What 1:12 means
Ramp slope describes how much horizontal run is needed for a given vertical rise, expressed as a ratio such as 1:12 — meaning 12 units of horizontal run for every 1 unit of vertical rise. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Standards for Accessible Design set 1:12 as the maximum allowable slope for a standard accessible ramp, equivalent to an angle of about 4.76°.
A gentler slope such as 1:16 requires more horizontal run for the same rise but is easier to travel, often used where space allows or extra accessibility margin is desired. A steeper slope such as 1:8 needs much less horizontal space but does not meet the ADA's accessible-ramp slope requirement and is generally unsuitable for wheelchair or mobility-device use.
The formula
Run is the rise multiplied by the slope ratio denominator (12 for the ADA maximum). The angle in degrees is the arctangent of 1 ÷ 12. The ramp's actual surface length — the sloped distance a wheelchair or handrail must actually cover — is the Pythagorean hypotenuse of the rise and run.
- Run = Rise × 12 (for a 1:12 slope)
- Angle (°) = arctan(1 ÷ 12) ≈ 4.76°
- Ramp surface length = √(Rise² + Run²)
Worked example: a 50 cm rise
For a 50 cm (0.5 m) rise at the ADA 1:12 maximum slope: run = 0.5 × 12 = 6 m. The angle is arctan(1 ÷ 12) ≈ 4.76°. The ramp's surface length — what materials and handrail actually run along — is √(0.5² + 6²) = √(0.25 + 36) = √36.25 ≈ 6.02 m, slightly longer than the flat 6 m run because it accounts for the rise.
| Value | Result |
|---|---|
| Rise | 0.5 m (50 cm) |
| Slope ratio | 1:12 (ADA maximum) |
| Run needed | 6.0 m |
| Angle | ≈ 4.76° |
| Ramp surface length | ≈ 6.02 m |
Slope is only part of ADA compliance
The ADA Standards require a maximum ramp slope of 1:12, but they also limit the maximum rise for any single continuous ramp run — commonly 760 mm (30 inches) — before a level landing is required, along with specific handrail, edge-protection and landing-size requirements. Assuming any ramp with a 1:12 slope is automatically ADA-compliant is a common mistake: slope is a necessary condition, not a sufficient one.
It's also worth noting that slope requirements for ramps outside ADA scope — vehicle ramps, temporary ramps, or non-accessible utility ramps — are set by different standards and are typically steeper than 1:12.
Domande frequenti
What is the maximum ADA ramp slope?
The ADA Standards for Accessible Design set a maximum slope of 1:12 for a standard accessible ramp — 12 inches (or any unit) of horizontal run for every 1 inch of vertical rise — equivalent to an angle of about 4.76°.
How much run does a 50 cm rise need at the ADA maximum slope?
At 1:12, a 50 cm rise needs 6 m of horizontal run, and the actual sloped ramp surface length is about 6.02 m.
Is a steeper ramp ever acceptable?
For ADA accessible ramps specifically, no — slopes steeper than 1:12 do not meet the accessible-ramp requirement. Steeper ramps such as 1:8 may still be appropriate for non-accessible applications like vehicle or utility ramps, governed by different standards.
Does a 1:12 slope alone make a ramp ADA-compliant?
No. The ADA also requires landings at intervals (commonly after a 760 mm/30 inch rise), handrails above a certain rise, edge protection, and specific surface and width requirements beyond just the slope ratio.
Fonti
- US Access Board — ADA Standards for Accessible Design, Section 405 (Ramps): maximum slope, rise, landing and handrail requirements.
- US Department of Justice — 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design.
- Standard right-triangle trigonometry underlying slope-ratio, angle and surface-length conversions.