Stair Riser: Calculating Rise and Tread from Floor Height

From the floor height and the number of steps, finds the riser and a guideline tread depth (2 × riser + tread = 60 cm). Japanese building law requires a riser of 23 cm or less and a tread of 15 cm or more in homes.

The riser is the height of one step; the tread is its depth. Divide the floor-to-floor height by the number of steps and you have the riser.

riser=floor heightsteps\text{riser} = \dfrac{\text{floor height}}{\text{steps}}

The tread comes from a long-standing rule of thumb.

2×riser+tread=60 cm2 \times \text{riser} + \text{tread} = 60\ \text{cm}

It is drawn from the human stride: the taller each step, the shallower its tread can be, and the shorter the step, the deeper it should be. It is a guideline, not a legal formula.

Example

Take the defaults, a floor height of 280 cm over 14 steps.

riser=28014=20 cm\text{riser} = \dfrac{280}{14} = 20\ \text{cm}
tread=602×20=20 cm\text{tread} = 60 - 2 \times 20 = 20\ \text{cm}

That gives a riser of 20 cm with a suggested tread of 20 cm. Add one step and 280 ÷ 15 = 18.67 cm, a gentler climb over the same floor height.

Notes