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Newel post

The sturdy anchor post at the end or turn of a railing.

A newel post is the heavy vertical post that anchors a handrail and guardrail at the bottom, top, and any turn of a staircase. It carries the lateral load when someone leans or pulls on the rail, so it must be fastened securely into the framing — a wobbly newel makes the whole rail feel unsafe. The balusters run between newels. Example: an L-shaped stair typically has a starting newel, a turn newel at the landing, and a landing newel at the top. Code does not give a newel spacing table, but the assembled guard must resist a 200 lb (0.89 kN) concentrated load at the top rail, which is what good newel anchoring provides.

Try the calculator Baluster Spacing Calculator

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Written by the Stairs Calc editorial team. Methodology and code references: see our methodology.

Built and maintained by builders, drafters and engineers who plan stairs for a living — every code limit is transcribed from the published standard and cited to its exact section.

Last reviewed 2026-06-20 against IRC 2021/2024

Stairs Calc gives accurate geometry and checks it against published building-code limits, but results are estimates for planning. Codes are adopted and amended locally and change over time. Always confirm dimensions against your local adopted code and a licensed professional before you build.