Concrete Anchor Depth Calculator
Calculate the required embedment depth for concrete anchors.
Covers wedge anchors, sleeve anchors, drop-in anchors, and epoxy anchors based on load and concrete strength.
Concrete anchors are used to attach structural elements, equipment, railings, shelving, machinery, and fixtures to concrete surfaces. Incorrect embedment depth is one of the most common causes of anchor failure — with potentially serious safety consequences.
Types of Concrete Anchors
Wedge Anchors (most common) Mechanically expand against the walls of the drilled hole when the nut is tightened. High load capacity. Require embedment of 6–8× the bolt diameter, minimum.
Sleeve Anchors Expand similarly to wedge anchors but with a different mechanism. Slightly lower load capacity but more forgiving installation. Required embedment: 4–6× diameter.
Drop-In Anchors Female threaded anchors set into the concrete. Used with a threaded rod or bolt. Require precise setting and embedment of 3–4× diameter.
Epoxy / Chemical Anchors Adhesive is injected into the hole, then the rod or rebar is inserted. Very high load capacity once cured. Used where mechanical anchors cannot achieve required strength. Embedment: 10–15× diameter for rebar; 6–10× for threaded rod.
Minimum Embedment Depth Rule
The general industry rule for mechanical anchors:
Minimum Embedment = Anchor Diameter × 6 (minimum) to × 8 (preferred)
Example: A ½-inch (12.7 mm) wedge anchor should be embedded at least 3 inches (76 mm), preferably 4 inches (102 mm).
Edge Distance and Spacing
Anchors placed too close to the edge of concrete can cause blowout failure. Minimum edge distance for most anchors: 5× the anchor diameter. Minimum spacing between anchors: 10× the anchor diameter.
Concrete Strength
Standard concrete (3,000–4,000 PSI) is assumed for most residential applications. For lower-strength concrete or lightweight concrete, increase embedment depth by 25–50% or use chemical anchors.
Embedment depths in this calculator are provided in both imperial (inches) and metric (millimeters).