Structural Load Calculator Domestic 2026 | Building Regulations Load Calculator
Structural Load Calculator Domestic 2026
UK Building Regulations Structural Load Calculator
Dead Load, Live Load & Total Load Calculator
Structural load calculations are essential for ensuring building safety and compliance with Building Regulations Approved Document A (Structure). Our Structural Load Calculator helps calculate dead loads, live loads, and total structural loads for domestic residential buildings following BS EN 1991 Eurocode 1 standards applicable in 2026.
Accurate load calculations determine foundation requirements, beam sizes, column dimensions, and overall structural integrity. This calculator provides preliminary load assessments for floors, roofs, walls, and complete building structures. All results should be verified by a qualified structural engineer before construction.
🏗️ Structural Load Calculator
Calculate dead loads, live loads, and total structural loads
Building Parameters
Floor Construction
Roof Construction
Wall Construction
Total Building Load
0 kN
0 Tonnes
Load Summary
Total Dead Load
0 kN
Total Live Load
0 kN
Floor Area
0 m²
Load per m²
0 kN/m²
Dead Load Breakdown
Floor Slab Load0 kN
Floor Finish Load0 kN
Roof Load0 kN
Wall Load0 kN
Ceiling/Plasterboard0 kN
Column Load Estimate
Ground Floor Column Load0 kN
Design Load (with 1.5 factor)0 kN
Recommended Column Size-
Understanding Structural Loads 2026
Structural loads represent forces acting on buildings. Proper load calculation ensures structures safely support all anticipated weights without collapse or excessive deflection. UK Building Regulations require calculations following BS EN 1991 (Eurocode 1) for actions on structures.
✅ Types of Structural Loads:
Dead Load (DL): Permanent loads - structure weight, walls, floors, roof (measured in kN/m²)
Live Load (LL): Variable loads - occupants, furniture, equipment (BS EN 1991-1-1)
Imposed Load: Floor finishes, services, partitions (superimposed dead load)
Wind Load: Lateral forces from wind pressure (BS EN 1991-1-4)
Snow Load: Roof snow accumulation (BS EN 1991-1-3)
Seismic Load: Earthquake forces (rarely significant in UK)
BS EN 1991 Load Standards
Load Type
Residential Value
Standard Reference
Application
Live Load - Domestic Rooms
1.5 kN/m²
BS EN 1991-1-1 Table 6.2
Bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms
Live Load - Stairs/Landings
3.0 kN/m²
BS EN 1991-1-1 Table 6.2
Staircases, corridors, hallways
Live Load - Balconies
4.0 kN/m²
BS EN 1991-1-1 Table 6.2
External balconies (assembly loads)
Roof Live Load (Access)
1.5 kN/m²
BS EN 1991-1-1
Accessible flat roofs
Roof Live Load (No Access)
0.6 kN/m²
BS EN 1991-1-1
Pitched roofs, maintenance only
Partition Allowance
1.0 kN/m²
BS EN 1991-1-1
Movable internal partitions
Domestic Rooms
Live Load1.5 kN/m²
StandardBS EN 1991-1-1
UseBedrooms, Living
Stairs/Corridors
Live Load3.0 kN/m²
StandardBS EN 1991-1-1
UseStaircases
Roof (No Access)
Live Load0.6 kN/m²
StandardBS EN 1991-1-1
UsePitched Roofs
Dead Load Values for Common Materials
Dead loads represent permanent structural weight. Accurate material weight estimation is critical for foundation design, beam sizing, and column capacity. Values below represent typical UK construction following Concrete Centre and TRADA guidance.
