RCC Design Formula Sheet — IS 456

All Limit State Method formulas for beams, slabs, columns, footings, and retaining walls — IS 456:2000 quick reference for GATE CE and design practice

Last Updated: March 2026

How to Use This Sheet

  • All formulas follow IS 456:2000 Limit State Method (LSM) unless noted otherwise.
  • Load factor = 1.5 for DL + LL combination; partial safety factors: γc = 1.5, γs = 1.15.
  • Design concrete stress = 0.446fck (stress block); design steel stress = 0.87fy.
  • Fe 415 is the default steel grade in most formulas; adjust coefficients for Fe 250 or Fe 500 where noted.
  • Use this sheet alongside the individual topic pages for derivations and worked examples.
  • GATE-critical values are highlighted in each section.

1. LSM Constants & Material Properties

1.1 Partial Safety Factors

ParameterValueIS 456 Clause
Load factor (DL + LL)1.5Cl. 36.4.1
Load factor (DL + LL + WL)1.2Cl. 36.4.1
γc — Concrete1.5Cl. 36.4.2
γs — Steel1.15Cl. 36.4.2

1.2 Design Stresses

Design compressive stress in concrete (flexure) = 0.446 fck   (= 0.67fck/1.5)

Design tensile stress in steel = 0.87 fy   (= fy/1.15)

Design compressive stress in concrete (columns, direct) = 0.4 fck

Design compressive stress in steel (columns) = 0.67 fy

1.3 Limiting Neutral Axis Depth (IS 456 Cl. 38.1)

Steel Gradexu,max/dRu,lim = Mu,lim/bd² (N/mm²) for M20for M25
Fe 2500.532.973.71
Fe 4150.482.763.45
Fe 5000.462.663.33

1.4 Modular Ratio (WSM reference only)

m = 280 / (3 σcbc)    [Working Stress Method — not used in LSM]

1.5 Concrete Properties

Gradefck (N/mm²)Ec = 5000√fck (N/mm²)τc,max (N/mm²)
M151519 3652.5
M202022 3612.8
M252525 0003.1
M303027 3863.5

2. Beams — Flexure

2.1 Singly Reinforced Rectangular Beam

Neutral axis depth (actual):

0.36 fck b xu = 0.87 fy Ast

⇒ xu = 0.87 fy Ast / (0.36 fck b)

 

Moment of resistance:

Mu = 0.87 fy Ast (d − 0.42 xu)

or equivalently: Mu = 0.36 fck b xu (d − 0.42 xu)

 

Limiting moment (balanced section):

Mu,lim = 0.36 (xu,max/d) [1 − 0.42(xu,max/d)] fck b d²

For Fe 415 / M20: Mu,lim = 2.76 b d² (N·mm, b and d in mm)

2.2 Area of Tension Steel (from Mu)

Ast = [fck b d / (2 × 0.87 fy)] × [1 − √(1 − 4.6 Mu / (fck b d²))]

Or use design aids (SP 16) for direct pt from Mu/bd²

2.3 Doubly Reinforced Beam

When Mu > Mu,lim, additional moment: Mu2 = Mu − Mu,lim

Additional tension steel: Ast2 = Mu2 / [0.87 fy (d − d′)]

Compression steel: Asc = Mu2 / [(fsc − 0.446 fck)(d − d′)]

fsc for Fe 415 at d′/d = 0.10 → 353 N/mm²

fsc for Fe 415 at d′/d = 0.15 → 342 N/mm²

fsc for Fe 415 at d′/d = 0.20 → 329 N/mm²

2.4 T-Beam & L-Beam (Effective Flange Width)

ParameterT-BeamL-Beam
bf (max)lo/6 + bw + 6Dflo/12 + bw + 3Df
loDistance between points of zero moment (≈ 0.7 × effective span for continuous)

