Sub-Guide – roofpitch.net – Updated June 2026

12/12 Roof Pitch

The classic 45 degree A-frame and Swiss chalet angle – the steepest pitch most builders still frame with standard dimensional lumber. Here is everything you need to know – the exact angle, rafter lengths for every building width, near full second-story attic space, material options, framing specs, and how it compares to 11/12 and 13/12.

12/12 Pitch at a Glance
45.00
degrees
1.414
pitch factor
100%
slope
1.732
hip/valley factor
16.97″
rafter per 12″ run
A-Frame
classic chalet angle
📐 45.00 degrees – rise equals run 📏 All materials compatible 🛠 OSHA steep-slope (specialized rigging) 🏠 Near full second-story attic
Chalet-style home with a steep 12/12 roof pitch showing the 45 degree slope angle
Section 01

What Is a 12/12 Roof Pitch?

A 12/12 roof pitch means the roof surface rises 12 inches vertically for every 12 inches of horizontal distance – the rise and the run are equal. You will also see it written as 12:12, 12-in-12, or “12 over 12.” All four notations describe the same slope.

In degrees, 12/12 equals exactly 45 degrees – calculated as arctan(12/12) x (180/pi). Because rise and run are identical, 12/12 is the one pitch you can sanity-check just by eye: if the roof looks like a perfect equal-sided triangle in cross-section, it is close to 12/12. This is the classic A-frame, Swiss chalet, and steep gothic-cottage angle, and it is generally considered the steepest pitch still commonly framed with standard dimensional lumber and a stick-built ridge rather than full engineered trusses or specialty framing.

12/12 Roof Pitch – Annotated Cross-Section
Rise = 12″ Run = 12″ 45.00° Rafter (1.414 x run) Building Width Ridge Height 12/12 Pitch
45.00°
Angle from horizontal
100%
Percent slope (12/12 x 100)
1.414
Pitch factor – multiply plan area by this
1.732
Hip and valley rafter factor

Why Builders Choose 12/12 – and Why Most Don’t

A 12/12 pitch is a deliberate architectural and performance choice, not a default:

  • Snow performance: Outstanding shedding even in the heaviest snow regions (climate zones 7 and 8 and above), which is why this pitch is a fixture of true alpine and mountain cabin construction.
  • Attic volume: Because ridge height equals the half span at exactly 1:1, a 12/12 roof on a typical building creates enough vertical space for an actual finished second floor, not just attic storage – this is the defining advantage over shallower pitches.
  • Architectural identity: The 45 degree angle is the signature look of A-frame cabins, Swiss chalets, and steep gothic-cottage designs. It is also frequently used selectively – on a single front gable, dormer, or entry feature – rather than across the entire roof, to add a dramatic accent without the full cost of a 12/12 main roof.
  • Material flexibility: Every standard residential roofing material installs at 12/12, though the steeper angle changes handling, fastening, and crew logistics for heavier materials like tile.

The trade-offs are significant: roughly 41% more roof surface area than the building footprint, a substantial steep-slope labor premium because the surface cannot be walked without rigging or mechanical assistance, and rafters or hip members that get very long very fast on wider buildings. Most production home builders stop well short of 12/12 for these reasons, reserving it for chalet-style homes, mountain construction, or accent features.

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Quick reference: 12/12 pitch formulas Pitch factor = sqrt(1 + (12/12)^2) = sqrt(2) = 1.414 | Hip/valley factor = sqrt((12/12)^2 + 2) = sqrt(3) = 1.732 | Rafter per 12 inch run = 12 x 1.414 = 16.97 inches | Ridge height = half-span x 1.0 (ridge height simply equals the half span) | Use the roof pitch calculator to run any of these for your specific dimensions.
Section 02

Rafter Length Table: Every Standard Building Width

The table below gives the precise structural rafter length and full rafter length (including a standard 12-inch eave overhang) for a 12/12 pitch on every common building width from 16 to 60 feet. The 12/12 column is highlighted. Lengths are calculated using the pitch factor of 1.414 and rounded to the nearest inch for lumber ordering accuracy. Adjacent pitches (11/12 and 13/12) are shown for comparison.

