Beam Load Calculator

Beam Load Calculator checks safe beam capacity from span, load type, section modulus, and allowable stress using M=P×L/4, M=w×L²/8, and fb=M/S for bending stress.

ft
lbf
in3
psi
Maximum Safe Capacity
8,000 lbf
Maximum load limit before exceeding allowable bending stress.
Support Reactions (R)
1,000 lbf
Total Applied Load 2,000 lbf
Max Shear Force (V) 1,000 lbf
The required reaction force at each support to maintain equilibrium.
Actual Bending Stress (fb)
6,000 psi
Stress Margin 18,000 psi
Section Capacity Used 25.0%
The peak flexural stress compared to the allowable safety limits.
Max Bending Moment (M)
5,000 lbf-ft
Allowable Moment 20,000 lbf-ft
Load Config Point Load
The internal bending moment applied compared to allowable limits.
Bending Safety Factor
4.0
Utilization Ratio 25.0%
Bending Check Safe by bending stress only
Ratio of allowable to actual stress. Does not evaluate deflection, shear, or buckling.
Structural Safety Note
This projection assumes a simply supported beam. It checks bending stress only. It does not evaluate deflection limits, shear capacity, lateral-torsional buckling, bearing, or specific building code combinations.

What the Beam Load Calculator checks

This calculator estimates safe load capacity for a simply supported beam. Enter the span length, load type, section modulus, and allowable bending stress — and the tool returns the maximum safe load, the internal bending moment, the actual flexural stress, and a bending safety factor. It works in both US Customary and Metric units and covers two load configurations: a single point load at mid-span, and a uniformly distributed load across the full span.

What the calculator solves

Safe load capacity

The maximum point load (lbf or N) or distributed load intensity (lbf/ft or N/m) the beam can carry before its bending stress reaches the allowable limit. Backsolved from the allowable moment and span geometry.

Bending moment

The maximum internal bending moment (M) at the critical section — midspan for both load configurations. Compared directly against the allowable moment derived from section modulus and allowable stress.

Bending stress

The actual flexural stress (fₐ) at the extreme fiber of the section under the applied load. Shown alongside the allowable stress (Fₐ), stress margin, and section capacity used as a percentage.

Bending safety factor

The ratio of allowable bending stress to actual bending stress (Fₐ / fₐ). A factor greater than 1.0 means the beam passes the bending check. The utilization ratio shows the same information as a percentage.

Formulas used

Point load at center

Support reaction $$R = \dfrac{P}{2}$$
Max bending moment $$M = \dfrac{P \times L}{4}$$

Uniformly distributed load (UDL)

Total load $$W = w \times L$$
Support reaction $$R = \dfrac{w \times L}{2}$$
Max bending moment $$M = \dfrac{w \times L^{2}}{8}$$

Stress and capacity

Actual bending stress $$f_b = \dfrac{M}{S}$$
Allowable moment $$M_{allow} = F_b \times S$$
Point load capacity $$P_{allow} = \dfrac{4 \times M_{allow}}{L}$$
UDL capacity $$w_{allow} = \dfrac{8 \times M_{allow}}{L^{2}}$$
Bending safety factor $$SF = \dfrac{F_b}{f_b}$$
Utilization ratio $$\eta = \dfrac{f_b}{F_b} \times 100\%$$

Worked example — Point load, US Customary

Unit systemUS Customary
Load configPoint Load (Center)
Span (L)10 ft
Point load (P)2,000 lbf
Section modulus (S)10 in³
Allowable stress (Fₐ)24,000 psi

Maximum Safe Capacity8,000 lbf
Support reaction (R)1,000 lbf each
Max bending moment (M)5,000 lbf-ft
Allowable moment20,000 lbf-ft
Actual bending stress (fₐ)6,000 psi
Bending safety factor4.0
Utilization ratio25.0%

The applied 2,000 lbf load produces a midspan moment of 5,000 lbf-ft and a bending stress of 6,000 psi — well inside the 24,000 psi limit. The section is operating at just 25% of its bending capacity, giving a safety factor of 4.0. The beam could theoretically carry up to 8,000 lbf before reaching the allowable stress threshold. Each support carries 1,000 lbf in reaction, consistent with symmetric loading.

What each output means

P

Maximum Safe Capacity

The highest load the beam can carry before its bending stress reaches the allowable limit — backsolved from Fₐ and S. For UDL mode, the output is load intensity (lbf/ft or N/m), not total load. Exceeding this value means the bending check fails.

R

Support Reactions

The vertical force each end support must resist to hold the beam in equilibrium. For symmetric loading on a simply supported beam, both reactions are equal. The Max Shear Force (V) equals this reaction value in both load configurations covered here.

fₐ

Actual Bending Stress

The peak flexural stress at the outermost fiber under the applied load, calculated as M / S. Compare this against the allowable stress (Fₐ) you entered. The stress margin shows how much headroom remains before the limit is reached.

%

Section Capacity Used

Actual bending stress divided by allowable bending stress, expressed as a percentage. A value of 100% means the section is exactly at its bending limit. Values above 100% indicate overload; values well below 100% may suggest an oversized section.

SF

Bending Safety Factor

The ratio Fₐ / fₐ. A value of 1.0 means the section is exactly at the allowable stress limit; values above 1.0 indicate margin; values below 1.0 indicate a bending failure condition. This factor covers bending stress only — it does not account for deflection, shear, buckling, or code-specific load combinations.

Scope and limitations

This calculator checks bending stress only, for a simply supported beam with a center point load or a full-span uniform load. A beam can pass this bending check and still fail on:

  • Deflection — serviceability limits are not evaluated
  • Shear capacity — shear stress at the supports is not checked
  • Lateral-torsional buckling — unbraced length effects are not considered
  • Bearing stress — web crippling at supports is not assessed
  • Connection and bracing design — not covered
  • Code load combinations — LRFD, ASD, or EN partial factors are not applied

Use this tool for preliminary member sizing and quick sanity checks. Final structural design must be completed by a licensed engineer in accordance with applicable building codes.

References and calculation basis