Occupancy load calculator
Calculate occupant loads and egress requirements per IBC
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The Occupancy Load Calculator helps architects and designers determine the maximum number of occupants for any space based on International Building Code (IBC) requirements.
Occupant load directly impacts egress design, plumbing fixture counts, and fire protection requirements. Getting this calculation right early in design prevents costly revisions during code review.
Select your occupancy type, enter the floor area, and instantly see the calculated occupant load along with implications for exit width, number of exits, and travel distance requirements.
Features
Everything you need
- IBC occupant load factor database
- Multiple occupancy type support
- Automatic egress width calculations
- Exit quantity requirements
- Travel distance guidelines
- Mixed-use building support
- Metric and imperial units
How it works
Simple workflow
- 1Select the occupancy classification (Assembly, Business, etc.)
- 2Choose the specific function within that classification
- 3Enter the floor area of the space
- 4Review the calculated occupant load
- 5Check the resulting egress requirements
Use cases
Built for real-world scenarios
Restaurant design
Determine maximum seating capacity based on dining area square footage and applicable load factors.
Office space planning
Calculate occupant loads for tenant improvements and verify existing egress capacity.
Assembly spaces
Determine code-compliant capacity for auditoriums, gyms, and event venues.
Permit applications
Generate accurate occupant load calculations for building permit submissions.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Occupant load factor is the floor area per person used to calculate maximum occupancy. For example, an office has a factor of 150 sq ft per person (gross), meaning a 15,000 sq ft office has an occupant load of 100 people.
IBC defines occupancy groups based on building use: Assembly (A), Business (B), Educational (E), Factory (F), High Hazard (H), Institutional (I), Mercantile (M), Residential (R), Storage (S), and Utility (U).
Concentrated occupancy (like theater seating) uses smaller load factors, resulting in higher occupant counts. Unconcentrated (like dining with tables) uses larger factors. The IBC specifies which applies to each use.
Generally: 1-49 occupants = 1 exit, 50-500 = 2 exits, 501-1000 = 3 exits, over 1000 = 4 exits. High-hazard and certain assembly uses have stricter requirements.
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