| Symbol | Variable | SI Unit | Imperial Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| δ | Maximum Deflection | mm | inches |
| P | Point Load | kN | kips |
| w | Uniform Distributed Load | kN/m | kips/ft |
| L | Beam Span / Length | m | ft |
| E | Modulus of Elasticity | GPa | ksi |
| I | Moment of Inertia | mm⁴ × 10⁶ | in⁴ |
- Assumes linear elastic behavior — valid only when stresses remain below the yield strength of the material
- Assumes prismatic beam (constant cross-section and uniform E and I throughout the span)
- Small deflection theory applies — deflections must be small relative to beam length (typically δ < L/100)
- Does not account for shear deflection — significant for deep beams (L/d < 10)
- Does not include long-term creep deflection — multiply by creep factor per ACI 318 or AISC for sustained loads
- Serviceability limits: L/360 for live loads on floors, L/240 for combined loads per AISC and IBC
- All structural designs must be verified by a licensed structural engineer per applicable building codes
What Is Beam Deflection?
Beam deflection is the vertical displacement of a structural beam under applied loads. Deflection control is a serviceability requirement — separate from strength. A beam can be strong enough to safely carry a load but still deflect excessively, cracking plaster ceilings, jamming doors, damaging glass facades, or creating an uncomfortable bouncy floor. For many modern long-span structures and lightweight steel construction, deflection governs the design before strength does.
Deflection Formulas
Serviceability Limits
| Application | Limit | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Floor beams — live load | L/360 | AISC / IBC 1604.3 |
| Floor beams — total load | L/240 | AISC / IBC 1604.3 |
| Roof — live load | L/240 | AISC / IBC 1604.3 |
| Roof — total load | L/180 | AISC / IBC 1604.3 |
| Beams supporting plaster | L/360 | IBC 1604.3 |
| Beams supporting brittle finishes | L/480 | Engineer judgment |
| Cantilever beams | L/180 | AISC |
| Beams supporting masonry | L/600 | TMS 402 |
Worked Examples
Example 1 — Office Floor Beam Under Live Load
A W12×26 steel beam spans 6m simply supported, carrying a uniform live load of 8 kN/m. Does it meet L/360?
Example 2 — Cantilever Balcony Beam
A cantilever balcony beam extends 2.4m with a uniform load of 5 kN/m. Using a W8×18 steel beam, check the L/180 deflection limit.
Example 3 — Long Span Timber Beam
A Douglas Fir timber beam (4×12 actual, I = 415 in⁴) spans 20 feet simply supported with a 1,200 lb point load at midspan. Check deflection.
Real World Applications
Common Mistakes Engineers Make
Frequently Asked Questions
Standard values: Structural steel = 200 GPa (29,000 ksi). Stainless steel = 193 GPa. Aluminum alloys = 69 GPa (10,000 ksi). Concrete = 4,730√f’c MPa per ACI 318 (approximately 25–32 GPa for normal weight concrete with f’c = 28–45 MPa). Douglas Fir = 12.4 GPa (1,800 ksi). Southern Yellow Pine = 11.0 GPa. Always use the actual E for your specific material and grade.
Moment of inertia for standard steel sections is tabulated in the AISC Steel Construction Manual (Table 1-1 for W-shapes). Values are given in in⁴ for Imperial and cm⁴ for metric. Common values: W8×18: I_x = 61.9 in⁴. W12×26: I_x = 204 in⁴. W16×40: I_x = 518 in⁴. W24×55: I_x = 1,350 in⁴. For rectangular sections: I = bh³/12.
For a point load at the free end: cantilever δ = PL³/3EI vs simply supported δ = PL³/48EI — a factor of 16 difference. For uniform load: cantilever δ = wL⁴/8EI vs simply supported δ = 5wL⁴/384EI — a factor of 4.8 difference. The fixed end prevents rotation, concentrating all curvature in the span rather than distributing it between two supports. This is why cantilever beams require much stiffer sections than simply supported spans of equal length.
No — this calculator computes bending deflection only. Shear deflection is negligible for most beams (typically less than 5% of bending deflection) but becomes significant for short, deep beams where the span-to-depth ratio (L/d) is less than 10. For deep beams and short transfer structures, add shear deflection using δ_shear = VL/(GA_v), where A_v is the shear area of the web.
