Joist Span Calculator
How far can your floor joists span without sagging or bouncing? That depends on the lumber size, spacing, wood species, grade, and what load they need to carry. This calculator uses standard residential span tables to tell you the maximum allowable span and whether your planned distance is within code limits.
How Joist Spans Are Determined
Maximum joist spans come from engineering calculations that account for bending strength, stiffness, and deflection limits. The IRC (International Residential Code) publishes prescriptive span tables that most residential construction follows. The key variables are:
- Lumber size: Deeper joists span farther (a 2x10 spans about 50% more than a 2x8)
- Spacing: Closer spacing means each joist carries less load, allowing longer spans
- Wood species: Stronger species like Douglas Fir span farther than softer woods
- Lumber grade: Higher grades have fewer knots and defects, allowing greater spans
- Live load: Floors carry more weight (40 psf) than ceilings (10-20 psf)
Sample Span Table (Douglas Fir-Larch #2, 40 psf Floor)
| Joist Size | 12" OC | 16" OC | 24" OC |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2x6 | 10' 0" | 9' 1" | 7' 6" |
| 2x8 | 13' 2" | 12' 0" | 9' 10" |
| 2x10 | 16' 10" | 14' 8" | 12' 4" |
| 2x12 | 19' 6" | 17' 9" | 14' 8" |
Load Types
Live load is the weight of people, furniture, and movable items. Standard residential floors use 40 psf (pounds per square foot). Sleeping areas can sometimes use 30 psf.
Dead load is the weight of the structure itself -- joists, subfloor, flooring, drywall below. Standard assumption is 10-20 psf depending on finish materials.
Deflection Limits
Building codes limit how much a joist can bend under load:
- Floors: L/360 -- a 15-foot span can deflect no more than 0.5 inches
- Ceilings: L/240 -- slightly more flex is allowed since you are not walking on it
"Bouncy" floors usually mean the joists are at or near their maximum span, even if they meet code.
When to Size Up
If your span is close to the limit, consider going one size larger. A 2x10 that is technically adequate at 14 feet will feel much more solid than a 2x8 at its maximum span. The extra cost for larger lumber is small compared to the lifetime comfort difference.