Concrete Slab (150mm)
Dead Load: 3.75 kN/m²
RCC Density: 25 kN/m³
Calculation: 0.15m × 25 = 3.75 kN/m²
Applications: Suspended floors, ground slabs
With Screed (65mm): +1.60 kN/m² = 5.35 kN/m²
Precast Concrete Floor (150mm)
Dead Load: 3.00 kN/m²
Lighter than cast in-situ
Includes: Precast units + infill
Applications: Multi-storey buildings
Advantage: Faster construction, lighter weight
Timber Floor (Joists + Boards)
Dead Load: 0.25 kN/m²
Joists: 0.15 kN/m²
Boards: 0.10 kN/m²
Applications: Traditional house construction
With Plasterboard Ceiling: +0.20 kN/m²
Cavity Wall (102.5mm + 102.5mm)
Dead Load: 2.00 kN/m² (per m height)
Brickwork Density: ~20 kN/m³
Total Thickness: 270mm with cavity/insulation
Applications: External walls UK standard
With Plaster: +0.20 kN/m² inside
Pitched Roof - Clay Tiles
Dead Load: 0.65 kN/m² (on slope)
Tiles: 0.45-0.65 kN/m²
Battens + Felt: 0.05 kN/m²
Rafters: 0.10 kN/m²
Total (35° pitch): ~0.80 kN/m² on slope
Pitched Roof - Concrete Tiles
Dead Load: 0.45 kN/m² (interlocking)
Plain Concrete: 0.75 kN/m²
Lighter than clay
Applications: Modern house construction
With Structure: ~0.60 kN/m² total
Flat Roof - Asphalt Finish
Dead Load: 0.80 kN/m²
2-Layer Asphalt: 0.42 kN/m²
Deck + Joists: 0.20 kN/m²
Insulation: 0.01 kN/m²
Ceiling: 0.15 kN/m²
Floor Finishes (Additional)
Ceramic Tiles + Adhesive: 0.60 kN/m²
Screed (65mm): 1.60 kN/m²
Carpet + Underlay: 0.10 kN/m²
Timber Flooring: 0.20 kN/m²
Vinyl/Laminate: 0.10 kN/m²
Load Calculation Methodology
Structural load calculations follow systematic procedures combining dead loads, imposed loads, and live loads. Total loads determine foundation size, beam capacity, and column dimensions. Engineers apply partial safety factors following BS EN 1990 (Basis of Structural Design).
📐 Basic Load Calculation Steps:
Step 1: Calculate Dead Load
Slab Load = Floor Area × Slab Weight (kN/m²)
Finish Load = Floor Area × Finish Weight (kN/m²)
Wall Load = Wall Area × Wall Weight (kN/m²)
Roof Load = Roof Area × Roof Weight (kN/m²)
Total Dead Load = Sum of all permanent loads
Step 2: Calculate Live Load
Floor Live Load = Floor Area × 1.5 kN/m² (domestic)
Stair Live Load = Stair Area × 3.0 kN/m²
Roof Live Load = Roof Area × 0.6 kN/m² (no access)
Columns transfer building loads to foundations. Ground floor columns carry loads from all upper floors. Column sizing depends on total load, material (concrete, steel, timber), and slenderness ratio. Typical domestic columns are 230×230mm concrete or 152×152mm steel.
Column Load Distribution
Building Configuration
Load per Column
Recommended Size
Material
Single Storey (4m × 4m bay)
50-80 kN
150×150mm or 152UC23
Concrete or Steel
Two Storey (4m × 4m bay)
100-150 kN
230×230mm or 203UC46
Concrete or Steel
Three Storey (4m × 4m bay)
150-220 kN
300×300mm or 254UC73
Concrete or Steel
Extension (3m × 3m bay)
40-70 kN
150×150mm or 127UC
Concrete or Steel
Single Storey Column
Load50-80 kN
Size150×150mm
MaterialConcrete/Steel
Two Storey Column
Load100-150 kN
Size230×230mm
MaterialConcrete/Steel
Three Storey Column
Load150-220 kN
Size300×300mm
MaterialConcrete/Steel
Foundation Load Bearing Requirements
Foundation design depends on total building load and ground bearing capacity. UK ground conditions vary significantly: London clay (75-150 kN/m²), sand (100-300 kN/m²), rock (>600 kN/m²). Site investigation determines actual bearing capacity. Strip foundations are most common for domestic buildings.
