Slope Grade Calculator

Use this free slope grade calculator to quickly determine slope percentage, angle, and ratio for your project. Enter values like rise and run to get accurate results, making it ideal for construction, landscaping, drainage planning, and road design.

By ConstructlyTools · Published: March 29, 2026 · Updated: April 13, 2026
Slope & Grade Calculator
📐 Formula
Grade % = (Rise ÷ Run) × 100 · Angle = arctan(Rise ÷ Run) · Slope Length = √(Rise² + Run²) · Ratio = 1 : (Run ÷ Rise)
Percent Grade
Enter rise and run above
Angle (degrees)
Slope Ratio
Rise over Distance
Slope Length

Grade % = rise ÷ run × 100 · A 2% grade rises 2 inches per 100 inches of horizontal run · Minimum drainage grade is typically 1–2% · ADA ramp max is 8.33%

How Does the Slope & Grade Calculator Work?

Slope and grade describe the same thing — how much a surface rises or falls over a horizontal distance — but expressed in different ways. This calculator converts between four common formats: percent grade, angle in degrees, rise/run ratio, and 1:X ratio notation. Enter any one format and get all others instantly.

Slope calculations are essential for drainage grading around foundations, driveway design, ramp construction, retaining wall planning, and site grading. Getting slope wrong causes water to pond against foundations, driveways to ice over dangerously, and ramps to fail accessibility requirements.

💡 Grade % vs Angle — Which to Use?

Percent grade is used in civil engineering, landscaping, road design, and site grading — because it directly tells you how many inches of rise per 100 inches of run, making drainage calculations intuitive. Degrees are used in roofing (pitch), surveying, and structural engineering. Ratio (1:X) is used in accessibility (ramps), drainage pipe design, and British civil engineering. Most construction applications use percent grade — it's the most practical unit for grading work.

Slope Reference Guide

Use this table to understand what common slope values mean in practice and where each is typically used.

% GradeRatioAngleDescriptionCommon Use
0.5%1:2000.29°Very gentle — nearly flatMinimum storm sewer slope, concrete floors
1%1:1000.57°Gentle drainage slopeMinimum paved surface drainage, gutters
2%1:501.15°Standard drainage gradeLawn grading away from foundations, patios
5%1:202.86°Moderate slopeWheelchair ramp max (ADA), gentle driveway
8.33%1:124.76°ADA ramp maximumAccessible ramp max — 1" rise per 12" run
10%1:105.71°Moderate-steepSteep driveway, lawn transition
15%1:6.78.53°SteepUpper limit for mowed lawns, most driveways
20%1:511.3°Very steepRetaining wall territory — erosion risk
33%1:318.4°ExtremeMaximum cut slope for many soils without retaining
100%1:145°45° — equal rise & runVery steep — requires retaining wall or special engineering

Drainage & Grading Standards

Proper grading is the most cost-effective water management strategy for any property. The goal is to direct surface water away from structures and toward appropriate drainage outlets — without creating erosion or ponding elsewhere on the lot.

ApplicationMin GradeMax GradeNotes
Lawn away from foundation2% (2"/10 ft)10%IRC requires 6" drop in first 10 ft from foundation
Concrete / paved patio1–2%5%Slope away from house; 1/8" per ft minimum
Gravel driveway1%15%Above 12% causes gravel washout in heavy rain
Asphalt / concrete driveway1%20%Above 15% can be slippery in ice — ADA limit is 8.33%
ADA accessible ramp8.33% (1:12)Max 30" rise before landing; cross-slope max 2%
Drainage swale / ditch0.5–1%5%Below 0.5% causes standing water; above 5% causes erosion
Storm sewer / drain pipe0.5%Minimum to prevent sediment deposit in pipe
Lawn for mowing15–20%Above 20% most mowers can't operate safely
✅ The 6-Inch Rule for Foundation Grading

The IRC building code requires the ground to slope away from a home's foundation at a minimum of 6 inches within the first 10 feet of horizontal distance — that's a 5% grade for the first 10 feet. This is the single most important grading requirement for preventing basement water infiltration. Use our landscaping cost calculator to estimate the cost of regrading your yard to meet this requirement.