Ridge board deduction not included. Subtract half the ridge board thickness (typically 0.75 inches for a 1.5-inch ridge board) from the ridge end of each rafter for precise layout. These lengths run from the outside face of the wall plate to the centerline of the ridge.
Building Width Run (half-width) 11/12 Rafter 12/12 Rafter ★ 13/12 Rafter 12/12 + 12″ OH Lumber to Buy
16 ft8 ft10′ 10″11′ 4″11′ 10″12′ 9″14 ft
18 ft9 ft12′ 3″12′ 9″13′ 3″14′ 2″16 ft
20 ft10 ft13′ 7″14′ 2″14′ 9″15′ 7″16 ft
22 ft11 ft14′ 11″15′ 7″16′ 3″17′ 0″18 ft
24 ft12 ft16′ 3″17′ 0″17′ 8″18′ 5″20 ft
26 ft13 ft17′ 8″18′ 5″19′ 2″19′ 10″20 ft
28 ft14 ft19′ 0″19′ 10″20′ 8″21′ 3″22 ft
30 ft15 ft20′ 4″21′ 3″22′ 1″22′ 8″24 ft
32 ft16 ft21′ 8″22′ 8″23′ 7″24′ 0″24 ft
34 ft17 ft23′ 1″24′ 0″25′ 1″25′ 5″26 ft
36 ft18 ft24′ 5″25′ 5″26′ 6″26′ 10″28 ft
40 ft20 ft27′ 2″28′ 3″29′ 6″29′ 8″30 ft
44 ft22 ft29′ 10″31′ 1″32′ 5″32′ 6″34 ft
48 ft24 ft32′ 7″33′ 11″35′ 5″35′ 4″36 ft
52 ft26 ft35′ 3″36′ 9″38′ 4″38′ 2″40 ft
60 ft30 ft40′ 8″42′ 5″44′ 3″43′ 10″44 ft
★ 12/12 pitch factor = 1.414 (square root of 2). Rafter = run x 1.414. Full rafter (+ 12″ OH) = (run + 1) x 1.414. Lumber to buy = next standard length above full rafter. Add 0.75″ ridge deduction at top for layout.

Hip Rafter Lengths at 12/12

Hip rafters run diagonally in plan at 45 degrees, making them significantly longer than common rafters for the same building. At 12/12 pitch, the hip/valley rafter factor is 1.732 (the square root of 3) applied to the horizontal run of the hip rafter. Hip members at this pitch grow long fast, and standard dimensional lumber runs out quickly.

— Hip rafter horizontal run = half the short building dimension Hip/Valley factor at 12/12 = sqrt((12/12)^2 + 2) = sqrt(1 + 2) = sqrt(3) = 1.732 Building 28 ft wide: hip run = 14 ft Hip rafter length = 14 x 1.732 = 24.25 ft = 24′ 3″ (near the limit of standard stock – consider LVL) Building 36 ft wide: hip run = 18 ft Hip rafter length = 18 x 1.732 = 31.18 ft = 31′ 2″ (engineered lumber or a scarf joint required) Building 40 ft wide: hip run = 20 ft Hip rafter length = 20 x 1.732 = 34.64 ft = 34′ 8″ (engineered lumber strongly recommended)
Section 03

Attic Space and Ridge Height at 12/12 Pitch

At exactly 12/12, ridge height above the top plate simply equals the half span – there is no scaling factor to apply because the rise to run ratio is 1.0. A 14-foot half-span produces a 14-foot ridge height, which on a building with 8-foot walls means the roof alone adds nearly as much vertical space as the entire first floor. This is the core reason 12/12 attics are so often framed as genuine second floors rather than left as crawl-and-storage space.

