Wood stud walls: double top plate (or single with corner ties); end joints offset ≥ 24 in
2025 RCNYS §R602.3.2 Top plateDescription
Wood stud walls must be capped with a double top plate (2 layers of dimensional lumber, same width as studs), with end joints offset at least 24 in. The double plate must overlap at corners and intersections with bearing partitions. SINGLE top plate is permitted with corner/intersection ties + in-line splice plates per Table R602.3.2 — but rafters/joists must be centered over studs within 1 in tolerance.
Why this exists
The double top plate is the load-spreading element that lets joists/rafters bear anywhere along the wall, not just over studs. The single-plate alternative saves ~5% of wall material but constrains framing layout — only worth it in budget-driven projects with consistent stud-to-rafter alignment.
Measurements
| Property | Operator | Value | Unit | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
jointOffset | min | 24 | in | Offset between end joints in stacked plates |
rafterAlignment | max | 1 | in | Single-top-plate rafter-over-stud alignment tolerance |
Categories
Applies to
- Jurisdiction: New York State
Source
Solver enforcement
Browsable only — the solver does not currently enforce this directive (no spec-level data to check against). This entry exists so the architect personas can cite it in conversation and the user can read what the rule says.
Related directives
- Habitable space minimum ceiling height · IRC R305.1
- Wind design · IRC R301.2.1
- Seismic provisions · IRC R301.2.2
- Snow loads · IRC R301.2.3
- Floodplain construction · IRC R301.2.4
Last reviewed 2026-05-15.