Stairs for a 3 m Ceiling
A code-compliant straight staircase to a 3 m ceiling takes 19 equal steps. Here is the exact riser, tread run, pitch and floor opening — already calculated, ready to adjust.
The 3 m ceiling staircase at a glance
A finished 3 m ceiling is not the same as the height your stair has to climb. Between the ceiling below and the finished floor above sit the joists, subfloor and floor covering — about 12" in a typical timber floor — so the real floor-to-floor rise is 10' 10 1/8". Running that rise through the stairs calculator under the US IRC gives the code-compliant straight flight below. Every figure is computed, not rounded by hand.
| Dimension | Value |
|---|---|
| Total rise (floor to floor) | 10' 10 1/8" |
| Number of steps (risers) | 19 |
| Number of treads | 18 |
| Riser height (each step) | 6 7/8" |
| Tread run / going | 11" |
| Total run (horizontal length) | 16' 5 11/16" |
| Stair angle / pitch | 31.9° |
| Stringer length | 19' 8 11/16" |
| Floor opening needed | 11' 7 13/16" |
Computed for a straight flight with a 11" going and a 6' 8" headroom target under IRC 2021. Switch the unit toggle in the header to read every value in metric or imperial.
Open this stair in the calculator Tweak the 19-step 3 m ceiling stair live — 3D diagram + code checkHow it fits your space
A 3 m ceiling stair built straight needs a clear floor length of about 16' 5 11/16" from the bottom step to the top nosing — that is the total run, the footprint the flight occupies on the lower floor. You also have to cut a hole in the floor above: the floor opening has to be at least 11' 7 13/16" long for someone to walk up without ducking, keeping the 6' 8" of headroom the code wants above every nosing.
At 6 7/8" per riser and a 11" going, the pitch lands at 31.9° — a very comfortable stair to climb. If your run is tight, an L-shaped or stairs with a landing layout folds the same 19 steps into a shorter footprint; if it is really tight, a spiral staircase climbs the same rise in a small circle.
Does it meet code?
Run against IRC 2021, the computed 3 m ceiling stair passes the dimensional rules. The same checks run live in the calculator the moment you change a number.
- Riser height · IRC R311.7.5.1 Riser 6 7/8" is within the IRC 2021 maximum of 7 11/16".
- Tread run (going) · IRC R311.7.5.2 Run 11" meets the IRC 2021 minimum of 10".
- Headroom · IRC R311.7.2 Provide at least 6' 8" of headroom above the nosing line. Minimum floor opening: 11' 7 13/16".
- Stair width · IRC R311.7.1 Width 36" meets the IRC 2021 minimum of 36".
- Handrail · IRC R311.7.8 A handrail is required (4+ risers), mounted 34"–38" above the nosings.
- Guard · IRC R312.1 The total drop exceeds 2' 6", so a guard at least 36" high is required, with balusters that reject a 4 3/8" sphere.
- Rise between landings · IRC R311.7.3 The flight rises 10' 10 1/8", within the 12' 7" allowed between landings.
- Riser uniformity · IRC R311.7.5.1 All 19 risers are equal, within the 3/8" uniformity rule.
Common pitfalls for a 3 m ceiling stair
- Measuring to the ceiling, not the floor above. The stair climbs floor to floor — 10' 10 1/8" here — not the 9' 10 1/8" ceiling height. Forget the 12" floor structure and you end up one short step at the top.
- Uneven top or bottom step. All 19 risers must be equal. Measure the finished floor-to-floor rise (after flooring is down) and divide by the step count so the last riser matches the rest.
- Forgetting the floor opening. The hole above has to be roughly 11' 7 13/16" long or tall walkers clip their heads near the top. Size it from the headroom, not by eye.
- Skimping on the run. Dropping the going below 10" to save floor space fails the IRC tread-depth rule and makes the stair feel steep. Turn the flight instead of shrinking the treads.
Stairs for other ceiling heights
Calculators for your 3 m ceiling stair
Written by the Stairs Calc editorial team. Methodology and code references: see our methodology.
Built and maintained by builders, drafters and engineers who plan stairs for a living — every code limit is transcribed from the published standard and cited to its exact section.
Last reviewed 2026-06-20 against IRC 2021
Stairs Calc gives accurate geometry and checks it against published building-code limits, but results are estimates for planning. Codes are adopted and amended locally and change over time. Always confirm dimensions against your local adopted code and a licensed professional before you build.