12/12 Attic Space Cross-Section – 28 ft Wide Building
Usable Zone (~16 ft wide) 6 ft+ standing headroom 14 ft ridge ht Wall ht 28 ft building width 12/12

Ridge Height and Usable Attic Width by Building Width

Building Width Half-Span (Run) Ridge Height Above Plate Total Ridge (8 ft walls) Usable Width at 6 ft Head Approx Attic Floor Area*
20 ft10 ft10 ft 0 in18 ft 0 in8 ft~320 sq ft
22 ft11 ft11 ft 0 in19 ft 0 in10 ft~400 sq ft
24 ft12 ft12 ft 0 in20 ft 0 in12 ft~480 sq ft
26 ft13 ft13 ft 0 in21 ft 0 in14 ft~560 sq ft
28 ft14 ft14 ft 0 in22 ft 0 in16 ft~640 sq ft
30 ft15 ft15 ft 0 in23 ft 0 in18 ft~720 sq ft
32 ft16 ft16 ft 0 in24 ft 0 in20 ft~800 sq ft
36 ft18 ft18 ft 0 in26 ft 0 in24 ft~960 sq ft
40 ft20 ft20 ft 0 in28 ft 0 in28 ft~1,120 sq ft
*Approximate floor area at 6 ft minimum headroom, 40 ft building length, open gable attic. Actual usable area varies with floor framing, HVAC equipment, and structural members.
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At 12/12, the attic is essentially a second story. On a 28-foot building, 12/12 produces 16 feet of usable width at 6-foot headroom – more than triple what a 6/12 roof gives on the same footprint. Because the volume is so large, many 12/12 designs frame the upper level with real stick-built knee walls and a finished floor system rather than open ceiling joists, effectively creating a true 1.5 or 2 story home under what reads as a single steep roofline.

A Note on Structural Design at This Pitch

One counterintuitive detail: the horizontal outward thrust a rafter places on the supporting wall actually decreases as pitch gets steeper, because more of the roof load travels straight down through the rafter rather than pushing the walls outward. Collar ties are still required by code at 12/12, but the bigger structural question at this pitch is usually whether to build a vaulted, collar-tie-free ceiling using a structural ridge beam – common when homeowners want the dramatic open ceiling that a 45 degree roof naturally suggests. A structural ridge beam capable of carrying half the roof load (rather than a simple non-structural ridge board) requires engineering review and is common practice on 12/12 chalet-style designs.

Section 04

11/12 vs 12/12 vs 13/12: Side-by-Side Comparison

12/12 is the recognizable, round-number landmark in the steep-pitch range. The table below shows exactly what you gain and give up by going one step shallower to 11/12 or one step steeper to 13/12. At this end of the pitch spectrum, every step adds meaningful cost and labor complexity.

11/12 vs 12/12 vs 13/12 – Profile Comparison (Same Building Width)
11/12 (42.5°) Shallower 12/12 (45.0°) ★ A-FRAME LANDMARK 13/12 (47.3°) Steeper – extreme range
Factor 11/12 12/12 ★ 13/12
Angle (degrees) 42.51° 45.00° 47.29°
Pitch Factor 1.357 1.414 1.474
Hip / Valley Factor 1.685 1.732 1.782
Ridge Height (28 ft building) 12 ft 10 in 14 ft 0 in 15 ft 2 in
Usable Attic Width at 6 ft head (28 ft) ~15 ft ~16 ft Round-number landmark ~17 ft
Rafter per 12″ run 16.28″ 16.97″ 17.69″
Material quantity vs footprint +35.7% +41.4% +47.4%
OSHA classification Steep-slope Full rigging Steep-slope Full rigging Steep-slope Specialist crews
Labor cost vs 4/12 baseline 1.30x to 1.45x 1.45x to 1.65x 1.60x to 1.85x
Snow shedding (US average) Excellent zones 2-8 Outstanding, all zones Alpine standard Outstanding, all zones
Practical framing method Dimensional lumber, standard ridge Dimensional lumber, ridge beam common Engineered ridge beam typical
Visible from street (proportions) Steep, dramatic Iconic A-frame / chalet Most recognized steep pitch Very steep, near-vertical look
Best for architecture Steep Tudor, chalet accents True chalet, A-frame cabin, gothic cottage Custom alpine, extreme statement roofs

When to Choose 11/12 Instead of 12/12

Choose 11/12 when you want nearly all the attic volume and snow-shedding benefit of a true A-frame without quite reaching the round-number 45 degree mark – useful when matching an existing structure or when a slightly gentler ridge cap detail is preferred. The material and labor savings versus 12/12 are modest (about 6 percentage points less material) but real on a full-house re-roof.

