Calculadora de Dutos HVAC
Beginner Guide

How Duct Sizing Works: A Complete Beginner Guide

HVAC Duct Calculator Team ·

How Duct Sizing Works

Duct sizing is the process of matching the physical dimensions of a duct to the amount of air it needs to carry. Too small and the air moves too fast, creating noise and pressure problems. Too large and the air moves too slowly, causing uneven temperatures and wasted material.

The process follows a logical sequence that any homeowner or beginner can understand.

Step 1: Determine How Much Air Each Room Needs

Every room in a building needs a specific volume of air to stay comfortable. This is measured in CFM (Cubic Feet per Minute).

The simplest rule of thumb for residential buildings is 1 CFM per square foot of floor area. So a 200 square foot bedroom needs approximately 200 CFM.

For more precise sizing, HVAC professionals perform a Manual J load calculation that accounts for:

  • Room dimensions and ceiling height
  • Number and size of windows
  • Insulation quality
  • Sun exposure and orientation
  • Climate zone
  • Number of occupants

Step 2: Choose a Friction Rate

Friction rate is the amount of pressure the air loses as it moves through the duct, measured in inches of water gauge per 100 feet of duct (in/wg per 100 ft).

Standard friction rates are:

ApplicationFriction Rate
Residential supply0.08 in/wg per 100 ft
Residential return0.06 in/wg per 100 ft
Commercial low pressure0.08 to 0.10 in/wg per 100 ft
Commercial medium pressure0.10 to 0.20 in/wg per 100 ft

For most homes, 0.08 is the standard starting point. Learn more in our friction rate guide.

Step 3: Calculate Total Effective Length

Total Effective Length (TEL) is the total resistance path the air must travel. It combines:

  • The actual straight length of the duct run
  • The equivalent lengths of all fittings (bends, transitions, takeoffs)

Common equivalent lengths:

  • 90° elbow = 10 feet
  • 45° elbow = 5 feet
  • 180° return bend = 20 feet
  • Branch takeoff = 25 to 35 feet

For flex duct, multiply all equivalent lengths by 1.5 because the corrugated interior creates more resistance.

Formula: TEL = Straight Length + Sum of All Fitting Equivalent Lengths

For a detailed walkthrough, see our TEL calculation guide.

Step 4: Size the Duct

With CFM, friction rate, and TEL known, you can determine the duct size. This is where the math happens:

Q = A × V (Airflow = Area × Velocity)

For a round duct: A = π × (D/2)²

In practice, most people use a duct calculator instead of doing this by hand. You enter your values and the calculator tells you the required diameter.

Example Calculation

A bedroom needs 200 CFM. The duct run is 30 feet with two 90° elbows.

  1. TEL = 30 + (2 × 10) = 50 feet
  2. Using 0.08 friction rate
  3. Calculator result: 8 inch round duct at approximately 573 FPM velocity

This velocity is well within the quiet range for residential systems (under 900 FPM).

Step 5: Verify the Velocity

After sizing the duct, always check that the velocity is acceptable:

ApplicationMaximum Velocity
Residential supply600 to 900 FPM
Residential return600 to 700 FPM
Commercial supply1000 to 1500 FPM

If the velocity is too high, the duct is undersized. If it is too low, the duct may be oversized.

Step 6: Check the Entire System

Individual duct sizing is only part of the picture. The complete system must be checked to ensure:

  • The blower fan can generate enough static pressure for all duct runs
  • No single run creates a bottleneck
  • Return air capacity matches supply air capacity
  • The main trunk is sized for the total system CFM

Common Beginner Mistakes

  1. Forgetting fittings in TEL — This underestimates resistance by 30% to 50%
  2. Using the wrong friction rate — Residential and commercial rates are very different
  3. Ignoring flex duct corrections — Flex duct creates much more resistance than metal
  4. Sizing only the branches — The main trunk line is just as critical

Tools and Resources