Calculadora de Ductos HVAC
Practical Guide

Duct Sizing for Contractors: Job Site Reference Guide

HVAC Duct Calculator Team ·

Duct Sizing on the Job Site

As an HVAC contractor, accurate duct sizing separates professional installations from callbacks and complaints. This guide covers the practical sizing information you need in the field.

Quick Reference: Duct Size by CFM

At 0.08 in/wg friction rate and approximately 700 FPM velocity:

CFMRound DuctRect EquivalentApplication
605 inch8 × 4Bathroom, small closet
1006 inch8 × 6Small bedroom, hallway
1507 inch10 × 6Standard bedroom
2008 inch10 × 8Large bedroom, office
30010 inch12 × 8Living room, master bed
40010 inch14 × 8Large living room
60012 inch16 × 10Main trunk section
80014 inch18 × 12Main trunk, large zones
120016 inch24 × 12Full system trunk
160018 inch26 × 14Large system trunk
200020 inch30 × 145 ton system trunk

Field Calculation: TEL Quick Method

When you do not have time for detailed calculations:

  1. Measure straight duct run
  2. Count fittings: add 10 ft per 90° elbow, 5 ft per 45° elbow
  3. Add 10 ft for the register boot
  4. Add 25 ft for the trunk takeoff
  5. Multiply total by 1.5 if using flex duct

Pre Installation Checklist

Before cutting any duct:

  • Manual J load calculation completed (or CFM per room estimated)
  • Equipment TESP rating verified
  • Available static pressure calculated
  • Friction rate determined
  • Longest run TEL calculated
  • All duct sizes specified
  • Return air sizing verified (often overlooked)
  • Duct material selected (metal trunk, flex branches, etc.)

Common Job Site Mistakes

1. Relying on Rules of Thumb Alone

Rules of thumb get you close but not accurate. Always verify critical runs with actual calculations or our HVAC Duct Calculator.

2. Not Accounting for Duct Route Changes

The planned route often changes once you see the actual framing, plumbing, and electrical. Every added bend increases TEL. Recalculate when routes change significantly.

3. Compressing Flex Duct

Flex duct must be fully extended and supported to maintain its rated diameter. Every sag and compression reduces effective diameter and increases friction.

4. Skipping the Return Side

Many contractors size supply ducts carefully but ignore return sizing. Undersized returns cause every comfort and noise complaint.

5. Not Sealing Joints

Air leakage at duct connections reduces delivered airflow by 10% to 30%. Use mastic sealant or metal tape (not cloth duct tape) on every joint.

Installation Best Practices

  • Support ducts every 4 feet to prevent sagging
  • Seal every connection with mastic or UL listed metal tape
  • Insulate ducts in unconditioned spaces to R 6 minimum (R 8 preferred)
  • Use turning vanes in rectangular duct elbows
  • Keep flex duct runs under 15 feet when possible
  • Test total system static pressure after installation

Verifying Your Work

After installation, measure static pressure at the supply and return plenums:

MeasurementAcceptable
Supply static0.15 to 0.30 in/wg
Return static0.10 to 0.20 in/wg
Total external0.30 to 0.50 in/wg

If TESP exceeds 0.50 in/wg, identify and fix the restriction before completing the job.

Mobile Duct Calculator

Use our HVAC Duct Calculator on your phone or tablet for instant duct sizing on the job site. No app download needed.