When to Choose 13/12 Instead of 12/12

Choose 13/12 only when the architectural design specifically calls for a steeper-than-standard A-frame look, or when a very narrow building needs extra ridge height for design reasons. At this end of the pitch range the practical difference between 12/12 and 13/12 is small relative to the added material (47.4% over footprint versus 41.4%) and labor cost, so most projects that consider going steeper than 12/12 are better served by a true engineered structural design from the outset.

Section 05

Roofing Material Compatibility at 12/12

Every major residential roofing material can technically be installed at 12/12 – there is no material that becomes incompatible purely because of pitch. What changes at 45 degrees is installation difficulty, crew logistics, and in some cases the practical recommendation around heavier materials. Below is the 2026 compatibility and cost guide for each material at 12/12.

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Asphalt Architectural Shingles
Ideal
Still an excellent choice at 12/12. Water and debris shed essentially as fast as possible, and there is no upper pitch limit for architectural shingles. Most manufacturers’ steep-slope installation guidance (extra fastener per shingle in high wind zones, careful nailing line discipline on a tilted work surface) applies above roughly 21 degrees and is fully in effect here.
2026 installed: $590 to $810 per square | 28×40 ft house: $10,600 to $14,600
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Metal R-Panel / Corrugated
Ideal
Performs very well at 12/12 – long panel runs and a steep surface shed snow and water about as cleanly as a metal roof can. Common on cabin and agricultural-style 12/12 structures. Panel handling on the steep surface takes longer per square than on a 6/12 or 8/12 roof, which shows up in the labor line rather than the material itself.
2026 installed: $700 to $1,010 per square | 28×40 ft house: $12,600 to $18,200
Standing Seam Metal
Ideal
The most common premium choice for true 12/12 chalet and alpine homes. Concealed fasteners and a smooth, nearly vertical surface combine for the cleanest possible snow release and minimal long-term maintenance – a major advantage when re-access to the roof for repairs is difficult at this pitch. 40 to 70 year lifespan.
2026 installed: $1,090 to $1,710 per square | 28×40 ft house: $19,600 to $30,800
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Cedar Shake / Wood Shingles
Good
Compatible and performs well at 12/12 – the steep angle keeps cedar drying quickly between rains, which helps long-term durability. Installation is noticeably slower at this pitch since each shake is fastened individually while the crew works from brackets, so expect a meaningfully higher labor share of the total cost than on a 6/12 cedar roof.
2026 installed: $930 to $1,320 per square | 28×40 ft house: $16,700 to $23,800
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Clay and Concrete Tile
Possible
Technically installable at 12/12, but treat this as a specialist application rather than a default choice. The combination of tile weight and a near-vertical work surface makes installation slow, mechanical fastening (not just gravity-set tiles) becomes mandatory rather than optional, and structural engineering review is essential, not just recommended. Many tile manufacturers and installers will flag this pitch range for additional review before quoting.
2026 installed: $1,010 to $1,550 per square | 28×40 ft house: $18,200 to $27,900
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Synthetic / Composite Slate
Good
A strong match for 12/12 Tudor and storybook-cottage designs – the steep angle shows off the deep shadow lines of synthetic slate especially well. Fully compatible with no material-side restrictions, and significantly lighter and easier to handle on a steep surface than natural slate or clay tile.
2026 installed: $780 to $1,160 per square | 28×40 ft house: $14,000 to $20,900
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Ordering the right quantity for a 12/12 pitch Multiply your building footprint by 1.414 to get sloped area, then add 10% for waste. A 28 x 40 ft house (1,120 sq ft footprint) x 1.414 = 1,584 sq ft sloped area = 15.84 squares. With 10% waste: 17.4 squares to order. Round up to the next full square for materials sold in square increments. Use the roof square footage calculator for a more precise figure that includes overhangs.
Section 06

