Load Bearing Wall Header Size Calculator

Estimate practical header options for wall openings. Compare bending, shear, deflection, reactions, and total load. Confirm every final choice with local code review first.

Calculator

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Example Data Table

Example Span Tributary width Dead load Live load Point load Planning note
Interior door opening3 ft4 ft10 psf40 psf0 lbOften controlled by practical depth.
Wide room opening6 ft8 ft12 psf40 psf0 lbDeflection may control the choice.
Opening below post5 ft6 ft10 psf40 psf1200 lbPoint loads raise moment and reaction.
Roof bearing wall8 ft10 ft15 psf20 psf0 lbSnow load and local rules matter.

Formula Used

The calculator treats the header as a simply supported beam. It combines uniform area load and an optional center point load.

How To Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the clear opening span in feet.
  2. Enter tributary width from framing supported by the header.
  3. Add dead, live, roof, or snow service loads.
  4. Add a center point load when a post lands above.
  5. Select the material, duration factor, and deflection limit.
  6. Press the calculate button and read the result above the form.
  7. Download the CSV or PDF report for planning records.
  8. Review the result with local code officials or a qualified professional.

Why Header Size Matters

A wall opening changes how loads move through a building. Studs once carried weight straight down. A header redirects that weight around the opening. It sends force into jack studs at each side. Correct sizing helps limit sag, cracks, sticking doors, and stress. This calculator gives a planning estimate. It is not a permit design.

Loads Behind The Opening

A header may carry ceiling load, floor load, roof load, snow load, and wall weight. The tributary width estimates how much surface area feeds the beam. Larger tributary width creates a larger line load. A concentrated load can represent a post above the opening. The tool combines these values into one service load.

Strength And Stiffness Checks

The calculation checks bending first. Bending controls many longer spans. Shear is also checked near supports. Deflection is checked because a safe member can still bend too much. Bearing at the jack stud is checked as well. A strong beam still needs enough support area.

Choosing A Practical Header

The smallest passing member is not always the best field choice. Builders may choose a deeper member for stiffness. They may choose more plies to match wall thickness. Moisture, notches, fasteners, and holes can reduce capacity. Engineered members can carry more load, but they need approved installation details.

Use Results Carefully

This page is useful for early planning, comparison, and material conversations. It helps you see which input affects the answer most. Increase span and the required section rises quickly. Increase tributary width and every strength check becomes harder. Local codes, species grades, bearing paths, and inspection rules still control the final header. Always keep final design approval with a qualified professional.

Input Quality Matters

Better input gives better output. Measure the opening, not the rough frame guess. Use service loads that match the actual story above. Separate roof load from floor load when possible. Add point loads only when a post, girder, or stacked support truly lands above the header.

When To Ask For Design Help

Ask for design help when removing wide walls, supporting masonry, changing multiple stories, or working near damaged framing. Older buildings may hide unusual load paths. Renovations can also change support conditions during field work.

FAQs

Is this result approved for construction?

No. It is a planning estimate. Final header sizing depends on code rules, plans, material certificates, connections, bearing path, and site conditions.

What is tributary width?

Tributary width is the supported floor, ceiling, or roof width feeding load into the header. Larger width creates higher line load.

Why does point load matter?

A post or concentrated beam reaction above an opening can increase bending and support reaction. Add it when that load lands near midspan.

Why check deflection?

A member can be strong enough but still bend too much. Deflection checks help reduce drywall cracks, trim gaps, and sticking openings.

Does this include notches or holes?

No. Notches, holes, damage, moisture, poor fastening, and eccentric loads need separate review. They can reduce useful strength.

Can I use it for masonry walls?

Do not rely on it for masonry, concrete, or steel lintels. Those systems need different checks, bearing rules, and detailing.

What if no option passes?

Use a deeper member, add plies, reduce the span, reduce tributary load, add posts, or request engineered design help.

Why is bearing length included?

The header must transfer reaction into jack studs without crushing support fibers. More reaction often needs more bearing area.

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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.