| Scenario | Balcony (m) | Area (m2) | Total weight (kg) | Loaded area (m2) | Load (kg/m2) | Allowable (kg/m2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planters along railing, two people | 3.00 x 1.50 | 4.50 | 401.00 | 2.25 | 178.22 | 350 |
| Dense container garden, single zone | 2.40 x 1.20 | 2.88 | 520.00 | 1.20 | 433.33 | 350 |
| Lightweight setup, spread across floor | 3.50 x 1.40 | 4.90 | 260.00 | 4.90 | 53.06 | 350 |
- Balcony area: Area = Length x Width
- Adjusted unit weight (wet items): AdjUnit = Unit x (1 + WaterFactor/100)
- Item line weight: Line = AdjUnit x Quantity
- Total weight: Total = Sum(Line weights) + (PeopleCount x PersonWeight)
- Distributed load: Load = Total / LoadedArea (kg/m2)
- Design load: Design = Load x SafetyFactor
- Utilization: Utilization = Design / Allowable (<= 1.00 is within limit)
- Measure the balcony length and width to get total area.
- Enter the allowable load from your building documentation.
- Select a loaded area mode if items are clustered.
- Add your garden items with unit weight and quantity.
- Mark “Wet” for saturated planters and water containers.
- Click Calculate to see load, utilization, and margin.
- Use CSV or PDF export to save your estimate.
Typical balcony ratings and what they mean
Balcony ratings are usually expressed as allowable distributed load in kg/m2 or kN/m2. Many residential balconies fall in the 250–400 kg/m2 range, but actual limits vary by building, age, and design. Use the rating from your documentation whenever possible, then compare your calculated design load to that value.
Why concentrated planter zones matter
A container garden often sits in a narrow strip near the railing. If 450 kg of planters and supplies are placed on only 2.0 m2, the local pressure is 225 kg/m2, even if the full balcony is 5.0 m2. The loaded-area setting lets you model that concentrated zone instead of assuming perfect distribution.
Water content and seasonal weight changes
Wet soil can weigh much more than dry media, and stored water adds quickly. A 25 kg planter that becomes 15% heavier when saturated becomes 28.75 kg. After rain or heavy irrigation, several planters can add tens of kilograms. Apply the water factor to wet items to reflect real conditions during watering days.
Interpreting utilization and safety margin
Utilization is the design load divided by the allowable rating. Values under 100% indicate capacity remains after applying your safety factor. Margin shows how much capacity is left per square meter. For example, with an allowable 350 kg/m2 and a design load of 280 kg/m2, the margin is 70 kg/m2.
Layout strategies for healthy plants and safer floors
Spread heavy planters across a wider zone, avoid stacking soil bags, and use lighter potting mixes where suitable. Group watering tools in one small bin instead of multiple containers. If utilization approaches the limit, reduce planter count, downsize containers, or move water storage indoors and refill as needed.
Example data
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Balcony size | 3.0 m x 1.5 m (4.5 m2) |
| Allowable load | 350 kg/m2 |
| Loaded area | 2.25 m2 (50% zone) |
| Total weight | 401 kg (items + people) |
| Calculated load | 178.22 kg/m2 |
| Safety factor | 1.25 |
| Design load | 222.78 kg/m2 |
| Utilization | 63.7% |
What is “loaded area” and when should I change it?
Loaded area is the portion of the balcony carrying most of the garden weight. Reduce it when items cluster in one zone, such as along a railing, to estimate local pressure more accurately.
How can I estimate planter weight if I do not have a scale?
Use manufacturer specs for container volume and add approximate soil and plant weight. A conservative shortcut is 10–15 kg for small pots, 20–35 kg for medium, and 35–60+ kg for large planters, depending on media and moisture.
Should I include rainfall or irrigation water?
Yes, indirectly. Mark planters and wet storage as “Wet” and apply a water factor to represent saturated media and retained water after watering or rain.
What safety factor should I use for garden planning?
Many users choose 1.10 to 1.30 for extra caution with uncertain weights. If your inputs are rough or conditions vary, a higher factor provides more buffer, but it is not a substitute for verified building ratings.
Why does the calculator show kN/m2 and psf?
Different regions and references use different units. kN/m2 is common in engineering contexts, while psf is used in some building references. The calculator converts from kg/m2 so you can compare with your documents.
What should I do if the status is “Over limit”?
Lower the total weight or increase the loaded area by spreading items. Reduce planter count, downsize containers, remove water storage, or move heavy supplies indoors. If you are unsure of the rating, seek qualified guidance.
Does this account for point loads from narrow legs or stands?
This tool estimates distributed loading. Narrow legs can create higher local stresses. Use wide bases, load-spreading pads, or continuous shelves, and avoid concentrating very heavy items on small contact points.