How to Calculate Feet of Head
Use this premium calculator to convert pressure into feet of head and estimate total dynamic head by adding static lift, friction loss, and velocity head. Ideal for pumps, water systems, process piping, and field troubleshooting.
Feet of Head Calculator
Enter pressure and system losses to estimate pressure head and total head in feet.
Results
Pressure head is converted from pressure. Total head includes lift and losses.
Ready to Calculate
Enter your data and click the button to compute feet of head.
Expert Guide: How to Calculate Feet of Head Correctly
Feet of head is one of the most important concepts in pumping, water distribution, hydronic systems, and process engineering. Even though operators and contractors often talk about pressure in psi, the pump itself responds to energy per unit weight of fluid, which is why engineers frequently convert pressure into head. If you understand how to calculate feet of head, you can compare pumps, estimate system resistance, check field readings, and avoid a lot of common design errors.
At a basic level, feet of head expresses the height of a fluid column that would create a given pressure. For water, the common field rule is simple: 1 psi is approximately 2.31 feet of head. That shortcut is incredibly useful, but it assumes the fluid is water with a specific gravity near 1.00. As soon as the fluid changes, the relationship changes too. That is why good calculations always consider both pressure and specific gravity.
What “feet of head” actually means
Head is a way to express fluid energy in units of length. Instead of saying a pump adds a certain pressure, engineers say it adds a certain number of feet of head. This is useful because a given pump can create roughly the same head regardless of fluid density, while the pressure reading changes with specific gravity. That difference is critical when dealing with fluids heavier or lighter than water.
For example, imagine a pump producing 100 feet of head. If the fluid is water, the pressure rise will be about 43.3 psi. If the fluid is denser than water, the same head produces a higher pressure. If the fluid is lighter, it produces a lower pressure. The pump’s energy addition is better described by head than by pressure alone.
The core formulas you need
There are several formulas used in practice, depending on what information you start with.
- Pressure head from psi: Head (ft) = Pressure (psi) × 2.31 ÷ SG
- Pressure head from kPa: Head (ft) = Pressure (kPa) × 0.3346 ÷ SG
- Pressure head from bar: Head (ft) = Pressure (bar) × 33.455 ÷ SG
- Total dynamic head: TDH = Static Lift + Pressure Head + Friction Loss + Velocity Head
The calculator above handles these unit conversions automatically. It first converts pressure to psi, then applies the standard head relationship using the entered specific gravity.
Step-by-step method for calculating feet of head
- Measure or identify the pressure. This may come from a gauge, transmitter, datasheet, or system requirement.
- Determine the pressure unit. Common units include psi, kPa, bar, or Pa.
- Determine fluid specific gravity. For clean water, use 1.00 unless you need high precision.
- Convert pressure to head. Use the appropriate formula for your unit.
- Add elevation differences. If the fluid must be raised vertically, include static lift.
- Add friction loss. Include losses from pipe length, elbows, valves, strainers, and heat exchangers.
- Add velocity head if needed. In many practical systems this is relatively small, but it matters in higher velocity designs.
- Report the result clearly. Distinguish between pressure head and total dynamic head.
Worked example using water
Suppose your discharge pressure is 50 psi, the fluid is water, static lift is 12 ft, friction loss is 8 ft, and velocity head is 2 ft. First calculate pressure head:
Pressure Head = 50 × 2.31 ÷ 1.00 = 115.5 ftThen calculate total head:
TDH = 115.5 + 12 + 8 + 2 = 137.5 ftThat result tells you the system needs about 137.5 feet of total head at the specified operating point.
Worked example for a heavier fluid
Now assume the same 50 psi pressure, but the fluid has a specific gravity of 1.20. The pressure head becomes:
Pressure Head = 50 × 2.31 ÷ 1.20 = 96.25 ftNotice that the same pressure corresponds to less head because the fluid is heavier. This is one of the most common points of confusion in pump selection. If you only look at psi and ignore specific gravity, you can misread what the pump is actually doing.