Example Calculations

Example 1 — Lawn Grading Away from Foundation

Target: 6-inch drop over 10 feet (IRC minimum)

Grade % = (6 ÷ 120) × 100 = 5% grade

Angle = arctan(6 ÷ 120) = arctan(0.05) = 2.86°

Ratio = 1 : (120 ÷ 6) = 1:20

Example 2 — Driveway Grade Check

Driveway: 40 ft long, rises 4 ft from street to garage

Grade % = (4 ÷ 40) × 100 = 10% grade

Angle = arctan(4 ÷ 40) = 5.71°

Assessment: 10% is within the typical max of 15% for residential driveways but may be uncomfortable in ice/snow. Consider 8% maximum in cold climates.

Example 3 — ADA Ramp Check

Ramp: 18 inches rise, need to find minimum run length

ADA max grade = 8.33% = 1:12 ratio

Run = Rise × 12 = 18 × 12 = 216 inches (18 ft) minimum run

At 18" rise, a landing is required every 30" of rise — so one landing needed at 30" if rise exceeds that.

Example 4 — Converting Percent Grade to Inches per Foot

2% grade — how many inches of fall per foot?

2% = 2/100 = 0.02 ft per ft = 0.02 × 12 = 0.24 inches per linear foot

Or: ¼ inch per foot — a common rule of thumb for patio and paved surface drainage.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a 2% slope in inches per foot?+
A 2% slope equals 0.24 inches of rise per linear foot (2% ÷ 100 × 12 inches = 0.24 in/ft). In practice, this is just under ¼ inch per foot. This is the standard minimum slope for patios, concrete slabs, and lawn grading away from buildings to ensure water drains away rather than pooling. For most construction applications, ¼ inch per foot (approximately 2%) is the commonly used rule of thumb for surface drainage.
What is the difference between slope and grade?+
Slope and grade mean the same thing — the ratio of vertical rise to horizontal run — but are expressed differently depending on the context. Grade is almost always expressed as a percentage (rise/run × 100), commonly used in civil engineering, landscaping, and road design. Slope can be expressed as a percentage, a ratio (rise:run or 1:X), or an angle in degrees. In everyday construction usage, "grade" typically means percent grade, while "slope" can mean any of these formats.
What is the minimum slope for drainage?+
For outdoor surfaces: minimum 1% grade (1 inch per 8 feet) for paved surfaces like concrete and asphalt — though 2% is recommended. For lawn grading away from foundations: minimum 5% for the first 10 feet (6 inches of drop). For drainage pipes and swales: minimum 0.5% (1/2 inch per 100 inches). Flat or near-flat surfaces (under 0.5% grade) retain water and cause ponding, which leads to erosion, mold, and foundation damage over time.
What is the maximum driveway slope?+
For residential driveways: most municipalities allow a maximum of 15–20% grade. However, practical limits are lower — above 12%, vehicles scrape on steep entrances; above 15%, driveways become dangerously slippery in ice and snow. In cold climates, 8–10% maximum is recommended. ADA accessible parking areas must be no steeper than 5% in any direction. Always check local zoning and permit requirements — some cities restrict driveway slopes to 10–12% maximum.
How do I measure slope in my yard?+
The simplest method: drive a stake at the high point, drive another at the low point, stretch a level string line between them at the high point's ground level, and measure the vertical distance from the string to the ground at the low point — that's your rise. The horizontal distance between stakes is your run. Divide rise by run and multiply by 100 for percent grade. For longer distances, use a builder's level or laser level on a tripod for more accurate readings over uneven terrain.
What is a 1:12 slope?+
A 1:12 slope means 1 unit of rise for every 12 units of horizontal run — equivalent to 8.33% grade or 4.76 degrees. This is the ADA maximum slope for accessible ramps and is also a widely used reference point in construction. In roofing, 1/12 is a very low pitch. In drainage, 1:12 is a steep grade. In ramp design, 1:12 (8.33%) is the maximum allowed — steeper ramps are not ADA compliant without additional handrails and landings.
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