12/12 Pitch Roof Cost Estimates (2026)

A 12/12 pitch carries the heaviest combination of cost drivers in the standard pitch range: roughly 41% more surface area than the building footprint, and a substantial steep-slope labor premium because the surface cannot be walked or staged without rigging, roof brackets, or a mechanical lift. The estimates below are for a 28 x 40 foot building (typical 3-bedroom home footprint) with a standard gable roof and 12-inch eave overhang.

28 x 40 ft Building – 12/12 Pitch – 2026 National Average
Full Roof Replacement Cost Range
Asphalt Arch.
$10,600
to $14,600
Metal Panel
$12,600
to $18,200
Standing Seam
$19,600
to $30,800
Cedar Shake
$16,700
to $23,800
Synthetic Slate
$14,000
to $20,900
Clay / Concrete Tile
$18,200
to $27,900
Cost ComponentQuantityUnit Cost (2026)SubtotalNotes
Architectural shingles18 squares$95 to $145/sq material$1,710 to $2,610Sloped area 15.84 sq + 10% waste
Synthetic underlayment18 squares$22 to $35/sq$396 to $630Standard for steep-slope use
OSB sheathing (if replacing)61 sheets$18 to $26/sheet$1,098 to $1,58628×40 sloped area / 28 sf net per sheet
Ice and water shield (2 courses at eaves)2 squares$65 to $95/sq$130 to $190IRC requires at eaves in zones 5-8
Ridge cap shingles42 linear ft$3.50 to $6.00/lf$147 to $252Building length + 2 ft per hip end
Drip edge148 linear ft$1.20 to $2.40/lf$178 to $355Perimeter of roof with overhangs
Fall protection / steep-slope rigging1 jobflat fee$500 to $1,200Roof brackets, anchors, harnesses, sometimes a mechanical lift
Labor (significant steep-slope premium)18 squares$280 to $380/sq$5,040 to $6,84045 to 65% premium over 6/12 baseline rate
Tear-off and disposal18 squares$40 to $65/sq$720 to $1,170Single layer; access difficulty adds time
Get quotes specifically from steep-slope specialists Some general roofing contractors decline or upcharge significantly for work at 45 degrees because it requires equipment and crew training beyond standard residential roofing. Ask any contractor quoting a 12/12 job how they plan to stage the work (roof brackets and harnesses versus scaffolding versus a mechanical lift) and whether the quote already includes that setup cost, since it is one of the largest variables in the total price at this pitch.
Section 07

Framing Specs and IRC 2021 Requirements for 12/12

The 12/12 pitch still falls within the IRC 2021 prescriptive framing provisions for rafter sizing, but the height and length of the rafters themselves, along with ridge design choices, deserve extra attention at this pitch. The specifications below apply to a standard single-family residential 12/12 gable roof in a climate zone with no extraordinary snow load.

Key 12/12 Geometry Values
Plumb cut angle45.00° from vertical
Seat cut angle45.00° from vertical
Rise per foot of run12 inches exactly
Common rafter factor1.414 per foot of run
Hip/valley factor1.732 per foot of run
Jack rafter shortening16.97″ per 12″ spacing
IRC 2021 Requirements
Rafter spacing16″ or 24″ OC per table
Max bird’s mouth depth (2×6)1.83″ (1/3 of 5.5″)
Max bird’s mouth depth (2×8)2.42″ (1/3 of 7.25″)
Ridge supportRidge board, or structural ridge beam for vaulted designs
Collar tie locationUpper 1/3 of rafter clear span
Collar tie spacingMax every 4 ft or every rafter pair

One useful memory aid at 12/12: the plumb cut and the seat cut are both exactly 45 degrees from vertical, since they are complementary angles that sum to 90 degrees and the pitch itself is 45 degrees. This is the only standard pitch where the two cuts on the rafter are identical angles.