If xu ≤ Df: treat as rectangular beam of width bf

If xu > Df: use T-beam formula splitting flange and web contributions

2.5 Minimum & Maximum Steel in Beams

Ast,min (tension) = 0.85 b d / fy   (IS 456 Cl. 26.5.1.1)

Ast,max = 0.04 b D   (IS 456 Cl. 26.5.1.1)

Asc,max = 0.04 b D   (compression steel)

3. Beams — Shear

3.1 Nominal Shear Stress

τv = Vu / (b d)

3.2 Design Shear Strength of Concrete τc

From IS 456 Table 19 (M20, selected values):

pt = 100 Ast/bd (%)M20M25M30
0.150.280.290.29
0.250.360.360.37
0.500.480.490.50
0.750.560.570.59
1.000.620.640.66
1.250.670.700.71
1.500.720.740.76
2.000.790.820.84
3.000.82* (max)0.82*0.82*

* τc does not increase beyond pt = 3 % in IS 456 Table 19.

3.3 Shear Reinforcement Design

If τv ≤ τc: No shear steel required (provide nominal ties)

If τc < τv ≤ τc,max: Design shear reinforcement

If τv > τc,max: Increase section size

 

Vertical stirrups:

Vus = Vu − τc b d

Sv = 0.87 fy Asv d / Vus

 

Maximum stirrup spacing:

Sv,max = min (0.75d, 300 mm) for vertical stirrups

 

Minimum shear steel (IS 456 Cl. 26.5.1.6):

Asv / (b Sv) ≥ 0.4 / (0.87 fy)

3.4 Torsion (IS 456 Cl. 41)

Equivalent shear: Ve = Vu + 1.6 Tu/b

Equivalent moment: Me1 = Mu + Mt   where Mt = Tu(1 + D/b)/1.7

Design for Me1 as flexure and Ve as shear

4. Development Length & Bond

4.1 Development Length Formula

Ld = φ σs / (4 τbd)

For Fe 415, design stress σs = 0.87 fy = 361.05 N/mm²

τbd (M20, deformed bars) = 1.6 × 1.2 = 1.92 N/mm² (IS 456 Cl. 26.2.1.1)

⇒ Ld = φ × 361.05 / (4 × 1.92) = 47φ

4.2 Ld Quick Reference Table

SteelM20M25M30
Fe 415 (tension, deformed)47φ40φ35φ
Fe 500 (tension, deformed)57φ49φ42φ
Fe 415 (compression)38φ32φ28φ
Fe 415 (plain bars)58φ50φ43φ

Note: τbd is increased by 25 % for deformed (HYSD) bars over plain bars. For compression, τbd is increased by 25 % (so Ld is reduced by 20 %).

4.3 Anchorage of Bars at Simply Supported Ends

IS 456 Cl. 26.2.3.3: Ld ≤ M1/V + Lo

M1 = Mu of bars continuing past support; V = shear at support; Lo = anchorage beyond support (≥ d or 12φ)

5. One-Way & Two-Way Slabs

5.1 One-Way Slab — Design Moments

Simply supported: Mu = wu l²/8    (wu = factored UDL per unit width)

Continuous (IS 456 Cl. 22.5): Use moment coefficients from IS 456 Table 12 & 13

5.2 One-Way Slab — Effective Span

leff = clear span + d   (whichever is less of: clear span + d, or c/c of supports)

5.3 Minimum Steel in Slabs (IS 456 Cl. 26.5.2.1)

Steel GradeMin Ast
Fe 250 (mild steel)0.15 % of b × D
Fe 415 / Fe 500 (HYSD)0.12 % of b × D

5.4 Two-Way Slab — IS 456 Coefficient Method (Cl. D-1)

Mx = αx w lx²   (short span moment)

My = αy w lx²   (long span moment)

r = ly/lx (aspect ratio); αx & αy from IS 456 Table 26

ly/lxαx (short)αy (long)
1.00.0620.062
1.10.0740.061
1.20.0840.059
1.30.0930.055
1.40.0990.051
1.50.1040.046
2.00.1180.029

Values are for simply supported two-way slabs with no provision for torsion at corners.

