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What a 7.75-inch riser paired with a 10-inch tread actually gives you — pitch, comfort, and code status — plus the calculator to size a full flight.
A 7.75-inch riser with a 10-inch tread is compliant under IRC 2021 (max riser 7.75″, min tread 10.0″), and non-compliant under the IBC commercial standard (max riser 7.0″, min tread 11.0″).
This pair is one step's geometry. To size a complete flight for your floor-to-floor height, enter your total rise in the calculator and it will hold the riser near 7.75″ while checking every code limit.
A 7.75-inch riser with a 10-inch tread produces a 37.8-degree pitch, which is on the brisk side of comfortable for a staircase. In practice that means it is efficient with floor space while staying easy to use. Its Blondel value of 25.5 inches sits just above the 24–25 inch Blondel band — a touch tall in the step, but still comfortable.
Across a typical flight of about 14 treads, the 10-inch tread depth works out to roughly 10.8 feet of horizontal run — a compact footprint. It is fine for a residential stair under the IRC but would fail an IBC commercial plan review because its 7.75-inch riser exceeds the IBC's 7-inch cap and its 10-inch tread is below the IBC's 11-inch minimum.
This is a sound general-purpose main-stair pairing: comfortable to climb yet reasonably efficient with floor space. Whatever your floor-to-floor height, the calculator below will hold the riser near 7.75 inches, divide the rise into uniform steps, and check the result against the code you select.