Manning’s Equation

A practical engineering guide to calculating open-channel flow using channel area, hydraulic radius, slope, and roughness.

By Turn2Engineering Editorial Team Updated April 24, 2026 10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Definition: Manning’s Equation estimates average velocity or flow rate in gravity-driven open-channel flow.
  • Main use: Engineers use it for channels, ditches, canals, culverts, storm drains flowing partially full, and natural streams.
  • Watch for: The result depends heavily on the Manning roughness coefficient \(n\), channel geometry, and using the correct unit constant.
  • Outcome: After reading, you should be able to apply the equation, rearrange it, check units, and judge whether the result is reasonable.
Table of Contents

    How Manning’s Equation Connects Channel Shape, Roughness, and Slope

    Manning’s Equation relates open-channel flow rate to area, hydraulic radius, roughness, and slope for steady gravity-driven flow.

    Manning's Equation diagram showing open channel flow rate, wetted area, hydraulic radius, slope, and roughness coefficient
    Manning’s Equation uses the flow area, wetted perimeter through hydraulic radius, channel slope, and roughness coefficient to estimate open-channel velocity or discharge.

    Notice the geometry first. The equation does not use channel width alone; it depends on the wetted cross-sectional area \(A\) and hydraulic radius \(R_h=A/P\), where \(P\) is the wetted perimeter. The roughness coefficient \(n\) then accounts for how much the channel surface resists flow.

    The Manning’s Equation Formula

    The most common discharge form of Manning’s Equation estimates flow rate \(Q\) in an open channel:

    $$ Q=\frac{k}{n} A R_h^{2/3} S^{1/2} $$

    In this form, \(A\) captures how much water is flowing through the cross section, \(R_h\) captures the hydraulic efficiency of the shape, \(S\) represents the driving slope, and \(n\) represents resistance from roughness and channel conditions.

    The velocity form is also common because it separates the average flow velocity from the cross-sectional area:

    $$ V=\frac{Q}{A}=\frac{k}{n}R_h^{2/3}S^{1/2} $$

    Use \(k=1.0\) for SI units when \(Q\) is in \(\text{m}^3/\text{s}\), \(A\) is in \(\text{m}^2\), and \(R_h\) is in meters. Use \(k=1.49\) for common US customary units when \(Q\) is in \(\text{ft}^3/\text{s}\), \(A\) is in \(\text{ft}^2\), and \(R_h\) is in feet.

    $$ R_h=\frac{A}{P} $$

    The hydraulic radius \(R_h\) is not the same as pipe radius or channel depth. It is the ratio of wetted area to wetted perimeter, which is why the same channel can carry different flow depending on the water depth.

    Variables and Units in Manning’s Equation

    Manning’s Equation is empirical, so unit consistency matters. Do not mix SI values with the US customary constant, and do not treat the roughness coefficient \(n\) as a universal material property.

    Key variables
    • \(Q\) Flow rate or discharge; typically \(\text{m}^3/\text{s}\) in SI or \(\text{ft}^3/\text{s}\) in US customary units.
    • \(V\) Average flow velocity; typically \(\text{m/s}\) or \(\text{ft/s}\).
    • \(A\) Wetted cross-sectional flow area; \(\text{m}^2\) or \(\text{ft}^2\).
    • \(R_h\) Hydraulic radius, equal to \(A/P\); meters or feet.
    • \(P\) Wetted perimeter, meaning the channel boundary in contact with water; meters or feet.
    • \(S\) Energy slope for uniform flow; often approximated by channel bed slope when flow is steady and uniform.
    • \(n\) Manning roughness coefficient; selected from channel material, vegetation, irregularity, bends, and field condition.
    • \(k\) Unit conversion constant; \(1.0\) for SI and \(1.49\) for common US customary applications.
    Unit tip

    The most common unit mistake is using \(k=1.49\) with SI dimensions or using \(k=1.0\) with feet-based dimensions. Pick one unit system and keep every geometric input in that system.

    VariableMeaningSI unitsUS customary unitsSanity-check note
    \(Q\)Discharge\(\text{m}^3/\text{s}\)\(\text{ft}^3/\text{s}\)Should increase when area, hydraulic radius, or slope increases.
    \(A\)Wetted flow area\(\text{m}^2\)\(\text{ft}^2\)Must be based on actual water depth, not full channel depth unless the section is full.
    \(R_h\)Hydraulic radius\(\text{m}\)\(\text{ft}\)For shallow wide channels, \(R_h\) is often close to flow depth, but it is not exactly the same.
    \(S\)Energy slopeDimensionlessDimensionlessUse decimal slope, such as \(0.001\), not percent slope unless converted.
    \(n\)Roughness coefficientEmpiricalEmpiricalSmall changes in \(n\) can noticeably change the calculated discharge.
    Rule of thumb

    If the channel gets rougher, \(n\) increases and the calculated velocity decreases. If your calculation says a rough vegetated ditch flows faster than a smooth lined channel with the same shape and slope, recheck the inputs.

