Free Polygon Angle Calculator — Gazebo & Multi-Sided Angles
How to Use the Polygon Calculator
How to Calculate Polygon Angles and Dimensions
A regular polygon has all sides equal and all interior angles equal. The key formula for angles is: Interior Angle = (n − 2) × 180° ÷ n, where n is the number of sides. An octagon (8 sides) has interior angles of (8 − 2) × 180 ÷ 8 = 135°. The miter angle for your saw is half the exterior angle: 180° ÷ n. For an octagon, that’s 180 ÷ 8 = 22.5° — the exact setting for cutting gazebo, planter box, and picture frame miters.
Understanding Polygon Geometry
Every regular polygon has two important circles. The circumscribed circle (circumradius) passes through all vertices — its radius R determines the overall size. The inscribed circle (apothem or inradius) is the largest circle that fits inside the polygon, touching the midpoint of each side. The apothem is crucial for area calculations: Area = ½ × Perimeter × Apothem.
- Circumradius: R = s ÷ (2 × sin(π/n)), where s is the side length
- Apothem (inradius): r = s ÷ (2 × tan(π/n))
- Area: A = (n × s × r) ÷ 2
- Perimeter: P = n × s
Gazebo and Deck Applications
The most common polygon in residential construction is the octagon, used for gazebos, hot tub platforms, and decorative deck extensions. When building an octagonal gazebo with 48-inch sides, set your miter saw to 22.5° for all joint cuts. The circumradius tells you the distance from center to each corner post (about 62.6 inches for 48-inch sides), and the apothem gives you the distance from center to the midpoint of each side (about 57.9 inches). Use the apothem to position floor joists and the circumradius to lay out corner posts.
Pro Tips
- Layout with a compass method: To lay out a polygon on the ground, drive a center stake, attach a string equal to the circumradius, and mark the first vertex. Then use a string equal to the side length to walk around, marking each successive vertex from the previous one.
- Verify your miter saw: Before cutting all pieces, cut two test miters and check the joint. Even a 0.5° error in saw calibration multiplies around the polygon — an 8-sided shape accumulates 4° of total error from a 0.5° offset.
- For large polygons: Work from the circumradius rather than the side length. Measure from center to each corner post, then connect them. This is more accurate than accumulating side-to-side measurements where errors compound.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer: This tool provides estimates for planning purposes only. Verify calculations with a qualified professional and consult local building codes before construction. Construction Bros is not liable for errors or construction decisions based on these calculations.