Stair calculator
Enter your total floor-to-floor rise and a target riser height. You'll instantly get the number of risers, the exact riser height, the tread count, the total run, the stringer length and the stair angle — plus a comfort check against the classic stair rules.
We split the total rise into equal risers nearest your target, then size the run from the tread depth.
= √(rise² + run²). Cut length before any nosing or trim.
2R+T 25.4″ (24–27 rule) · R+T 18.2″ (17–18 rule)
Riser = rise ÷ steps. Treads = steps − 1. Run = treads × tread depth. Angle = arctan(rise ÷ run).
Common questions
- How do I calculate how many stairs I need?
- Divide your total floor-to-floor rise by a comfortable target riser height — about 7 in (175 mm) — and round to the nearest whole number. That is how many risers (steps up) you need, and the actual riser height is the total rise divided by that count. A 108-inch rise ÷ 7 ≈ 15.4, rounded to 15 risers, gives an actual riser of 108 ÷ 15 = 7.2 in. A standard flight has one fewer tread than risers, so 15 risers means 14 treads.
- What is the 27 rule for stairs?
- The 27 rule is a comfort guideline: two riser heights plus one tread depth should total roughly 24–27 inches, matching a typical adult stride. It extends the classic Blondel rule of 24–25 inches. A 7-inch riser with an 11-inch tread gives 2 × 7 + 11 = 25 inches — right in the middle of the band. Use it together with the 17-inch rule as a quick comfort sanity check.
- What is the 17 inch rule for stairs?
- The 17-inch rule says one riser height plus one tread depth should add up to about 17–18 inches for a comfortable stride. A 7-inch riser and an 11-inch tread sum to 18 inches; a steeper 7.5-inch riser pairs with a shallower 10-inch tread (17.5 inches). If riser + tread falls well outside 17–18 inches, the stairs feel cramped or over-stretched.
- How many stairs to get up 10 feet?
- Ten feet is 120 inches. At a 7-inch target riser, 120 ÷ 7 ≈ 17.1, so you would use 17 risers at an actual height of about 7.06 in, with 16 treads. Always round to whole, equal risers — uneven risers are a trip hazard. Enter 120 inches above to see the run, stringer length and angle for that flight.
- Is this a staircase or stair stringer calculator?
- Both. From your total rise it gives the full staircase layout — risers, riser height, treads, total run and angle — and it sizes the stringer (the sloped board you cut) by returning its exact length, so you can use it as a staircase calculator and a stair stringer calculator in one.
Want the full walk-through? Read the stair calculation guide →
Reference & education only. Not professional, engineering, or code-compliance advice. Estimates are based on published model codes; local amendments and your Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) govern. Always verify against the current adopted code and a licensed professional before doing work.
Last reviewed 2026-06.