Beam Reaction Calculator

Solve beam reactions using flexible supports and load cases. Export results quickly for project reports. Design decisions improve with organized calculations and practical summaries.

Input model

Beam geometry and loading

Use downward forces as positive values. Use positive moments for counterclockwise rotation.

This tool solves statically determinate, simply supported beams with two vertical supports.

Point loads

Distributed loads

Applied moments

Reset form
Formula used

Static equilibrium relations

For a simply supported beam, the vertical reactions come from force and moment equilibrium.

1. Sum of vertical forces: RA + RB = ΣF

2. Sum of moments about support A: RB(xB - xA) + ΣM - Σ(Fx) = 0

3. Reaction at B: RB = [Σ(Fx) - ΣM] / (xB - xA)

4. Reaction at A: RA = ΣF - RB

5. For each UDL, the equivalent point load is wL acting at the segment midpoint.

Positive force inputs are treated as downward loads. Positive moments are treated as counterclockwise actions.

How to use

Calculation workflow

  1. Enter the beam length and both support locations.
  2. Set your preferred force and length units.
  3. Add any point loads with magnitudes and positions.
  4. Add distributed loads by entering intensity, start, and end positions.
  5. Add applied moments using positive values for counterclockwise rotation.
  6. Click Calculate reactions to show the support forces above the form.
  7. Review the equilibrium checks, breakdown tables, and resultant location.
  8. Use the export buttons to save the calculation summary as CSV or PDF.
Example data table

Sample beam reaction case

Parameter Value Notes
Beam length 8 m Support A at 0 m and Support B at 8 m
Point loads 12 kN at 2 m, 18 kN at 6 m Both are downward loads
UDL 4 kN/m from 3 m to 7 m Equivalent to 16 kN at 5 m
Applied moment 10 kN·m at 5 m Counterclockwise positive
Reaction at A 20.75 kN upward From force equilibrium
Reaction at B 25.25 kN upward From moment equilibrium
FAQs

Common questions

1. What beam type does this calculator solve?

It solves statically determinate, simply supported beams with two vertical supports. Point loads, distributed loads, self weight, and applied moments can be combined in one model.

2. How are point loads treated?

Each point load acts directly at its entered position. Positive values are taken as downward forces. Negative values can represent uplift or upward actions.

3. How does the calculator handle distributed loads?

Each uniform distributed load becomes an equivalent point load equal to intensity multiplied by loaded length. That equivalent acts at the loaded segment midpoint.

4. Why can a reaction be negative?

A negative reaction means the support force acts downward under the chosen sign convention. This can happen when moments or uplift loads shift equilibrium strongly.

5. Does the moment position change the reactions?

For a pure applied couple on a statically determinate beam, the reaction effect depends on the moment magnitude and sign, not its listed position.

6. What is the resultant load location?

It is the single equivalent position of all vertical loads only. Applied moments are excluded because they create rotation without adding net vertical force.

7. What do the equilibrium checks confirm?

They verify that the final reactions satisfy vertical force balance and moment balance. Values near zero indicate the calculation is internally consistent.

8. Can I use different units?

Yes. Enter any consistent force and length units, such as N and mm or kN and m. Moment units update automatically from those choices.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.