✓ The Decision
- Storage or a modest loft → attic trusses on a steep gable. Engineered, fast, predictable — the default answer for most garages over ~24 ft of span.
- A real room or studio over a shop → gambrel (engineered gambrel attic trusses if your yard stocks them). Most space per dollar, full stop.
- Dormers, custom shapes, or you're the framer → stick framing — pay for the freedom in labour, or supply the labour yourself.
- Any chance people occupy it later → order the 40 psf floor now. The cheapest decision in this guide and the only one you can't change after.
- Under ~22 ft of span → temper expectations: attic-truss rooms get hallway-narrow. Run the attic calculator before falling in love.
Everyone building a garage or shop eventually has the same thought: that's a lot of empty roof up there. Whether that triangle becomes storage, a loft, or finished space depends on a decision you make before the first truss is ordered — because the standard solution actively prevents it.
Why Most Roofs Can't Be Attics
A standard truss is a web of small lumber (usually 2×4) engineered to span the building using triangulated members. It's brilliant at being a roof and terrible at being a room: the webs criss-cross exactly where you'd want to stand, and the bottom chord is designed to hold up drywall, not people and table saws. Cutting truss webs to "open things up" is structurally dangerous and voids the engineering — never do it.
If you want space up there, you have to frame for it deliberately. There are four honest ways:
The Four Options, Side by Side
Option 1: Attic Trusses — The Practical Default
An attic truss is a factory-engineered truss with a rectangular room built into the web layout — typically giving you a room about half the building's width, with sloped sides. Crucially, the bottom chord is engineered as a real floor (40 psf live load, the same as a house), not a ceiling.
- Cost: roughly $200–$800 per truss vs $100–$300 standard — and they're typically spaced at 24" so you need a full count, plus subfloor. On a 24×30 garage, expect the attic-truss upgrade to add roughly $5,000–$12,000 including decking, stairs allowance, and the beefier foundation/wall checks the load may trigger.
- Pros: engineered and code-clean, fast to install like any truss package, no site carpentry heroics, predictable cost.
- Cons: room width limited (~half of span), sloped ceilings, must be decided at order time — and the building must be wide enough that the "room" isn't a hallway. Under ~24 ft of span, attic trusses get cramped fast.
Option 2: Stick Framing — Maximum Freedom, Maximum Labour
Stick framing builds the roof on site from rafters and a ridge (often with a structural ridge beam when you remove ties from the floor area). With a proper floor system below (engineered joists or dimensional lumber sized for 40 psf), the whole attic footprint can be open.
- Cost: materials can be modest, but labour flips the equation — industry comparisons show truss roofs going up with roughly 60% less labour than stick framing. With 2026 carpentry rates, stick-framed attic roofs usually cost more in total than attic trusses unless you're doing the labour yourself.
- Pros: full-width space, dormers and odd shapes are easy, no crane required, design can evolve on site.
- Cons: slower; quality depends entirely on the framer; spans and ridge beams may need an engineer's stamp; easier to get wrong.
The Shape Question: Gambrel vs Steep-Pitch Gable
A steep gable (10/12 to 14/12) opens up the peak — simple, wind-shedding, and conventional-looking. But the usable zone is a triangle: you gain height at the centre and lose it fast toward the eaves. Knee walls claw back usable floor, at the cost of width.
A gambrel (the barn profile) breaks each slope into two pitches — nearly vertical below, shallow above. The payoff is dramatic: close to full-width usable space with standing height almost wall to wall, the most room per dollar of any shape. The costs: more complex framing (or specialty gambrel trusses), more roof surface area to shingle, trickier flashing at the pitch break, more wind exposure, and a look that suits some streets and fights others. Many lumberyards stock engineered gambrel attic trusses — worth pricing before assuming stick-built.
Rule of thumb: want a storage loft? Steep gable with attic trusses. Want a genuine room or studio over a shop? Gambrel earns its complexity.
Quick Comparison
| Attic truss (gable) | Stick-framed steep gable | Gambrel | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Usable width | ~50% of span | ~40–55% (with knee walls) | ~75–90% of span |
| Cost premium over standard roof | $5k–$12k (24×30) | Highest (labour) | Mid–high |
| Speed | Fastest | Slowest | Mid (trusses) / slow (stick) |
| Engineering | Included in truss design | Often needs an engineer | Trusses incl. / stick needs eng. |
| Best for | Storage, modest loft | Custom spaces, dormers, DIY labour | Maximum room, barn/shop aesthetic |
Try the Attic Space Calculator
✗ Deal-Breakers — Resolve Before Ordering Trusses
- Municipal height cap kills the ridge. Steep pitches and gambrels raise overall height, and accessory buildings face caps almost everywhere. A truss order you can't legally build is firewood. (See the permits guide.)
- No room for a code stair. A real stair to living space eats floor area on both levels; if it doesn't fit the plan, the "room upstairs" is storage, and should be engineered and priced as storage.
- Cutting existing truss webs to "open it up." Never. It destroys the engineering and risks collapse — retrofits need an engineer, period.
- Ordering 20 psf "storage" while quietly planning a rec room. The floor rating is structural, not paperwork. Order what you'll actually use.
The Safest Path Forward
- Model the space first in the attic calculator — style, pitch, span, floor offset — and confirm the room is worth pursuing.
- Check the height bylaw for your zone before any design work.
- Decide the floor load honestly — 40 psf if occupancy is even a maybe.
- Quote attic trusses and gambrel trusses from the truss plant — engineered pricing is free to ask for and settles the stick-vs-truss question with real numbers.
- Permit drawings finalize it: stair, egress, and loads get confirmed by the reviewer — before lumber arrives, not after.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much more do attic trusses cost than standard trusses?
Roughly $200–$800 per attic truss vs $100–$300 standard in 2026. On a typical 24×30 garage, the full upgrade — trusses, 24" spacing, subfloor, stair allowance — adds about $5,000–$12,000.
Can I modify my existing trusses to create attic space?
No — cutting truss webs destroys the engineered structure and is dangerous. Retrofitting attic space in a trussed roof means engineered reinforcement or roof replacement; both need a professional engineer.
Is a gambrel roof more expensive than a gable?
Usually moderately more — extra roof surface, more complex framing or specialty trusses, and trickier flashing. But per square foot of usable attic space created, gambrel is often the cheapest shape there is.
What pitch do I need for usable attic space?
With ordinary gable framing, usable standing height generally starts around 10/12 pitch on a 24 ft span and improves from there. Attic trusses and gambrels create height through their geometry instead of raw pitch.
Do I need an engineer for a stick-framed attic roof?
Frequently yes — structural ridge beams, long rafter spans, and floor systems for living loads commonly require engineered design or at least a truss/beam supplier's stamped specs. Your building permit reviewer will tell you exactly what's needed.