Glossary: Lap Splice
A **Lap Splice** is the structural overlapping of two reinforcing steel bars (rebar) placed side-by-side and tied together at a joint, ensuring tension and compression forces are continuously transferred across the reinforcement mesh without structural breaks.
Lap Splice Length Guidelines & Code Rules
When concrete slabs or footings exceed standard inventory rebar lengths (commonly 20 ft or 6 m), bars must be spliced. A lap splice relies on concrete bond development to transfer stress between the steel bars.
- The Rule of Thumb: Lap splice length is typically calculated as **40 to 60 times the bar diameter** (40d to 60d).
• For #4 rebar (0.5" diameter): A 40d overlap is 40 × 0.5 = 20 inches.
• For 12mm rebar (1.2cm diameter): A 40d overlap is 40 × 1.2 = 48 cm. - Structural Code Variables (ACI 318):
• **Class A Splices:** Overlap length is equal to 1.0 × the development length (ld).
• **Class B Splices:** Overlap length is 1.3 × the development length (the most common structural specification for high-tension zones).