ESAL Cheat Sheet: Quick Reference for Pavement Engineers

What is an ESAL?

  • Definition: ESAL = Equivalent Single Axle Load
  • Standard: One ESAL is the damage from a single 18,000-lb (80 kN) single axle with dual tires.
  • Purpose: Convert mixed traffic into a common damage unit for pavement design.

ESAL Formula

Where:

  • Ni​ = number of passes for vehicle class i
  • LEFi​ = Load Equivalency Factor for vehicle class i

Typical Load Equivalency Factors (LEFs) (based on AASHTO & typical LEFs)

Vehicle TypeAxlesTypical Load (kips per axle)Approx. ESAL per Pass
Passenger Car (sedan)22–30.0004
Pickup / SUV23–40.001
Delivery Van (2-axle, light)24–50.005
Single-Unit Truck (2-axle, 6-tire)26–90.02
Single-Unit Truck (3-axle)38–100.40
City Bus2–310–120.50 – 1.50
Tractor-Trailer (4-axle)412–140.80 – 1.50
Tractor-Trailer (5-axle standard semi)516–181.0 – 4.0
Tractor-Trailer (6-axle)618–203.0 – 6.0
Heavy Haul Truck (7+ axles, overloaded)7+20+5.0 – 10.0+

(Values vary by pavement type and standard — AASHTO, IRC, etc.)

How to Use This Table

  1. Classify vehicles (cars, pickups, buses, trucks, semis, heavy haul).
  2. Multiply the number of vehicles by the ESAL factor in the table.
  3. Sum across all vehicle classes to get the total daily ESALs.
  4. Apply growth factor & design life to get design ESALs.

Or use the Traffic to ESAL Converter

ESAL Conversion Table (by Vehicle & Load Condition)

Vehicle TypeAxlesLoad ConditionTypical Axle Load (kips)Approx. ESAL per Pass
Passenger Car2Normal2–30.0004
Pickup / SUV2Empty3–40.0005
2Loaded4–50.001
Delivery Van (2-axle, light)2Empty4–50.003
2Loaded5–60.005
Single-Unit Truck (2-axle, 6-tire)2Empty6–70.01
2Medium8–90.02
2Fully Loaded10–120.05
Single-Unit Truck (3-axle)3Empty8–100.2
3Medium10–120.4
3Fully Loaded12–140.8
City Bus2–3Light Load (off-peak)10–110.5
2–3Peak Load (crowded)12–141.0 – 1.5
Tractor-Trailer (4-axle)4Empty10–120.3
4Medium12–140.8
4Fully Loaded14–161.5
Tractor-Trailer (5-axle, standard semi)5Empty12–140.5
5Medium14–161.5
5Fully Loaded16–182.5 – 4.0
5Overloaded18–20+5.0+
Tractor-Trailer (6-axle)6Medium16–183.0
6Fully Loaded18–204.0 – 6.0
Heavy Haul Truck (7+ axles)7+Legal Load20+5.0
7+Overloaded22–25+8.0 – 12.0+

Passenger cars ≈ negligible impact → engineers usually ignore them in ESAL calculations.

Axle load matters more than vehicle type (a single overloaded truck can equal thousands of cars).

Buses can rival trucks in ESAL impact, especially in urban corridors.

Overloaded trucks are ESAL monsters → 1 pass can equal 5–10+ passes of a legal semi-truck.


Step-by-Step Conversion Example

Problem:

  • Road AADT = 20,000
  • 8% trucks (1,600 trucks/day)
  • Design life = 20 years
  • Assume truck mix avg. LEF = 2.0

Solution:

  1. Total trucks over design life = 1,600×365×20=11.68 million1,600 \times 365 \times 20 = 11.68 \text{ million}1,600×365×20=11.68 million
  2. ESALs = 11.68×106×2.0=23.36 million11.68 \times 10^6 \times 2.0 = 23.36 \text{ million}11.68×106×2.0=23.36 million

Pavement must be designed for 23.4 million ESALs.


Typical ESAL Ranges for Roads

Road TypeDesign ESALs (lifetime)
Low-volume rural10⁴ – 10⁵
Urban arterial10⁶ – 10⁷
Expressway / Highway10⁸+

Quick Reference Notes

  • Cars contribute negligible ESALs compared to trucks.
  • Pavement failure risk grows exponentially with axle load (fourth power law).
  • Always check local design codes (AASHTO 1993, MEPDG, IRC, etc.).

Free Download ESAL Cheat Sheet

(Compact, printable version for students & engineers.)

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