Rafter Sizing for 12/12 Pitch: IRC 2021 Span Limits

The spans below come from IRC 2021 Table R802.4.1 for a 20 psf roof live load, 10 psf dead load, with ceiling attached to rafters at 16-inch on-center spacing. These limits are based on horizontal projected span, so they apply equally regardless of pitch. At 12/12, however, the rafter itself is far longer than the horizontal span it covers (1.414 feet of rafter per foot of span), so even a building width within the span table’s limit can require unusually long single pieces of lumber – check actual available lengths at your supplier before finalizing a framing plan. Confirm load assumptions with your local building department, especially in snow country.

Lumber SizeSpecies / GradeMax Horizontal Span (20 psf LL)Max Horizontal Span (30 psf LL)Common Application
2×6SPF #213′ 2″11′ 6″Spans up to 26 ft building width (13 ft run)
2×6Doug Fir-Larch #214′ 5″12′ 7″Spans up to 28 ft building width
2×8SPF #217′ 5″15′ 2″Spans up to 34 ft building width
2×8Doug Fir-Larch #219′ 0″16′ 7″Spans up to 38 ft building width
2×10SPF #222′ 2″19′ 4″Spans up to 44 ft building width
2×10Doug Fir-Larch #224′ 3″21′ 2″Spans up to 48 ft building width

Step-by-Step: Laying Out a 12/12 Common Rafter

1
Set the Framing Square
On the rafter stock, hold the framing square with 12 on the tongue (vertical leg) and 12 on the body (horizontal leg) along the top edge of the lumber – both legs read the same number, which is the easiest pitch to set up on the square. Mark along the tongue for the plumb cut line (45 degrees from vertical).
2
Mark the Ridge Plumb Cut
At the top (ridge) end of the rafter, draw the plumb cut line using the square set as above. Shorten the rafter by 3/4 inch (half the 1.5-inch ridge board thickness) measured perpendicular to the plumb cut. If you are using a structural ridge beam for a vaulted design, confirm the bearing detail with your engineer before cutting, since beam-bearing rafters are often notched differently than ridge-board rafters.
3
Step Off the Run
From the ridge plumb cut, step off the run by “stepping” the framing square along the rafter top edge: 12″ body and 12″ tongue at each step, once per foot of horizontal run. For a 14-foot run, make 14 steps. Mark the seat cut (bird’s mouth) plumb line at the last step. Because the rafter is unusually long relative to the building width at this pitch, double-check your step count carefully – a single missed step throws off the entire ridge height.
4
Cut the Bird’s Mouth
The bird’s mouth consists of the plumb cut (vertical) and the level (seat) cut (horizontal), and at 12/12 both of these cuts are 45 degrees from vertical. Maximum seat cut depth: 1/3 of rafter depth per IRC R802.4.2. For a 2×6 rafter (5.5″ actual), max seat cut = 1.83 inches.
5
Add the Tail / Overhang
From the seat cut, continue stepping the square for the overhang run. For a 12-inch horizontal overhang, add one more 12/12 step and mark the plumb tail cut (fascia cut). The fascia board will sit at a steep 45 degree angle to the rafter tail, so plan fascia and soffit details accordingly before ordering trim material.
6
Install and Verify
Install the first opposing pair at each end of the building and check ridge height with a level rod. For a 14-ft run at 12/12, the ridge should measure exactly 14 feet above the top of the wall plate. At this height, rafter setting is genuinely a two-person-minimum job with proper bracing and tie-off – do not attempt to set tall 12/12 rafters solo or without temporary bracing at each pair.
Collar tie placement for 12/12 roofs IRC Section R802.7 requires collar ties in the upper third of the clear attic space. On a 12/12 roof with a 14-foot ridge height, the upper third begins at 9 feet 4 inches above the top plate. If the design uses a vaulted ceiling with a structural ridge beam instead of collar ties, the ridge beam itself must be engineered to carry the load that collar ties would otherwise help resist – this is not optional and should never be skipped purely to preserve an open ceiling look.
Section 08

How to Measure and Confirm a 12/12 Pitch

Before ordering materials for a re-roof or pulling a permit, confirm the actual pitch of your existing roof. Do not assume a previous builder used exactly 12/12 – field verification is essential because 11/12, 12/12, and 13/12 can look very similar from the ground, and material ordering errors are expensive at this pitch given how much extra material a small pitch difference adds.

