Dachneigung-Rechner

Welche Neigung hat mein Dach? Kostenloser Dachneigungsrechner — Höhe und Grundlänge eingeben für sofortigen Winkel, Neigung in % und Flächenmultiplikator.

Ad — 728x90 — Leaderboard
Geben Sie Ihre Maße ein

So verwenden Sie diesen Rechner

  1. 1Measure the vertical rise of your roof in inches — this is how many inches the roof goes up over a horizontal distance.
  2. 2Enter the horizontal run in inches (standard is 12 inches for conventional pitch notation like 6/12).
  3. 3Click Calculate to get the pitch ratio, angle in degrees, slope percentage, and area multiplier.
  4. 4Use the area multiplier to convert your flat (plan-view) roof area to actual roof surface area — multiply flat area by this number.
Ad — 728x90 — Mid-Page

Über dieses Material

Roof pitch is the ratio of vertical rise to horizontal run, typically expressed as inches of rise per 12 inches of run (e.g., 6/12). It is one of the most critical dimensions in roofing because it determines material suitability, water shedding performance, structural load paths, and walkability for installers. Common residential pitches range from 4/12 to 8/12. A 4/12 pitch (18.4°) is the minimum recommended for standard asphalt shingles and is easy to walk on. A 6/12 pitch (26.6°) is the most popular in the United States, offering a balanced look and good water shedding. An 8/12 pitch (33.7°) and steeper provides excellent snow shedding and a dramatic roofline but increases material costs and labor difficulty. In northern climates with heavy snowfall — such as Minnesota, Michigan, and the Northeast — steeper pitches of 8/12 to 12/12 are common to prevent dangerous snow accumulation. In the South and Southwest, lower pitches of 4/12 to 6/12 prevail because snow load is not a concern. Low-slope roofs (below 2/12) require special roofing systems such as modified bitumen, TPO, or EPDM membrane because shingles cannot reliably shed water at such shallow angles. Pitch also affects material quantity: a 12/12 pitch roof has 41% more surface area than the same footprint at flat, requiring proportionally more shingles, underlayment, and sheathing. The roof area multiplier converts plan-view area to actual surface area, saving contractors from costly underestimates.

Einbautipps

  • Use a pitch gauge or speed square placed on a rafter or truss tail to verify pitch before ordering materials.
  • For inaccessible roofs, measure pitch from inside the attic by holding a level horizontally and measuring rise at 12 inches of run.
  • When using a smartphone inclinometer app, place the phone directly on the roof surface or a rafter for the most accurate angle reading.
  • Always verify pitch on multiple sections of the roof — dormers, additions, and garage roofs often have different pitches than the main roof.
  • Convert pitch to the area multiplier before estimating materials — a steeper roof uses significantly more shingles, underlayment, and sheathing than the flat footprint suggests.

Häufige Fehler, die Sie vermeiden sollten

  • Confusing rise and run — rise is vertical (up), run is horizontal (across). Swapping them gives the wrong pitch.
  • Measuring along the slope instead of horizontally for the run — run must be the horizontal distance, not the rafter length.
  • Assuming the entire roof has one pitch — many homes have multiple pitches across different sections.
  • Using flat (plan-view) roof area for material estimates without applying the pitch multiplier — this leads to material shortages on steep roofs.
  • Ignoring minimum pitch requirements for the chosen roofing material — asphalt shingles need at least 2/12, and standard installation requires 4/12 or greater.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Verwandte Rechner