⚠️ Foundation Design Considerations:
Bearing Capacity: Ground must support total building load without excessive settlement
Foundation Width: Calculated as Total Load ÷ Safe Bearing Capacity ÷ Foundation Length
Professional Design: Always required - site-specific ground conditions vary significantly
Beam Load Calculations
Beams support floor and roof loads, transferring weight to columns or walls. Steel beams (Universal Beams/UB sections) are common for domestic construction due to strength and relatively shallow depth. Timber beams suit lighter loads. Beam selection requires deflection and bending moment calculations.
Steel Beam 152×89 UB 16kg/m
Load Capacity: 15-20 kN (3m span)
Typical Use: Small openings, single storey
Span Range: 2.5-4.0m
Applications: Internal doorways, small extensions
Cost: £80-120 per beam (3m)
Steel Beam 203×133 UB 25kg/m
Load Capacity: 25-35 kN (4m span)
Typical Use: Standard openings, two storey
Span Range: 3.0-5.0m
Applications: Living room openings, extensions
Cost: £150-220 per beam (4m)
Steel Beam 254×146 UB 31kg/m
Load Capacity: 40-55 kN (4.5m span)
Typical Use: Large openings, two storey
Span Range: 3.5-6.0m
Applications: Open-plan conversions, garages
Cost: £220-320 per beam (4.5m)
Steel Beam 305×165 UB 40kg/m
Load Capacity: 60-80 kN (5m span)
Typical Use: Large spans, three storey
Span Range: 4.0-7.0m
Applications: Major structural openings
Cost: £320-480 per beam (5m)
Timber Beam 75×225mm C24
Load Capacity: 8-12 kN (3m span)
Typical Use: Loft conversions, light loads
Span Range: 2.5-4.0m
Applications: Roof openings, non-structural walls
Cost: £40-70 per beam (3m)
Engineered I-Joist (300mm)
Load Capacity: 15-22 kN (5m span)
Typical Use: Floor joists, long spans
Span Range: 4.0-6.5m
Applications: Open-plan floors, new builds
Cost: £35-60 per joist (5m)
Load Combinations and Safety Factors
Building Regulations require designs to consider multiple load scenarios simultaneously. Eurocode 0 (BS EN 1990) defines load combinations ensuring structures remain safe under worst-case conditions. Partial safety factors account for material variability and calculation uncertainties.
Ultimate Limit State (ULS) Combinations
Load Combination
Formula
Purpose
Critical For
Persistent Combination
1.35 DL + 1.5 LL
Normal building use, strength design
Beams, columns, foundations
Dead Load Only
1.35 DL
Minimum load case, uplift check
Lightweight roofs, wind uplift
With Wind Load
1.35 DL + 1.5 WL + 0.75 LL
Lateral stability, overturning
Tall buildings, exposed locations
Serviceability (SLS)
1.0 DL + 1.0 LL
Deflection limits, cracking
Beam deflection (span/360 limit)
Persistent Combination
Formula1.35 DL + 1.5 LL
PurposeStrength Design
Critical ForBeams, Columns
Serviceability (SLS)
Formula1.0 DL + 1.0 LL
PurposeDeflection Check
LimitSpan/360
Structural Calculations Documentation
Building Control requires structural calculations for most domestic projects. Calculations must be prepared or checked by a qualified structural engineer (IStructE or ICE member). Documentation demonstrates compliance with Approved Document A.
📋 Required Structural Calculations Include:
Load Calculations: Dead loads, live loads, wind loads, load combinations
Foundation Design: Size, depth, reinforcement based on ground conditions
What is the difference between dead load and live load?
Dead load is permanent weight - structure, walls, floors, roof, fixed equipment (stays constant). Live load is variable weight - people, furniture, movable equipment (changes over time). BS EN 1991-1-1 specifies 1.5 kN/m² live load for domestic rooms, 3.0 kN/m² for stairs. Dead loads typically 4-6 kN/m² for concrete floors, 0.5-1.0 kN/m² for timber floors. Total design load combines both with safety factors.
How do I calculate total building load?
