Calculate ridge vent length needed for your roof. Determines net free area, ridge vent linear feet, and compliance with exhaust ventilation requirements.
Ridge vents are installed along the peak of a roof, allowing hot, moist air to escape the attic continuously along the full ridge length. They provide the most effective and uniform exhaust ventilation when paired with balanced soffit intake vents.
This calculator determines the ridge vent length needed (typically the full ridge length minus a 12-inch setback from each end) and the number of ridge vent sections to order. It also calculates the net free area (NFA) provided, which is critical for meeting building code ventilation requirements.
Ridge vent comes in 4-foot sections and is covered by ridge cap shingles, making it nearly invisible from the ground. Proper ridge venting reduces cooling costs, prevents ice dams, and extends shingle and decking lifespan.
Understanding this metric in quantitative terms allows construction professionals to compare design alternatives, evaluate cost-effectiveness, and select the optimal approach for each project. Accurate calculation of this value helps construction professionals plan projects more effectively, reduce material waste, and ensure compliance with building codes and industry standards.
Proper exhaust ventilation requires a specific net free area (NFA) matched to intake. This calculator determines if your ridge length provides enough NFA, or if supplemental exhaust venting is needed. Data-driven calculations reduce financial risk by ensuring that material orders, labor estimates, and project budgets reflect actual requirements rather than rough approximations.
Active Vent Length = Ridge Length − (2 × Setback) Ridge Vent Pieces = Active Vent Length / Piece Length (round up) NFA Provided = Active Vent Length × NFA per LF
Result: 10 pieces, 720 sq in NFA
Active length = 42 − 2 = 40 ft. Pieces = 40 / 4 = 10 pieces. NFA = 40 × 18 = 720 sq in of net free area.
Ridge vent is considered the best exhaust vent because it vents along the entire ridge, providing even ventilation across the full attic. Box vents, turbines, and powered fans create localized exhaust at specific points, often leaving portions of the attic under-ventilated.
For every square inch of exhaust (ridge vent), there should be at least an equal amount of intake (soffit vents). The ideal ratio is 50/50, though up to 60% intake and 40% exhaust is also effective. Insufficient intake causes the ridge vent to pull air from unintended paths (cracks, gable vents, or even the house interior).
Always cut the ridge slot BEFORE installing the ridge vent. Cut to the manufacturer's recommended width (typically 1 to 1.5 inches total). Avoid cutting through the ridge board or trusses. Apply ice and water shield or membrane along the cut edges for added waterproofing.
NFA is the actual open area through which air can pass, measured in square inches. A vent's NFA is less than its physical opening because insect screens and baffles reduce the effective area. Ridge vent NFA is specified per linear foot (typically 18 sq in/ft).
As much as possible. The ideal installation runs the full ridge length minus a 12-inch setback at each end. If the ridge is shorter than needed for balanced ventilation, supplement with additional exhaust vents near the ridge.
Yes. A slot is cut in the roof deck along both sides of the ridge peak (typically 3/4 inch per side, for a total 1.5-inch-wide slot). The ridge vent sits over this slot to let hot air escape.
Quality baffled ridge vents are tested to prevent water and snow intrusion even in driving rain and blizzards. External and internal baffles create a tortuous path that allows air through but blocks water and wind.
Yes, and most building science experts recommend it. Ridge vents with balanced soffit intake provide continuous, passive ventilation that is more energy-efficient and reliable than powered fans. Powered fans can actually create negative pressure that pulls conditioned air from the house.
Standard ridge vent comes in 4-foot sections. Some products come in rolls up to 20 feet. Sectional products snap together with built-in connectors for easy installation.