope away from house (1/4 in per foot)
  • Driveway: max 14% sustained, 8-10% preferred
  • Driveway on hillside: max 20% for 20 ft length, with transition zones
  • Stair rise:run: 7" rise × 11" run = 1.57 slope ratio = 32.5°
  • Roof low-slope: 1:12 to 3:12 (requires special roofing systems)
  • Roof standard: 4:12 to 9:12
  • Roof steep: 9:12 and above
Slope Equivalents Reference Table
PercentDegreesRise:RunInches per FootTypical Use
0.5%0.29°1:2001/16"Interior floor drain
1%0.57°1:1001/8"Min drainage paved surface
2%1.15°1:501/4"Patio drainage, walkways
3%1.72°1:333/8"Heavy drainage
5%2.86°1:205/8"ADA ramp max
8.33%4.76°1:121"Accessible wheelchair ramp
10%5.71°1:101.2"Steep driveway limit (paved)
14%7.97°1:7.11.68"Max driveway sustained
20%11.3°1:52.4"Max driveway short segment
25%14°1:43"Severe driveway (4WD)
33%18.4°1:34"Drainage ditch side
50%26.6°1:26"Hillside grade
100%45°1:112"Steep roof

Always verify with code: ADA, IRC, and local codes set enforceable slope limits for specific applications.

Roof Pitch Equivalents
Rise:RunPercentDegreesClassification
1:128.33%4.76°Low-slope (single-ply required)
2:1216.67%9.46°Low-slope
3:1225%14.04°Low-moderate
4:1233.33%18.43°Moderate / standard
5:1241.67%22.62°Moderate
6:1250%26.57°Medium-steep
8:1266.67%33.69°Steep
10:1283.33%39.81°Very steep
12:12100%45°Extreme

Lower roof pitches (≤ 2:12) require membrane roofing or hot-mop. Pitches 4:12 to 9:12 work with standard asphalt shingles. Above 12:12 requires specialty fastening.

Real-World Example Calculations

Driveway Slope Check

Homeowner measuring existing driveway slope for possible concrete replacement.

Horizontal length
50 ft
Vertical drop
4 ft
Slope 8% / 4.57° / 1:12.5

Takeaway: Within normal driveway range. If you can walk up without effort, car clearance is almost certainly fine.

ADA Wheelchair Ramp

Building code-compliant ramp to front door, 3-foot elevation.

Vertical rise
36 in (3 ft)
Required ratio
1:12
Run / Slope 36 ft / 8.33% / 4.76°

Takeaway: Any ramp over 30 ft needs a 60-inch landing. Break into two 15-foot runs with a landing in the middle.

Patio Drainage Slope

Backyard patio sized for proper water drainage away from house.

Patio length
16 ft
Required slope
2%
Total Drop 3.84 in (1/4 in per foot)

Takeaway: Patio near house at grade 0, far end 4 in lower. Allows water to flow away from foundation naturally.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate slope percent?

(Rise ÷ Run) × 100. Example: 4-ft rise over 50-ft run = (4 ÷ 50) × 100 = 8%. Rise and run must be in the same units.

What is the maximum driveway slope?

14% sustained is the practical max for passenger vehicles; 20% for short segments (under 20 ft); 25%+ only for 4WD vehicles. Beyond that, approach and departure angles cause bumper scraping on transitions.

What's the ADA wheelchair ramp slope?

1:12 (8.33%, 4.76°) maximum. 1:16 preferred for long ramps. Maximum 30 ft between landings. Landings must be 60 × 60 in minimum.

How do I convert slope percent to degrees?

Degrees = arctan(percent / 100). Example: 10% = arctan(0.10) = 5.71°. Mental shortcut: for slopes under 10%, percent × 0.57 ≈ degrees.

What does 4:12 roof pitch mean?

The roof rises 4 inches of vertical for every 12 inches of horizontal run. Equivalent to 33.33% slope or 18.43°. 4:12 is a common residential pitch — works with standard asphalt shingles and sheds water well.

What's the minimum drainage slope?

1% (1/8 in per foot) for paved surfaces (driveways, patios, walkways). 2% preferred for lawns and mulched areas. 1/4 in per foot (2%) for patios away from houses — prevents water pooling against foundations.

How is slope measured in the field?

Three tools in order of accuracy: (1) Smart level / digital level ($40-80) reads to 0.1°; (2) Laser level with grade rod ($150-400) for long distances; (3) Survey total station ($5,000+) for professional accuracy. For DIY projects, a smart phone inclinometer app is adequate (±1°).