Measure first
Measure finished dimensions, actual stock, openings, and site constraints before ordering material.
Stair geometry
Convert a stair rise and horizontal run into a slope angle, percentage, pitch ratio, and diagonal stringer length. It is useful for comparing options before a detailed stair layout.
How the estimate works
Angle uses arctangent(rise/run); slope percentage is rise divided by run; stringer length is the hypotenuse of the rise and run triangle.
Measure finished dimensions, actual stock, openings, and site constraints before ordering material.
A stair angle alone does not establish a compliant or comfortable stair. Use it with riser and tread calculations, site measurement, and local requirements.
Use the related calculators below to turn a first estimate into a material list, layout, or a more detailed project plan.
FAQ
Residential stair angles vary with rise and tread dimensions. Compare the result with local requirements rather than relying on one universal target.
Pitch expresses rise relative to run, while angle expresses that slope in degrees.
Related tools
Free stair calculator. Estimate riser count, riser height, tread depth, total run, and approximate stringer length from your project dimensions.
Open Stair CalculatorFree rise and run calculator. Convert total rise, riser count, and target tread depth into total run, angle, and stringer length estimates.
Open Rise and Run CalculatorFree roof pitch calculator. Convert rise and run into roof pitch, angle, slope percentage, pitch multiplier, and an approximate common-rafter length.
Open Roof Pitch CalculatorPlanning disclaimer: WoodCutTool results are estimates. Verify measurements, product instructions, material condition, local requirements, and safety practices before buying, cutting, or building.