Attic Method (Most Reliable)

Go into the attic. Hold a 12-inch level flat against the underside of a rafter. Center the bubble. From the 12-inch mark on the level, measure straight down (perpendicular to the floor, not the rafter) to the bottom of the rafter. If the measurement is exactly 12 inches, you have a 12/12 pitch – rise equals run.

Common confusions: measuring to the top of the rafter instead of the bottom, and not holding the level perfectly horizontal. Both produce incorrect readings.

Roof Deck Method

This method is not recommended on a 12/12 roof surface itself – the deck is far too steep to stand or kneel on safely without rigging. If the attic is not accessible, use a digital angle finder or smartphone inclinometer app from a securely anchored position, or measure the gable end triangle from the ground with a tape measure and basic trigonometry instead of getting on the roof surface.

A reading of 45.0 degrees on an angle finder confirms 12/12 within normal tolerance.

— Confirming 12/12 from known dimensions: If you know the building width and ridge height above the wall plate: Rise = ridge height in inches Run = half building width in inches Pitch = rise / run x 12 Example: 24 ft building, ridge 12 ft above top plate Rise = 144 inches, Run = 144 inches Pitch = (144 / 144) x 12 = 1.0 x 12 = 12/12 confirmed (rise equals run) — Converting a degree reading to confirm 12/12: App reads 45.0 degrees: tan(45) x 12 = 1.0 x 12 = 12.0 = 12/12 App reads 44.0 degrees: tan(44) x 12 = 0.9657 x 12 = 11.59 – closer to 11.5/12, check attic App reads 46.0 degrees: tan(46) x 12 = 1.0355 x 12 = 12.43 – closer to 12.5/12, slightly steeper than 12/12
Section 09

Frequently Asked Questions: 12/12 Roof Pitch

What angle is a 12/12 roof pitch?

A 12/12 roof pitch equals exactly 45 degrees, calculated as arctan(12/12) x (180/pi) = arctan(1.0) x 57.296 = 45.0 degrees. Because the rise and run are equal, 12/12 is the only standard pitch where you can confirm the angle just by noticing the rise equals the run. It is the classic A-frame and Swiss chalet angle, and the steepest pitch commonly framed with standard dimensional lumber rather than full engineered trusses.

What is the rafter length for a 12/12 pitch?

The rafter length for a 12/12 pitch depends on building width. The pitch factor is 1.414 (the square root of 2), meaning every foot of horizontal run produces 1.414 feet of rafter. For common widths: 24 ft wide (12 ft run) = 16.97 ft structural rafter (17 ft 0 in), 18.38 ft (18 ft 5 in) with a 12 inch overhang. 28 ft wide (14 ft run) = 19.80 ft structural (19 ft 10 in), 21.21 ft (21 ft 3 in) with overhang. 32 ft wide (16 ft run) = 22.63 ft structural (22 ft 8 in), 24.04 ft (24 ft 0 in) with overhang. See the complete rafter length table above for every width from 16 to 60 feet.

How much attic space does a 12/12 roof give you?

A 12/12 pitch produces a ridge height exactly equal to the half span, since the rise to run ratio is 1.0. For a 28 foot wide building, that is 14 feet of ridge height above the top plate – almost twice the wall height itself. The usable width at 6 foot standing headroom is roughly 16 feet on a 28 foot building, and the attic floor area at 6 foot minimum headroom on a 40 foot long building is around 640 square feet. Because of this, 12/12 attics are commonly framed as an actual second floor with real stick-built knee walls rather than left as open storage space.

Is a 12/12 pitch good for snow?

