MGP10 Floor Joist Spans: How to Size Them Right
Floor joists are where most people first meet a span table, and they are a perfect example of how the variables interact. This guide explains how MGP10 floor joist spans are determined so you can read the table confidently — it is an orientation to the method, not a number to copy.
What spans what
In a typical sub-floor, joists span across bearers, and the joist span is the distance it bridges between those supports. The bearers then span between posts or stumps. Getting the language right matters: when a table asks for "span," it means the clear distance the joist itself bridges, not the size of the room.
Spacing changes everything
Joists are usually set out at 450 or 600 mm centres. Spacing matters because it sets how much floor each joist carries:
- Closer spacing (450 mm) — each joist carries less, which generally allows a longer span or a smaller section.
- Wider spacing (600 mm) — each joist carries more, generally reducing the span it can manage.
The table has separate columns for each spacing, so always read the one that matches your set-out.
Single vs continuous span
A joist supported only at its two ends is a single span. A joist running continuously over three or more supports is a continuous span and can often reach further. These are different columns — read the right one for your real framing.
Strength is not the whole story
A joist that is strong enough not to break can still deflect or vibrate enough to feel bouncy underfoot. Span tables build in deflection limits precisely so floors feel solid, not just stay up. This is why you cannot simply pick the size that "looks beefy enough" — the table has already balanced strength and stiffness for you.
Decks are a different animal
Putting it together
To size an MGP10 floor joist: confirm the grade, pick your spacing, decide single vs continuous, establish the load case (internal floor vs deck), then read the smallest size whose listed span meets your required span — from the current official table. The Span Spec Builder assembles all of this into a clean spec to take to the table or your engineer.
Handy on site
Chalk Line Reel
Snapping long, straight set-out lines across a subfloor or wall plate in seconds. The fastest way to mark joist and stud centres.
Keep going
Joists sit on bearers, so read MGP10 bearer spans next, and make sure you understand load width before you finalise anything.
Frequently asked questions
What spacing are MGP10 floor joists usually set at?
Do floor joists span across bearers?
Are deck joists the same as floor joists?
Why does my floor feel bouncy even though the joists are 'strong enough'?
Keep reading
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