Roof Pitch to Degrees Calculator

Convert roof pitch such as 4/12, 6/12, or 12/12 to degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio with a clear roof pitch table.

Calculator

Roof Pitch to Degrees Calculator

Measure visually

Result

Enter values and calculate.

Calculations are browser-side and intended for planning, learning, and visual checks.

Convert roof pitch rise per 12 with the roof pitch to degrees

Use the roof pitch to degrees when roofing learners, homeowners, plan reviewers, and estimators need a clear conversion from roof pitch rise per 12 to degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio. The calculator is designed for a 4/12 roof, a 9/12 roof, and a roof table comparison, with the result and interpretation kept close to the inputs.

A reliable roof pitch to degrees result starts with reliable input. Use matching units, avoid zero or impossible values, and compare the result with a 9/12 roof only after the source measurement is clear enough to support the calculation.

From roof pitch rise per 12 to degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio

  1. Enter the known roof pitch rise per 12 in the roof pitch to degrees form near the top of the page.
  2. Use matching units for roof pitch rise per 12 when the form asks for more than one length; inches, feet, centimeters, and meters all work if you do not mix them.
  3. Read degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio in the result panel, then check the derived values that help compare a 4/12 roof with ramps, roofs, stairs, or diagrams.
  4. Change one roof pitch to degrees value at a time if you are comparing a 4/12 roof with a 9/12 roof. This makes it easier to see which input controls the result.
  5. Use the related protractor online pages when a roof pitch to degrees value comes from a photo, drawing, PDF page, or marked screenshot rather than a measured source.

Reliable setup for roof pitch to degrees

  • Enter only the rise number from an x/12 pitch; the run is already 12.
  • Use decimal rise values when a roof pitch is written between common whole-number pitches.
  • Compare the degree output with a visual roof measurement only when the photo is side-on.
  • Keep pitch and angle units labeled because roof trades usually communicate pitch, not degrees.
  • Use a direct pitch measurement on site before ordering materials or planning structural work.

Where roof pitch to degrees helps

  • Converting a 4/12 roof into a value that can be compared with a drawing or report.
  • Checking a 9/12 roof during early planning before a precise field measurement is available.
  • Explaining a roof table comparison in a classroom, note, spreadsheet, or project handoff.
  • Comparing visual angle measurements from an image with roof pitch rise per 12 calculations.
  • Creating a quick table of common degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio values before moving into a professional design workflow.

Before relying on degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio

Roof pitch conversion is geometric and does not evaluate roof condition, framing, load, drainage, or material requirements. These roof pitch to degrees calculations are useful for planning, learning, and visual checks. For construction, accessibility compliance, structural work, or safety-critical decisions involving a 4/12 roof, verify measurements with local codes and a qualified professional.

The roof pitch to degrees runs in your browser. Numbers entered in the roof pitch to degrees form are calculated on the page, and normal use does not require an account, upload, or server-side project file.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which values should I enter in the roof pitch to degrees?

Use the values named in the form for roof pitch rise per 12. Depending on the roof pitch to degrees, that may mean rise, run, degrees, percent grade, pitch, ratio, radians, or a single angle. The page explains invalid entries so degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio is not presented as reliable when the input is incomplete.

Why does roof pitch rise per 12 produce degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio?

The roof pitch to degrees uses the trigonometry relationship that matches degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio. Rise divided by run gives slope, arctangent converts slope to degrees, and tangent converts degrees back to percent grade, roof pitch, or ratio values when those formats apply to a 4/12 roof.

Should a 4/12 roof be checked with this calculator?

Yes, the roof pitch to degrees is useful for a 4/12 roof when the source measurements are reliable. If the value comes from a photo, plan, or screenshot, combine this calculator with a visual measurement page and record the uncertainty before using degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio.

What changes when roof pitch to degrees values are shown in another format?

The same angle can be described in several formats. A degree value, percent grade, 1:n ratio, radians, and roof pitch can represent related geometry, but a 9/12 roof and a roof table comparison emphasize different trade, classroom, or documentation contexts. The roof pitch to degrees keeps those formats near the same result.

Does the roof pitch to degrees handle zero or negative values?

The roof pitch to degrees blocks entries that would make degrees, percent grade, and slope ratio meaningless, such as zero run for slope calculations or angles outside the expected range. Negative values are avoided on construction-style pages because direction should be documented separately from magnitude.

Can roof pitch to degrees replace a professional check?

No. The roof pitch to degrees is for planning, learning, and review. Codes, tolerances, surfaces, landings, fasteners, accessibility rules, and site conditions can matter, so final a 4/12 roof decisions should be checked against local requirements and qualified professionals.