Yes, a 12/12 pitch provides outstanding snow shedding and is the traditional choice for true alpine and chalet-style construction in the heaviest snow regions (climate zones 7 and 8 and above). At 45 degrees, accumulated snow slides off readily under its own weight, which is why this pitch shows up so often on mountain cabins and ski-region homes where standard 6/12 or 8/12 roofs would carry significant snow load between storms.

What is the pitch factor for 12/12 and how do I use it?

The pitch factor for 12/12 is 1.414, the square root of 2, calculated as sqrt(1 + (12/12)^2) = sqrt(2) = 1.414. Use it to convert plan area to sloped roof area: plan area x 1.414 = sloped area. For a 28 by 40 foot house: 1,120 sq ft x 1.414 = 1,584 sq ft sloped area = 15.84 squares. Add 10 percent waste to get 17.4 squares, rounded up to 18 squares to order. Use the roof square footage calculator to get an exact figure including overhangs and ridges.

How do I calculate the ridge height for a 12/12 pitch?

Ridge height above the top plate simply equals the half span, since the rise to run ratio for 12/12 is exactly 1.0. Half span is the building width divided by 2. For a 24 foot building: half span = 12 ft, ridge height = 12 ft. For a 28 foot building: ridge height = 14 ft. For a 32 foot building: ridge height = 16 ft. Add the wall height to get total ridge height above the floor. With standard 8 foot walls on a 28 foot building: 8 plus 14 equals 22 feet total ridge height above the floor.

Does a 12/12 pitch require fall protection?

Yes, and more than most steep-slope pitches. At 45 degrees, a 12/12 roof is too steep to walk or stand on without mechanical assistance, so crews rely on roof brackets, toe boards, and full personal fall arrest systems anchored well above the work area, and many crews use scaffolding or a mechanical lift rather than working freehand on the surface. This typically adds a 45 to 65 percent labor premium over a 6/12 baseline, and some roofing companies decline 12/12 work entirely or refer it to steep-slope specialists.

What is the hip and valley rafter factor for 12/12?

The hip and valley rafter factor for 12/12 pitch is 1.732, the square root of 3, calculated as sqrt((12/12)^2 + 2) = sqrt(3) = 1.732. Multiply your hip rafter horizontal run by 1.732 to get the actual hip rafter length. For a 28 foot wide building with a 14 foot hip run, the hip rafter length is 14 x 1.732 = 24.25 feet, or about 24 feet 3 inches. Hip rafters at this pitch grow long very quickly, so engineered lumber or a site-built scarf joint is common practice once the hip run exceeds about 16 to 18 feet.

Section 10

Calculators and Related Guides

Use these free tools to take your 12/12 pitch measurements to a complete material list and cost estimate. If you are in Texas and need a vetted contractor to measure and quote your roof replacement, see the lists for Houston, Austin, and Dallas.

Industry References

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IRC Chapter R802 contains the rafter span tables, bird’s mouth depth limits, collar tie requirements, and ridge support sizing that govern 12/12 framing in most US jurisdictions. Chapter R905 sets material-specific installation requirements; 12/12 exceeds every common minimum and maximum pitch threshold discussion for residential roofing materials, which is why installation method – not material compatibility – becomes the limiting factor at this pitch. Adopted in most US states through 2024 to 2026.
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The WFCM provides the engineering basis for IRC prescriptive rafter span tables. Rafter sizing values for 12/12 in this guide draw from WFCM Table R802.4.1 for SPF and Douglas Fir-Larch lumber species at 16-inch on-center spacing under standard residential roof loads; the WFCM also covers structural ridge beam design considerations relevant to vaulted 12/12 ceilings.
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Establishes the slope thresholds used to separate low-slope from steep-slope fall protection requirements, and the 6-foot height trigger for mandatory fall protection on all roofing work. At 45 degrees, a 12/12 pitch is well beyond any low-slope category and requires the full range of steep-slope protection – personal fall arrest systems, guardrails, or safety nets – with many crews also using mechanical means of staging rather than working directly on the unsupported surface.