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Loft Load Capacity Calculator — Can My Loft Joists Take the Weight?

Calculate the safe distributed load capacity of your loft joists based on size, spacing, span and timber grade. Checks against Eurocode 1 requirements for storage and habitable use.

Measure width × depth of existing joists

Centre-to-centre distance between joists

Clear span between supporting walls

Check stamp on joists — assume C16 if unmarked

Determines the load requirement to check against

How We Calculate This

This calculator uses structural engineering principles from Eurocode 5 (timber design) to determine the bending moment capacity of your joists and convert this into a safe uniformly distributed load per square metre.

The formula

Safe load per m² = (8 × Moment capacity) ÷ (Span² × Joist spacing) - Dead load

Step-by-step

  1. Section modulus: Z = b × d² ÷ 6 (where b = width, d = depth in mm)
  2. Design bending strength: fd = kmod × fm,k ÷ γM
  3. Moment capacity: Mc = fd × Z
  4. Max UDL per m²: q = 8 × Mc ÷ (L² × s)
  5. Net imposed load: qimposed = q - dead load (0.5 kN/m²)

Design values used

  • γM (material partial factor): 1.3 per EC5
  • kmod (modification factor): 0.8 for medium-term loading, service class 1
  • Dead load allowance: 0.5 kN/m² (plasterboard ceiling, joists, boarding)

Required imposed loads (Eurocode 1)

  • Storage only: 0.25 kN/m² (BS EN 1991-1-1, Category A)
  • Light habitable: 1.0 kN/m²
  • Full habitable room: 1.5 kN/m² (BS EN 1991-1-1, Category A)

Important disclaimer

This is a simplified bending check only. A full structural assessment should also check shear capacity, deflection limits (L/333 for plasterboard ceilings), and bearing at supports. Always consult a structural engineer for loft conversions and significant storage loads. Reference: Approved Document A, BS EN 1995-1-1 (Eurocode 5), BS EN 1991-1-1 (Eurocode 1).

Frequently Asked Questions

Last updated: February 2026

All calculations are estimates. Verify with your supplier.