5.5 Slab Depth — Span-to-Depth Ratios (IS 456 Cl. 23.2.1)

Support Conditionl/d Basic Ratio
Simply supported20
Continuous26
Cantilever7

Multiply by modification factor Mt (tension steel) and Mc (compression steel) from IS 456 Fig. 4 & 5.

6. Columns

6.1 Short Column — Axially Loaded (IS 456 Cl. 39.3)

Tied column: Pu = 0.4 fck Ac + 0.67 fy Asc

Helical column: Pu = 1.05 (0.4 fck Ac + 0.67 fy Asc)

Ac = Ag − Asc

Condition: emin/D ≤ 0.05 (both axes)

6.2 Minimum Eccentricity

emin = max [ l/500 + D/30 , 20 mm ]

6.3 Slenderness

Short column: lex/D ≤ 12 and ley/b ≤ 12

le = effective length = k × l (k from IS 456 Table 28)

6.4 Longitudinal Reinforcement Limits (IS 456 Cl. 26.5.3.1)

ParameterLimit
Minimum steel0.8 % of Ag
Maximum steel6 % of Ag (8 % at laps)
Minimum bar diameter12 mm
Minimum bars — rectangular4
Minimum bars — circular6

6.5 Lateral Ties (IS 456 Cl. 26.5.3.2)

Tie diameter ≥ max (φmain/4, 6 mm)

Pitch ≤ min (16 φmain,min, least lateral dimension, 300 mm)

6.6 Helix Volume Ratio (IS 456 Cl. 39.4.1)

Vs/Vc ≥ 0.36 (Ag/Ak − 1)(fck/fy)

Helix pitch: 25 mm to 75 mm

7. Isolated Footings

7.1 Plan Size

A = 1.10 P / SBC    (service load; 10 % allowance for self-weight)

Square: L = B = √A

7.2 Net Factored Upward Pressure

qu = Pu / (L × B)   where Pu = 1.5 P

7.3 Punching Shear (IS 456 Cl. 31.6)

Critical perimeter at d/2 from column face

bo = 2(a + b + 2d) for rectangular column a × b

τc,punch = ks × 0.25 √fck   where ks = min(0.5 + βc, 1.0)

For square column: ks = 1.0 ⇒ τc,punch = 0.25√fck

M20: 1.118 N/mm²    M25: 1.25 N/mm²    M30: 1.369 N/mm²

7.4 One-Way Shear

Critical section at d from column face

τv = Vu / (B × d) ≤ τc (Table 19)

7.5 Bending Moment

Critical section at column face

L′ = (L − a) / 2   (cantilever projection)

Mu = qu × B × (L′)² / 2

7.6 Development Length in Footings

Lavailable = L′ − 50 (cover) ≥ Ld = 47φ (Fe 415, M20)

Cover in footings cast against soil: 50 mm

8. Retaining Walls

8.1 Earth Pressure (Rankine — Level Backfill)

Ka = (1 − sinφ) / (1 + sinφ) = tan²(45° − φ/2)

Kp = (1 + sinφ) / (1 − sinφ) = 1/Ka

Pa = ½ Ka γ Htotal²    (acts at Htotal/3 from base)

With surcharge q: add Ps = Ka q H (acts at H/2)

8.2 Stability Checks

FOSOT = ΣMs / Mo ≥ 1.5   (moments about toe)

FOSSL = μΣW / Pa ≥ 1.5   (add shear key if insufficient)

8.3 Soil Pressure at Base

&xmacr; = (ΣMs − Mo) / ΣW

e = B/2 − &xmacr; ≤ B/6 (no tension condition)

qtoe = (ΣW/B)(1 + 6e/B) ≤ SBC

qheel = (ΣW/B)(1 − 6e/B) ≥ 0

8.4 Stem Design Moment

Mu,stem = 1.5 × Ka γ Hstem³ / 6   (Hstem = wall height above base slab)

