Roof Pitch Calculator
Calculate your roof pitch from rise and run measurements or enter an angle in degrees. See results as X:12 ratio, degrees, slope percentage, pitch factor, and rafter length with a live visual diagram.
Understanding Roof Pitch
Roof pitch is the measure of a roof's steepness, expressed as the ratio of vertical rise to horizontal run. In the United States, pitch is given in the X:12 format — a 6:12 pitch means the roof rises 6 inches for every 12 inches of horizontal distance.
Knowing your roof pitch is essential for calculating the correct amount of roofing materials, estimating costs, and choosing appropriate materials. Steeper pitches shed water and snow more effectively but cost more to build and maintain.
Our roof pitch calculator supports both rise/run input (in inches, feet, centimeters, or meters) and direct angle input in degrees. Results include the pitch ratio, angle, slope percentage, pitch factor for area calculations, and material recommendations based on your specific pitch. For L-shaped or irregular roofs, use the draw roof area tool to trace the footprint first, then multiply by the pitch factor to get true roof surface area.
What to Do After You Know Your Pitch
Pitch is the bridge between a footprint measurement and a real material or budget estimate. Once you know the pitch, use it to calculate roof area, material quantities, and replacement cost.
Calculate roof area
Turn footprint into total roof square footage and roofing squares.
Measure irregular shapes
Trace L-shaped and custom roofs before applying the pitch factor.
Estimate shingles
Use final roof area to calculate bundles, squares, and waste.
Estimate metal roofing
Apply roof size and pitch to panel counts and installed pricing.
Estimate project cost
Compare full replacement pricing once roof size is known.
Common Roof Pitch Examples
| Pitch | Degrees | Slope | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4:12 | 18.4° | 33.3% | Common baseline for asphalt shingle roofs |
| 5:12 | 22.6° | 41.7% | Ranch-style and contemporary homes, good drainage without steep labor cost |
| 6:12 | 26.6° | 50.0% | Typical residential roofs with balanced drainage and walkability |
| 7:12 | 30.3° | 58.3% | Moderately steep, common in rainy climates and craftsman-style homes |
| 8:12 | 33.7° | 66.7% | Steeper roofs in wet or snowy regions |
| 9:12 | 36.9° | 75.0% | Steep residential pitch, traditional New England and heavy-snow regions |
| 10:12 | 39.8° | 83.3% | Very steep custom homes and heavy snow climates |
| 12:12 | 45.0° | 100% | Equal rise and run — dramatic alpine and Gothic architectural styles |
Roof Pitch FAQ
- What is roof pitch?
- Roof pitch is the steepness of a roof expressed as a ratio of rise to run. In the X:12 format used in the U.S., a 6:12 pitch means the roof rises 6 inches for every 12 inches of horizontal run.
- What is the most common roof pitch?
- Most residential roofs have a pitch between 4:12 and 6:12. A 4:12 pitch is the minimum recommended for standard asphalt shingles, while 6:12 offers a good balance of aesthetics, drainage, and walkability.
- How do I convert roof pitch to degrees?
- Use the formula: degrees = arctan(rise / run). For example, a 6:12 pitch equals arctan(6/12) = 26.57 degrees. Our calculator does this conversion instantly for any pitch value.
- What roof pitch do I need for shingles?
- Standard asphalt shingles require a minimum pitch of 4:12 (per manufacturer installation requirements and IRC Section R905.2). Roofs between 2:12 and 4:12 need special low-slope shingles with additional underlayment. Below 2:12, shingles are not recommended — use rolled roofing or a membrane system instead.