Floor Area Ratio

Floor Area Ratio

The floor area ratio is the relationship between the total amount of usable floor area that a building has, or has been permitted to have, and the total area of the lot on which the building stands. Floor Area Ratio \= Total Building Floor Area Gross Lot Area \\begin{aligned} &\\text{Floor Area Ratio} = \\frac{ \\text{Total Building Floor Area} }{ \\text{Gross Lot Area} } \\\\ \\end{aligned} Floor Area Ratio\=Gross Lot AreaTotal Building Floor Area The floor area ratio accounts for the entire floor area of a building, not simply the building's footprint. The floor area ratio is the relationship of the total usable floor area of a building relative to the total area of the lot on which the building stands. The floor area ratio is the relationship between the total amount of usable floor area that a building has, or has been permitted to have, and the total area of the lot on which the building stands. A two-story building on the same lot, where each floor was 500 square feet, would have the same floor-area-ratio value.

The floor area ratio is the relationship of the total usable floor area of a building relative to the total area of the lot on which the building stands.

What Is Floor Area Ratio?

The floor area ratio is the relationship between the total amount of usable floor area that a building has, or has been permitted to have, and the total area of the lot on which the building stands. A higher ratio likely would indicate a dense or urban construction. Local governments use the floor area ratio for zoning codes.

You may determine the ratio by dividing the total or gross floor area of the building by the gross area of the lot.

Floor Area Ratio = Total Building Floor Area Gross Lot Area \begin{aligned} &\text{Floor Area Ratio} = \frac{ \text{Total Building Floor Area} }{ \text{Gross Lot Area} } \\ \end{aligned} Floor Area Ratio=Gross Lot AreaTotal Building Floor Area

The floor area ratio is the relationship of the total usable floor area of a building relative to the total area of the lot on which the building stands.
A higher ratio usually indicates a dense or highly urbanized area.
floor area ratios vary based on structure type, such as industrial, residential, commercial, or agricultural.

What Does the Floor Area Ratio Tell You?

The floor area ratio accounts for the entire floor area of a building, not simply the building's footprint. Excluded from the square footage calculation are unoccupied areas such as basements, parking garages, stairs, and elevator shafts.

Buildings with different numbers of stories may have the same floor-area-ratio value. Every city has a limited capacity or limited space that can be utilized safely. Any use beyond this point puts undue stress on a city. This is sometimes known as the safe load factor.

The floor area ratio is variable because population dynamics, growth patterns, and construction activities vary and because the nature of the land or space where a building is placed varies. Industrial, residential, commercial, agricultural, and nonagricultural spaces have differing safe load factors, so they typically have differing floor area ratios. In the end, local governments establish regulations and restrictions that determine the floor area ratio.

The floor area ratio is a key determining factor for development in any country. A low floor area ratio is generally a deterrent to construction. Many industries, largely the real estate industry, seek hikes in the floor area ratio to open up space and land resources to developers. An increased floor area ratio allows a developer to complete more building projects, which inevitably leads to greater sales, decreased expenditures per project, and greater supply to meet demand.

Example of How to Use the Floor Area Ratio

The Difference Between the Floor Area Ratio and Lot Coverage

Though the floor area ratio calculates the size of the building relative to the lot, the lot coverage takes into account the size of all buildings and structures. The lot coverage ratio includes structures such as garages, swimming pools, and sheds — including nonconforming buildings.

Limitations of Using the Floor Area Ratio

The impact that the floor area ratio has on land value cuts both ways. In some instances, an increased floor area ratio may make a property more valuable if, for example, an apartment complex can be built that allows for more spacious rentals or more tenants.

However, a developer who can build a larger apartment complex on one piece of land may decrease the value of an adjoining property with a high sale value bolstered by a view that is now obstructed.

Related terms:

Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU)

An accessory dwelling unit (ADU) is a residential structure that shares the same lot as a primary structure. read more

Add-On Factor

The add-on factor is the percentage of a building's gross usable space that is added to each tenant's rented space to determine their total rent. read more

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

Key performance indicators (KPIs) are quantifiable measures that gauge a company's performance against a set of targets, objectives, or industry peers. read more

Landominium

Landominium refers to a unit, built as part of a residential development, whose owner owns both the unit and the land on which it is built. read more

Population

Population may refer to the number of people living in a region or a pool from which a statistical sample is taken. See our population definition here. read more

Real Estate

Real estate refers broadly to the property, land, buildings, and air rights that are above land, and the underground rights below it. Learn more about real estate. read more

Reproduction Cost

Reproduction cost refers to the costs involved with reproducing an asset or property with same specifications as insured property based on current prices. read more

Zero-Lot-Line House

A zero-lot-line house is a piece of residential real estate in which the structure comes up to, or very near to, the edge of the property line. read more

Zoning

Zoning refers to laws that regulate how real property can be used in certain areas, designating the type of operations allowed on a site. read more