Steel on earth face (tension face)

8.5 Preliminary Dimensions

Base width B = 0.5H to 0.7H (use 0.6H)

Base slab thickness = H/12, ≥ 300 mm

Stem thickness at base = H/12, ≥ 200 mm

Toe length ≈ B/3; Heel length = B − toe − tstem

9. Deflection & Crack Width

9.1 Span-to-Effective-Depth Limits (IS 456 Cl. 23.2.1)

MemberBasic l/dNotes
Simply supported beam/slab20Multiply by Mt (tension steel factor)
Continuous beam/slab26Multiply by Mt, Mc (compression steel)
Cantilever7For spans > 10 m, calculate actual deflection

9.2 Crack Width (IS 456 Cl. 43.1 / Annex F)

Wcr = 3 acr εm / [1 + 2(acr − cmin)/(h − x)]

Maximum surface crack width: 0.3 mm (moderate exposure); 0.2 mm (severe exposure)

9.3 Modulus of Elasticity

Ec = 5000 √fck N/mm²   (IS 456 Cl. 6.2.3.1)

Es = 2 × 10⁵ N/mm² (steel)

Long-term Ec,eff = Ec / (1 + θ) where θ = creep coefficient (IS 456 Table 8)

10. GATE Quick-Reference Table

The single most-tested values in GATE CE — memorise these.

ItemValue
xu,max/d for Fe 4150.48
Mu,lim for Fe 415, M202.76 bd² N·mm
Mu,lim for Fe 415, M253.45 bd² N·mm
Design stress in steel (LSM)0.87 fy
Development length, Fe 415, M20, tension, deformed47φ
Development length, Fe 415, M25, tension, deformed40φ
fsc for Fe 415 at d′/d = 0.10353 N/mm²
Stirrup spacing max0.75d or 300 mm
Axially loaded tied column (IS 456 Cl. 39.3)0.4fckAc + 0.67fyAsc
Column min steel0.8 % of Ag
Column max steel6 % of Ag
Punching shear stress (M20, square column)1.118 N/mm²
Punching shear perimeter locationd/2 from column face
One-way shear critical sectiond from column face / support face
Bending critical section (footing/retaining wall)Column/wall face
Ka for φ = 30°0.333
FOS overturning / sliding (retaining wall)≥ 1.5
Cover in footings (cast against soil)50 mm
Slab min steel, Fe 4150.12 % of bD
Beam min steel, Fe 4150.85 bd / fy
emin in columnsmax(l/500 + D/30, 20 mm)

11. Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Confusing 0.4fck (Column) with 0.36fck (Beam Stress Block)

What happens: The coefficient 0.4fck from the column capacity equation (Cl. 39.3) is incorrectly used for beam flexure calculations, and vice versa. The 0.36fck is the average stress in the rectangular stress block used for beam bending; the 0.4fck in the column formula is a simplified direct compression coefficient that already accounts for in-situ strength reduction.

Fix: Beams and slabs use the stress block (0.36fck for the compression zone in the moment equation). Columns (Cl. 39.3) use 0.4fck directly on Ac.

Mistake 2: Using the Same Development Length for Tension and Compression

What happens: Ld = 47φ (Fe 415, M20) is the tension development length for deformed bars. Applying this to compression bars underestimates the available strength — compression development length is actually shorter (38φ for same grade/concrete) because bond in compression is more effective.

Fix: Always check whether the bar is in tension or compression before selecting Ld. Compression bars have a 25 % reduction in required development length compared to tension bars.

Mistake 3: Applying Shear Coefficient 0.75d Incorrectly

What happens: The maximum stirrup spacing of 0.75d is applied for inclined stirrups instead of vertical ones. IS 456 Cl. 26.5.1.5 specifies 0.75d for vertical stirrups and d for inclined stirrups (at 45°). Using 0.75d for inclined stirrups is conservative but incorrect if the problem specifically asks for the IS 456 limit.