    Manning’s Equation Quick Reference

    Use this section when you need a fast check before working through a full hydraulic calculation.

    ItemQuick reference
    What it calculatesOpen-channel flow rate \(Q\) or average velocity \(V\).
    Required inputsChannel geometry, water depth, roughness coefficient \(n\), and slope \(S\).
    Best used whenFlow is steady, uniform, gravity-driven, and has a free surface.
    Do not use whenThe pipe is flowing full under pressure, rapidly varied flow controls the section, or backwater effects dominate.
    Most important assumptionThe flow is close enough to uniform that the energy slope can be represented reliably.
    Common mistakeUsing percent slope directly, confusing hydraulic radius with water depth, or choosing an unrealistic \(n\) value.

    How to Rearrange Manning’s Equation

    Engineers commonly rearrange Manning’s Equation to solve for slope, roughness, or required flow area during design checks. Because \(A\) and \(R_h\) both depend on channel depth, solving for depth usually requires iteration rather than a simple algebraic rearrangement.

    Solving for slope

    If discharge, geometry, and roughness are known, isolate \(S\) to estimate the energy slope needed to carry the target flow:

    $$ S=\left(\frac{Qn}{k A R_h^{2/3}}\right)^2 $$

    Solving for Manning’s roughness coefficient

    If measured flow, depth, and slope are known, the equation can be rearranged to back-calculate an effective roughness coefficient:

    $$ n=\frac{k A R_h^{2/3}S^{1/2}}{Q} $$

    Solving for hydraulic radius

    For a known velocity and slope, the velocity form can be rearranged to estimate the hydraulic radius required by the section:

    $$ R_h=\left(\frac{Vn}{kS^{1/2}}\right)^{3/2} $$
    Senior engineer check

    If you are solving for normal depth, do not rearrange the equation as if \(A\) and \(R_h\) are constants. Both change with water depth, so the normal-depth solution is usually iterative.

    Manning’s Equation Worked Example

    Example problem

    A straight rectangular concrete channel is \(3.0\ \text{m}\) wide and carries water at a normal depth of \(1.0\ \text{m}\). Estimate the discharge using \(n=0.015\) and slope \(S=0.0012\). Assume steady uniform open-channel flow and SI units.

    First compute the wetted area and wetted perimeter:

    $$ A=by=(3.0)(1.0)=3.0\ \text{m}^2 $$ $$ P=b+2y=3.0+2(1.0)=5.0\ \text{m} $$

    Then compute the hydraulic radius:

    $$ R_h=\frac{A}{P}=\frac{3.0}{5.0}=0.60\ \text{m} $$

    Now substitute into the SI form of Manning’s Equation with \(k=1.0\):

    $$ Q=\frac{1.0}{0.015}(3.0)(0.60)^{2/3}(0.0012)^{1/2} $$
    $$ Q\approx 4.93\ \text{m}^3/\text{s} $$ $$ V=\frac{Q}{A}=\frac{4.93}{3.0}\approx 1.64\ \text{m/s} $$

    The estimated flow rate is about \(4.93\ \text{m}^3/\text{s}\), and the average velocity is about \(1.64\ \text{m/s}\). That velocity is plausible for a lined drainage channel with moderate slope, but the answer should still be checked against allowable velocity, erosion risk, freeboard, and downstream control conditions.

    Interpretation tip

    The equation gives average velocity, not the detailed velocity distribution. Real channels have slower flow near boundaries, faster flow away from rough surfaces, and local disturbances near bends, transitions, and structures.

    Where Engineers Use Manning’s Equation

    Manning’s Equation is most useful when the design question is about gravity flow with a free surface. It is often a first-pass design and checking equation rather than the final word for every hydraulic condition.

    • Stormwater channels: Estimate ditch, swale, or channel capacity for a design storm.
    • Culverts and storm drains: Check partially full gravity flow before moving into inlet control, outlet control, or backwater analysis.
    • Canals and irrigation channels: Estimate normal depth and discharge for lined or unlined conveyance systems.
    • Natural streams: Approximate flow capacity when cross-section geometry, slope, and roughness are estimated from field conditions.
    • Floodplain and hydraulic modeling: Provide roughness inputs and conveyance logic for one-dimensional hydraulic calculations.
    Field reality

    In the field, the roughness coefficient is rarely just a surface material value. Vegetation, sediment, debris, channel irregularity, bends, maintenance condition, and overbank flow can all change the effective \(n\).