Pressure vs head: why field technicians convert back and forth
Many instruments in the field read pressure, but pump curves are usually plotted in head. The conversion is what connects instrument readings with pump performance. If your gauge shows 43.3 psi on water, that is approximately 100 feet of head. If your system design requires 120 feet of total dynamic head, you know that a 43.3 psi reading by itself is not enough unless the elevation and losses are already accounted for somewhere else in the system balance.
| Pressure | Equivalent Head in Water (SG 1.00) | Equivalent Head at SG 1.20 | Equivalent Head at SG 0.90 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 psi | 23.1 ft | 19.3 ft | 25.7 ft |
| 20 psi | 46.2 ft | 38.5 ft | 51.3 ft |
| 30 psi | 69.3 ft | 57.8 ft | 77.0 ft |
| 40 psi | 92.4 ft | 77.0 ft | 102.7 ft |
| 50 psi | 115.5 ft | 96.3 ft | 128.3 ft |
| 60 psi | 138.6 ft | 115.5 ft | 154.0 ft |
Static head, friction head, and velocity head
When people ask how to calculate feet of head, they are often really asking how to calculate the full requirement a pump must overcome. That requires more than pressure conversion.
- Static head is the vertical distance the fluid must be lifted, or the elevation difference between source and destination.
- Friction head is the energy lost as fluid moves through pipe walls, valves, elbows, strainers, and equipment.
- Velocity head is related to the fluid’s kinetic energy and depends on flow velocity.
These components combine to create total dynamic head, often abbreviated as TDH. For pump selection, TDH is usually the real target number.
Typical water system values and design context
Real systems vary widely, but a few benchmark values help provide intuition. Municipal pressure in distribution systems often falls in a practical range that supports residential service without over-pressurizing fixtures. Buildings with multiple stories may require booster pumps because pressure and available head fall as elevation increases. In irrigation and industrial circulation loops, friction can become a large fraction of the total head requirement if the pipe is undersized or the flow rate is high.
| Reference Statistic | Typical Figure | Feet of Head Equivalent | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard atmospheric pressure at sea level | 14.7 psi | 33.9 ft of water | Useful for suction-side concepts and vacuum discussions. |
| Common residential service pressure | 40 to 80 psi | 92.4 to 184.8 ft | Shows how ordinary building pressures translate into head. |
| Elevation effect in water | 1 ft rise | 1 ft static head | Every vertical foot directly adds to required pump head. |
| Pressure needed for 100 ft of water head | 43.3 psi | 100 ft | A classic benchmark for checking pump curve readings. |
Common mistakes when calculating feet of head
- Ignoring specific gravity. This is the biggest error when the fluid is not plain water.
- Mixing pressure head and total head. Pressure conversion alone does not include elevation or friction losses.
- Using the wrong pressure location. Gauge position matters. A reading at one point in the system may not represent pump differential head.
- Forgetting minor losses. Valves, tees, elbows, and filters can add significant friction head.
- Confusing suction lift with discharge elevation. The total picture requires both sides of the system to be considered.
- Assuming velocity head is always zero. In large pipes it may be small, but in high velocity systems it can matter.
How feet of head relates to pump curves
Pump curves are typically plotted with flow on the horizontal axis and head on the vertical axis. Once you calculate the total head required by the system at a given flow, you can overlay that requirement on the pump curve. The intersection between system curve and pump curve gives the operating point. This is why feet of head is such a universal engineering language for pumps. Two pumps may develop very different pressures on fluids of different densities, but their head curves remain the more fundamental way to compare performance.
When the 2.31 rule is appropriate
The 2.31 conversion factor is excellent for quick water calculations in U.S. customary units. It is used constantly in field service, design review, and troubleshooting. However, it should be treated as a practical approximation for water near standard conditions. If the fluid temperature, density, or composition differs significantly, or if your specification is highly sensitive, use the actual fluid properties and a more exact calculation.
Practical engineering workflow
A smart workflow starts with known flow, pipe size, fluid properties, and elevation change. Then you estimate friction losses using hydraulic methods or software, convert any pressure requirements into head, add all components, and compare that total with available pump head at the desired flow. The calculator on this page helps with the conversion and head summation part of that process, which is usually the fastest way to turn field readings into an actionable number.
Authoritative resources for deeper study
If you want to go beyond a quick field calculation, these sources provide reliable background on fluid pressure, energy, and water systems:
- USGS Water Science School
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Water Research
- NASA Glenn Research Center: Bernoulli Principle
Bottom line
To calculate feet of head, convert pressure into an equivalent fluid column height and then, when needed, add static lift, friction loss, and velocity head. For water, the fast rule is pressure in psi times 2.31. For other fluids, divide by specific gravity. If you are selecting or evaluating a pump, focus on total dynamic head rather than pressure alone. That single habit will make your calculations more accurate and your equipment choices far more dependable.