UK Bolt Capacity Tables -- EN 1993-1-8 Shear and Tension Resistance with UK National Annex

The design resistance of structural bolts forms the foundation of every UK steel connection design. EN 1993-1-8 Table 3.4 provides the general formula for bolt shear resistance Fv,Rd and bolt tension resistance Ft,Rd, referencing the tensile stress area As and the bolt ultimate strength fub. This reference presents complete capacity tables for M12 through M36 bolts in Class 4.6, 8.8, and 10.9, covering shear with threads in and outside the shear plane, tension, combined shear and tension interaction, and the UK NA partial factors that govern UK practice.

Regulatory Framework

The bolt shear resistance formula derives from EN 1993-1-8 Clause 3.6 and Table 3.4:

Fv,Rd = alpha_v x fub x As / gamma_M2

Where:

The tension resistance formula:

Ft,Rd = k2 x fub x As / gamma_M2

Where k2 = 0.9 for all bolt classes, and gamma_M2 = 1.25.

Bolt Tensile Stress Areas

The tensile stress area As represents the effective cross-sectional area of the bolt at the threaded section, accounting for the reduced diameter at the thread root. Values are per ISO 898-1 and BS EN ISO 898-1:2013:

Bolt As (mm^2) d (mm) Thread Pitch (mm)
M12 84.3 12 1.75
M16 157 16 2.0
M20 245 20 2.5
M22 303 22 2.5
M24 353 24 3.0
M27 459 27 3.0
M30 561 30 3.5
M36 817 36 4.0

Class 8.8 Bolt Capacity Tables (fub = 800 MPa)

Class 8.8 bolts are the workhorse of UK structural steelwork, specified on the vast majority of building frame connections. The 8.8 designation indicates a minimum ultimate tensile strength of 800 MPa and a yield ratio of 0.8, giving fyb = 640 MPa nominal minimum.

Shear Resistance Fv,Rd (kN) -- Threads in Shear Plane (alpha_v = 0.6)

Bolt As (mm^2) Fv,Rd (kN)
M12 84.3 32.4
M16 157 60.3
M20 245 94.1
M22 303 116.4
M24 353 135.6
M27 459 176.3
M30 561 215.4
M36 817 313.7

Shear Resistance Fv,Rd (kN) -- Threads Outside Shear Plane (alpha_v = 0.6, use gross area A)

Bolt A (mm^2) Fv,Rd (kN)
M12 113 43.4
M16 201 77.2
M20 314 120.6
M24 452 173.6
M30 707 271.5

When the shear plane passes through the unthreaded shank, the larger gross area A is used instead of As, yielding significantly higher shear resistance. This condition is achievable when the grip length is controlled and the bolt stick-out is specified to ensure threads are outside the shear plane.

Tension Resistance Ft,Rd (kN) (k2 = 0.9)

Bolt As (mm^2) Ft,Rd (kN)
M12 84.3 48.6
M16 157 90.4
M20 245 141.1
M22 303 174.5
M24 353 203.3
M27 459 264.4
M30 561 323.1
M36 817 470.6

Class 10.9 Bolt Capacity Tables (fub = 1000 MPa)

Class 10.9 bolts are specified for heavily loaded connections, bridge structures, and preloaded slip-resistant joints where higher preload forces permit higher slip resistance. The bolt shear resistance formula for Class 10.9 uses alpha_v = 0.5 when threads are in the shear plane, reflecting the reduced ductility of higher-strength bolts and the more conservative treatment of thread effects.

Shear Resistance Fv,Rd (kN) -- Threads in Shear Plane (alpha_v = 0.5)

Bolt As (mm^2) Fv,Rd (kN)
M12 84.3 33.7
M16 157 62.8
M20 245 98.0
M24 353 141.2
M30 561 224.4
M36 817 326.8

Note that for Class 10.9, the Fv,Rd with threads in the shear plane is only marginally higher than for Class 8.8 (e.g., M20: 98.0 vs 94.1 kN) despite the 25% increase in fub, because alpha_v reduces from 0.6 to 0.5.

Tension Resistance Ft,Rd (kN) (k2 = 0.9, fub = 1000 MPa)

Bolt As (mm^2) Ft,Rd (kN)
M12 84.3 60.7
M16 157 113.0
M20 245 176.4
M24 353 254.2
M30 561 403.9
M36 817 588.2

Class 4.6 Bolt Capacity Tables (fub = 400 MPa)

Class 4.6 bolts represent the lowest strength class commonly specified in UK steelwork, typically reserved for secondary members, purlin connections, and non-structural attachments where strength requirements are modest. The lower fub reduces all capacities proportionally.

