Foundation Footings: Types, Sizing, and Code Requirements

Foundation footings are the structural elements that distribute building loads from columns, walls, and piers into the bearing soil or rock below. Footing design, sizing, and placement are governed by the International Building Code (IBC) and the International Residential Code (IRC), with additional engineering standards set by the American Concrete Institute (ACI). Footing failures account for a disproportionate share of structural distress events in both residential and commercial construction, making code compliance and proper sizing critical at the design phase rather than after construction.

Definition and scope

A footing is a widened base element, typically cast-in-place concrete, positioned at or below the frost line to spread concentrated or distributed loads over a sufficient soil bearing area. Footings are distinct from the foundation wall, pier, or column they support — the footing is the terminus at which structural load transfers to the ground.

The governing codes classify footings under Chapter 18 (Soils and Foundations) of the IBC for commercial structures, and Chapter 4 of the IRC for one- and two-family dwellings. ACI 318, Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete, establishes reinforcement, concrete strength, and proportioning standards referenced by both codes. The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 7 standard governs the load combinations — dead, live, wind, seismic, and snow — that determine the design loads footings must accommodate.

Footing scope extends beyond residential slabs. The foundation providers on this site organize contractor qualifications across footing types from light residential strip footings through drilled pier caps used in commercial high-rise construction. See the foundation provider network purpose and scope for classification boundaries between residential and commercial footing work.

How it works

Footing design follows a sequence of discrete phases driven by geotechnical data, code requirements, and structural load calculations:

Common scenarios

Strip footings (continuous wall footings) run beneath load-bearing walls and distribute linear loads along their length. Used in residential construction for perimeter and interior bearing walls, strip footings are typically 16 to 24 inches wide and 8 to 12 inches deep for standard single-story residential loads, sized upward per actual soil bearing.

Spread footings (isolated column footings) support individual columns and are the standard solution for steel frame and concrete frame commercial buildings. Dimensions range from 3 ft × 3 ft for lightly loaded columns to 12 ft × 12 ft or larger for heavily loaded commercial columns on weak soils.

Combined footings support 2 columns on a single footing, typically where column spacing is close or a column is adjacent to a property line that prevents a standard spread footing.

Mat foundations (raft footings) extend beneath the entire building footprint and function as a single large footing. Mat foundations are used when allowable soil bearing pressure is low — below approximately 1,000 psf — or where differential settlement must be minimized. They are common beneath multistory buildings on soft clay.

Grade beams are horizontal structural elements that span between piers or deep foundation elements; they function as footings for wall loads where point support is provided by piles or drilled piers rather than continuous soil bearing.

The contrast between strip and spread footings illustrates the core design logic: strip footings solve linear load distribution problems; spread footings solve point load problems. Mat foundations address both by eliminating the distinction at the cost of significantly more concrete volume.

Decision boundaries

Footing type selection crosses from engineering judgment into code-mandated requirements at several thresholds:

The boundary between IRC and IBC footing requirements falls at the occupancy classification of the structure, not its size. A detached garage is IRC-governed; a commercial storage building on the same lot is IBC-governed. Both require footing permits in jurisdictions that have adopted those codes.

Projects involving expansive soils, liquefiable soils, fill of unknown compaction, or organics below the footing plane require a licensed geotechnical engineer to establish site-specific bearing values — code prescriptive tables are not applicable in those conditions.

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References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)