Bending Stress Calculator for Beams and Structural Sections
Calculate elastic bending stress using the standard flexure equation, section modulus, and common beam section dimensions. This tool helps estimate beam stress for rectangular, round, hollow, and custom sections in U.S. customary or metric moment inputs.
Calculate Bending Stress
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View Chart →How to Use This Tool
Pick the section
Select a solid rectangle, solid round, hollow round, or custom input mode based on the member you are checking.
Enter geometry
Add the dimensions in inches, or enter I and c directly if section properties are already known from plans or a steel table.
Enter moment
Input the bending moment in kip-ft, in-lb, ft-lb, N-m, or kN-m. The calculator converts everything to a consistent stress unit.
Review the check
See bending stress, section modulus, stress ratio, and a quick material grade comparison for planning and early design review.
Bending Stress Reference Data
The calculator uses the elastic flexure relationship σ = M × c / I, which is also written as σ = M / S when section modulus is known. For a solid rectangle, the standard section formulas are I = b × h³ / 12 and S = b × h² / 6.
| Reference Item | Value | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| ASTM A36 yield strength | 36 ksi | Common baseline steel strength for stress comparison in planning checks. |
| ASTM A992 yield strength | 50 ksi | Widely used structural shape grade in U.S. building work. |
| Normal-weight concrete dead load | 150 pcf | Useful when related beam moments come from slab or beam self-weight estimates. |
| Structural steel dead load | 490 pcf | Useful for self-weight and rough gravity load checks. |
| 1 kip-ft | 12,000 in-lb | Critical conversion for U.S. beam design calculations. |
| 1 ksi | 1,000 psi | Helps compare computed stress with common material strength values. |
For related structural checks, compare results with the beam load calculator, the beam deflection calculator, and the beam stress calculator.
What Bending Stress Tells You
Bending stress is the normal stress caused by beam flexure. The extreme fibers carry the largest tension or compression because stress increases with distance from the neutral axis.
In field practice, bending stress checks help with beam sizing, steel shape comparison, shop drawing review, equipment support framing, lintels, and temporary works planning. It is not the only design limit. Deflection, shear, local buckling, lateral-torsional buckling, connections, and load combinations still matter.
If you are also reviewing concrete members, the concrete stress calculator, concrete flexural strength calculator, and concrete load-bearing calculator can help round out the review.
Sample Calculations
Rectangular wood or plate section
Section: 3.5 in × 9.25 in
Moment: 24 kip-ft
Section modulus: \(S = b h^2 / 6 = 3.5 × 9.25^2 / 6 = 49.93 \text{ in}^3\)
This is a fast way to check whether the section is in the right range before moving to a full beam design review.
Solid round bar
Diameter: 6.0 in
Moment: 8 kip-ft
Section modulus: \(S = \pi d^3 / 32 = 21.21 \text{ in}^3\)
Round bars and pins are less common as primary beams, but this mode is useful for shafts, rods, and custom fabricated parts.
Hollow round tube
OD: 8.625 in
Wall: 0.322 in
Moment: 15 kip-ft
This saves time when reviewing HSS round members or pipe sections carrying eccentric or flexural demand.
Common Bending Stress Mistakes
Watch these input errors
- Mixing kip-ft with in-lb without converting the moment.
- Using overall depth in feet while section dimensions are entered in inches.
- Entering outer diameter and wall thickness that create a negative inside diameter.
- Comparing elastic bending stress directly to strength design values without load-factor context.
- Ignoring lateral-torsional buckling when the beam is unbraced over long spans.
A beam can pass a simple bending stress check and still fail another design limit. If your next step is load estimation, use the slab load calculator, concrete bearing pressure calculator, or concrete load calculator to build a better input moment.
Project Context and Material Planning
For U.S. construction work, beam moments often come from tributary dead load, live load, equipment load, or temporary shoring demand. Normal-weight concrete is commonly estimated at 150 pcf, while structural steel is commonly taken at 490 pcf for self-weight review.
If the member is fabricated from plate or rolled steel, weight and transport can matter too. Use the steel weight calculator, plate weight calculator, and steel plate weight calculator when estimating piece weights and handling loads.
Frequently Asked Questions
The elastic flexure formula is σ = M × c / I. Because section modulus is S = I / c, the same check can be written as σ = M / S.
The calculator converts the entered bending moment to in-lb, keeps section properties in inches, then reports stress in psi and ksi. This matches common U.S. beam design practice.
Yes, for elastic bending stress estimation. The stress math is general. The strength comparison depends on the material limit you select or enter.
No. You may still need checks for shear, deflection, bearing, web crippling, local buckling, lateral-torsional buckling, and connection design.
Section modulus directly links bending moment to elastic bending stress. It is often the quickest property to compare when choosing between similar sections.
Use the custom mode and enter I and c directly. That is useful when you already have section properties from AISC shape data or manufacturer tables.
Sources and Methodology
This calculator uses the linear elastic flexure equation and standard section property formulas for common shapes. The methodology aligns with general strength of materials references for beam bending stress and with standard steel design practice where elastic section modulus is used for stress review.
- Omni Calculator, Bending Stress Calculator, formula summary for σ = M × c / I and S = I / c.
- Strength of Materials Supplement, beam stress due to bending moments, flexure relationship and section modulus expression.
- AISC Shapes Database v15.0, reference source for structural steel section properties used in practice.
- IBC 2024 Chapter 16, Structural Design, general requirement for structural design strength and serviceability checks.
- ASCE/SEI 7, common U.S. basis for load determination used to generate beam moments before stress checks.
Disclaimer
This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes. For permitted structural work, foundations, multi-story construction, retaining walls over 4 feet, and commercial projects, calculations must be verified by a licensed structural engineer per IBC 2024 §1604. ConcreteCalculate.com is not liable for structural decisions made from these estimates.
Privacy Note
Free, no signup required. Calculations run in your browser and posted calculation inputs are only used to return the result. No project data is stored or transmitted for marketing use.
Built by Muhammad Ramzan Babar, physics researcher (PhD candidate).
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