Shear Resistance Fv,Rd (kN) -- Threads in Shear Plane

Bolt Fv,Rd (kN) Fv,Rd (kN) -- Threads Outside
M12 16.2 21.7
M16 30.1 38.6
M20 47.0 60.3
M24 67.8 86.8
M30 107.7 135.7

Tension Resistance Ft,Rd (kN)

Bolt Ft,Rd (kN)
M12 24.3
M16 45.2
M20 70.6
M24 101.7
M30 161.6

Provision for Preloaded Bolts -- Categories D and E

For preloaded bolt connections designed as slip-resistant at the serviceability limit state (Category E) or ultimate limit state (Category D), the design slip resistance per bolt is:

Fs,Rd = ks x n x mu x Fp,Cd / gamma_M3

Where:

For a connection with Class A surface (grit blasted, no paint, mu = 0.50), M20 Class 8.8 bolts, standard holes (ks = 1.0), single interface (n = 1):

Fp,Cd = 0.7 x 800 x 245 / 1.10 = 124.7 kN Fs,Rd (ULS) = 1.0 x 1 x 0.50 x 124.7 / 1.25 = 49.9 kN Fs,Rd (SLS) = 1.0 x 1 x 0.50 x 124.7 / 1.10 = 56.7 kN

Combined Shear and Tension

EN 1993-1-8 Table 3.4 provides the interaction equation for bolts subject to combined shear and tension:

(Fv,Ed / Fv,Rd) + (Ft,Ed / 1.4Ft,Rd) <= 1.0

The 1.4 factor on the tension denominator reflects the reduced tension capacity in the presence of shear, but the interaction is asymmetric -- shear is penalised more heavily than tension. For a bolt with Fv,Ed/Fv,Rd = 0.5, the permitted tension ratio is Ft,Ed/Ft,Rd = 0.7 (i.e., (1.0 - 0.5) x 1.4 = 0.7).

This interaction is relevant for:

UK National Annex Modifications

The UK NA to BS EN 1993-1-8 confirms the following bolt resistance parameters:

  1. gamma_M2 = 1.25 for bolt shear and tension resistance, without modification from the recommended value.

  2. gamma_M7 = 1.10 for preloaded bolt design preload force Fp,Cd.

  3. gamma_M3 (ULS) = 1.25 and gamma_M3 (SLS) = 1.10 for slip-resistant connections.

  4. No modification to alpha_v values. The thread-in-shear-plane alpha_v values of 0.6 (8.8) and 0.5 (10.9) are adopted as recommended.

  5. The UK NA permits the use of LSCC (Limited Slip Capacity Connections), where the connection is designed as shear-bearing for ULS but slip is checked at SLS. This hybrid approach is common in UK multi-storey frames where thermal movements are accommodated by simple connections but lateral stability depends on a limited number of slip-resistant joints.


Design Resources


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the shear capacity of an M20 Class 8.8 bolt per UK NA provisions?

The shear resistance per shear plane for M20 Class 8.8 bolts with threads in the shear plane is Fv,Rd = 0.6 x 800 x 245 / 1.25 = 94.1 kN. With threads outside the shear plane: Fv,Rd = 0.6 x 800 x 314 / 1.25 = 120.6 kN. Single-shear connections (lap joints) use one shear plane; double-shear connections (cover plate splices) use two shear planes, effectively doubling the bolt group shear resistance.

Why does the Class 10.9 shear capacity not increase proportionally with bolt strength?

For Class 10.9 bolts, alpha_v reduces from 0.6 to 0.5 when threads are in the shear plane, per EN 1993-1-8 Table 3.4. The 25% increase in fub (800 to 1000 MPa) is partially offset by the alpha_v reduction (0.6 to 0.5, a 17% reduction). The net effect for M20: Fv,Rd_8.8 = 94.1 kN vs Fv,Rd_10.9 = 98.0 kN -- only a 4% increase. The reduced alpha_v reflects the lower ductility of higher-strength bolts and the associated reduction in stress redistribution capacity at the bolt-pin interface.

What UK NA factor applies to bolt tension resistance checks?

The UK NA to BS EN 1993-1-8 confirms gamma_M2 = 1.25 for bolt tension resistance. The tension resistance is Ft,Rd = 0.9 x fub x As / 1.25. For M20 Class 8.8: Ft,Rd = 0.9 x 800 x 245 / 1.25 = 141.1 kN. The gamma_M2 factor is not modified by the UK NA from the recommended value.


Educational reference only. All design values are per BS EN 1993-1-8:2005 + UK National Annex and BS EN ISO 898-1:2013. Verify all values against the current editions of the standards and the applicable National Annex for your project jurisdiction. Designs must be independently verified by a Chartered Structural Engineer registered with the Institution of Structural Engineers (IStructE) or the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE). Results are PRELIMINARY -- NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION without independent professional verification.