Calculate area-by-area: (1) Floor loads = Floor area × (slab + finish + live load), (2) Roof loads = Roof area × (roof construction + ceiling), (3) Wall loads = Wall area × wall weight per m². Sum all components. Example two-storey 10m×8m house: Floors 80m² × 6 kN/m² = 480 kN, Roof 80m² × 1.5 kN/m² = 120 kN, Walls 120m² × 2 kN/m² = 240 kN. Total ≈ 840 kN (84 tonnes).
Do I need a structural engineer for my extension?
Yes, for most extensions. Structural engineer required when: removing/altering load-bearing walls, installing steel beams, building over 30m², adding second storey, poor ground conditions, near boundaries. Engineer produces calculations showing compliance with Building Regulations Part A. Cost £400-1200 depending on project complexity. Building Control requires stamped calculations before approving work.
What size steel beam do I need for a 4m opening?
Depends on load above. Typical two-storey house (4m span, single storey above): 203×133 UB 25kg/m or 254×146 UB 31kg/m. Calculate load: 4m span × 3m tributary width × 8 kN/m² (total load) = 96 kN. 203UB25 suitable for 80-100 kN at 4m span. Always verify with structural engineer - site-specific factors (floor type, wall positions, point loads) significantly affect requirements.
How deep should foundations be for a two-storey house?
Minimum 1.0m depth (Building Regulations protection against frost heave). Typical strip foundation: 450-600mm width for two-storey on good ground (bearing capacity >100 kN/m²). Poor ground requires wider foundations or raft. Foundation width = Total wall load ÷ Safe bearing capacity. Example: 100 kN/m wall load ÷ 100 kN/m² ground = 1.0m width minimum. Site investigation determines actual ground conditions.
What is a kN and how does it relate to tonnes?
kN = kilonewton, unit of force. 1 kN ≈ 100 kg (102 kg precisely). 10 kN ≈ 1 tonne (1000 kg). Structural loads measured in kN or kN/m² (kilopascals). Example: 500 kN total building load = 50 tonnes. Load per area: 5 kN/m² = 500 kg per square meter. Engineers use kN; builders often think in tonnes. Conversion: divide kN by 10 for approximate tonnes.
How much load can a standard brick wall support?
Depends on wall thickness, height, and mortar. 102.5mm single-skin brick wall (3m high): 20-40 kN/m safe load-bearing capacity. 215mm cavity wall (3m high): 50-100 kN/m capacity. Calculations follow BS EN 1996 (Masonry Code). Factors: slenderness ratio (height÷thickness), eccentricity of load, brick strength (typically 10-20 N/mm²). Walls over 3.5m height or carrying heavy loads require engineer verification.
What are load combinations and why are they important?
Load combinations consider multiple loads acting simultaneously with safety factors. BS EN 1990 defines combinations ensuring structures remain safe. Ultimate Limit State (ULS): 1.35×Dead Load + 1.5×Live Load = strength design. Serviceability (SLS): 1.0×Dead Load + 1.0×Live Load = deflection checks. Wind combinations add lateral forces. Design must satisfy ALL combinations - critical case varies by element (beams usually ULS, deflection often SLS).
Can I use this calculator instead of hiring an engineer?
No. This calculator provides preliminary estimates only - NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION. Building Regulations require structural calculations by qualified engineer for: beam installations, column design, foundation sizing, wall removal, structural alterations. Engineers consider site-specific factors: ground conditions, existing structure condition, load paths, connection details, material properties. Calculator useful for initial planning/budgeting but cannot replace professional structural design.
How much do structural calculations cost in 2026?
Typical fees: Single beam installation £400-600, Extension (single storey) £600-1000, Extension (two storey) £1000-1800, Loft conversion £800-1200, Full house design £2000-5000. London/Southeast 20-30% higher. Includes: site visit, calculations, stamped drawings, Building Control liaison. Complex projects (poor ground, large spans, unusual loads) cost more. Shop around but prioritize competence - cheap calculations may fail Building Control review causing delays.