    Assumptions and Limits of Manning’s Equation

    Manning’s Equation is powerful because it reduces open-channel resistance into a compact empirical relationship. That simplicity depends on assumptions that should be checked before trusting the answer.

    Assumptions checklist
    • 1 Flow is steady enough that a single representative discharge and depth make sense.
    • 2 Flow is approximately uniform, so the energy slope can be represented by the channel slope.
    • 3 The channel has a free surface and is not acting as a fully pressurized pipe.
    • 4 The selected roughness coefficient reasonably represents the actual channel condition.

    What the equation ignores

    Manning’s Equation does not directly model rapidly varied flow, hydraulic jumps, local entrance and exit losses, pump effects, pressure-flow behavior, sediment movement, unsteady hydrographs, or detailed turbulence structure.

    Breakdown warning

    Do not rely on Manning’s Equation alone where flow is controlled by a weir, gate, culvert inlet, downstream backwater, hydraulic jump, steep transition, or pressurized pipe condition.

    Common Mistakes and Engineering Checks

    Most bad Manning’s Equation results come from incorrect geometry, unrealistic roughness, wrong slope interpretation, or unit-system mixing.

    • Using percent slope as a decimal: A 0.2% slope should be entered as \(0.002\), not \(0.2\).
    • Confusing hydraulic radius with depth: \(R_h=A/P\), not simply the water depth except as a rough approximation in very wide channels.
    • Using the wrong unit constant: Use \(k=1.0\) for SI and \(k=1.49\) for common US customary dimensions.
    • Choosing \(n\) too optimistically: Smooth-lab-channel roughness values may not represent vegetation, sediment, debris, bends, or poor maintenance.
    • Ignoring downstream control: If downstream water surface elevation controls the reach, normal-depth Manning flow may be misleading.
    Sanity check

    Increase \(n\), and the calculated velocity should decrease. Increase slope, area, or hydraulic radius, and the calculated discharge should increase. If your result moves the wrong way, check the algebra and units.

    Check itemWhat to verifyWhy it matters
    GeometryArea and wetted perimeter are based on actual flow depth.Wrong geometry can dominate the result more than arithmetic errors.
    Roughness\(n\) reflects field condition, not just material type.Vegetation and irregularity can substantially reduce capacity.
    SlopeSlope is entered as a decimal and represents energy slope when appropriate.Slope appears under a square root, but large slope errors still matter.
    Flow regimeThe problem is open-channel gravity flow, not pressurized pipe flow.Using Manning’s Equation for the wrong flow type can give misleading design decisions.

    Design References and Source Notes

    Manning’s Equation appears throughout open-channel hydraulics practice, but the equation itself is not a complete design standard. Engineers usually pair it with agency criteria, drainage manuals, hydraulic modeling guidance, and project-specific requirements.

    • Open-channel hydraulics textbooks: Commonly present Manning’s Equation for uniform flow, normal depth, channel conveyance, and roughness selection.
    • FHWA hydraulic design guidance: Uses open-channel flow concepts, roughness selection, culvert behavior, and related hydraulic checks in roadway drainage design.
    • USACE hydraulic modeling references: Use Manning roughness values as important inputs in river and floodplain hydraulic modeling workflows.
    • Local drainage manuals: Often control allowable velocities, freeboard, design storm criteria, channel lining requirements, and acceptable roughness assumptions.

    Treat the equation as a hydraulic calculation method. Treat the applicable design manual, jurisdictional criteria, and professional judgment as the design authority.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Manning’s Equation is used to estimate flow rate or average velocity in open channels, partially full pipes, culverts, ditches, canals, and natural streams when gravity drives the flow.

    Manning’s \(n\) is an empirical roughness coefficient that represents channel resistance from surface texture, vegetation, irregularity, bends, obstructions, and other energy losses.

    Manning’s Equation is primarily used for open-channel flow and gravity flow. For full pressurized pipe flow, engineers commonly use methods such as Darcy-Weisbach or Hazen-Williams instead.

    For uniform open-channel flow, the slope term is normally the energy slope, which is often approximated by the channel bed slope when flow depth, velocity, and channel geometry are steady and uniform.

    Summary and Next Steps

    Manning’s Equation is a core open-channel flow relationship that estimates discharge or average velocity from channel geometry, hydraulic radius, slope, and roughness. It is most useful for steady, uniform, gravity-driven flow with a free surface.

    The most important engineering checks are choosing a defensible \(n\) value, calculating \(A\) and \(R_h\) from the actual water depth, using the correct unit constant, and confirming that the flow is not controlled by a downstream condition, inlet, outlet, hydraulic jump, or pressurized-pipe behavior.

    Where to go next

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