Fix: Vertical stirrups: Sv,max = 0.75d or 300 mm. Inclined stirrups (45°): Sv,max = d or 300 mm.

Mistake 4: Forgetting the Middle-Third Rule for Footing and Retaining Wall Base Pressure

What happens: The formula q = (ΣW/B)(1 ± 6e/B) is applied even when e > B/6, giving a negative qheel. The formula assumes the entire base is in compression, which is invalid when the resultant falls outside the middle third.

Fix: First check e ≤ B/6. If not, the base is partially separated and the pressure diagram must be recalculated using only the effective contact length (triangular pressure distribution covering 3&xmacr; from toe).

Mistake 5: Using Gross Area Ag Instead of Ac = Ag − Asc for Concrete in Column Equations

What happens: Writing Pu = 0.4fckAg + 0.67fyAsc double-counts the steel area as both steel and concrete, overestimating capacity by (0.4fck + 0.67fy) × Asc instead of (0.67fy − 0.4fck) × Asc.

Fix: Always use Ac = Ag − Asc in the concrete term. For GATE problems the error is typically 3–5 % but can shift the answer to a wrong option.

12. Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. Why does IS 456 use 0.36fck in the stress block but 0.446fck as the peak stress?

The IS 456 stress block for flexure is a parabolic-rectangular shape. The peak design stress is 0.67fck/1.5 = 0.447fck ≈ 0.446fck at the extreme compression fibre. However, this non-uniform stress block has an average intensity of approximately 0.36fck over the depth xu and a centroid at 0.42xu from the compression face. The moment arm formula uses 0.36fck (average block stress) and the lever arm (d − 0.42xu). Both 0.36 and 0.446 are correct — they represent different quantities from the same stress block: average stress vs peak stress.

Q2. When should SP 16 be used instead of direct IS 456 formulas?

SP 16 (Design Aids for Reinforced Concrete to IS 456:1978) provides pre-computed charts and tables that bypass the quadratic equations. It is useful when: (a) quickly selecting beam steel from pt vs Mu/bd² charts (Chart 1–14), (b) designing doubly reinforced beams by reading off Asc and Ast directly, (c) column design using interaction diagrams (Charts 27–62) for combined axial load and bending, and (d) T-beam design using flange charts. In GATE, SP 16 charts are not available so all computations must be done from IS 456 first principles. SP 16 is essential in practice for quick checking and for combined bending + compression (column) design that would otherwise require lengthy iteration.

Q3. What is the difference between nominal cover, clear cover, and effective cover?

Nominal cover (IS 456 Cl. 26.4) is the designer-specified distance from the concrete surface to the nearest reinforcement bar surface — this is what appears in design drawings. Clear cover is the same as nominal cover. Effective cover (d′) is the distance from the compression face to the centroid of the compression steel — used in doubly reinforced beam design; d′ = nominal cover + tie diameter + half bar diameter. Effective depth (d) is measured from the compression face to the centroid of the tension steel; d = D − effective cover to tension steel. GATE problems sometimes interchange these carelessly — always identify which definition is being used.

Q4. How are IS 456 Table 12 and Table 13 moment coefficients used for continuous beams and slabs?

IS 456 Tables 12 and 13 give bending moment and shear force coefficients for uniformly loaded continuous beams and one-way slabs with approximately equal spans (no span differing by more than 15 % of the longest). The design moment at any section = coefficient × wu × ln², where wu is the factored load per unit length and ln is the clear span. The coefficients already incorporate pattern loading (alternate span loading for maximum hogging/sagging) and are conservative. They cannot be used for: unequal spans (>15 % variation), non-UDL loads, or frames with significant lateral loads. For these cases, elastic analysis (moment distribution or stiffness method) is required.

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