60×80 Metal Building Kits: Cost, Uses & What Fits

A 60x80 metal building kit encloses 4,800 square feet, a footprint 60 feet wide and 80 feet deep.
DH
Reviewed by Dale Hartman, Licensed General Contractor
MBK EDITORIAL · UPDATED JUN 2026 · 6 MIN READ
Large commercial metal warehouse building with loading docks

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A 60×80 metal building kit encloses 4,800 square feet, a footprint 60 feet wide and 80 feet deep. That is a large commercial shop, a distribution warehouse, a truck or farm equipment barn, or an indoor arena, all under one clear-span roof. Sixty feet of width is the headline: it holds three deep work lanes side by side, or a forklift aisle flanked by racking, with no interior column to route around. The 80-foot depth runs long enough to stage a production line, park a fleet nose to tail, or split the floor into a shop on one end and storage on the other.

This guide sits under the metal building sizes pillar, and it covers one footprint in depth: what fits inside a 60×80, the uses it suits, the frame and options you will see on a quote, the clear heights you can order, and an illustrative 2026 price range. To see this size against every other footprint at a glance, the metal building size chart lays them out side by side.

4,800 square feet

What a 60×80 metal building kit covers

Sixty feet wide by eighty feet deep gives you 4,800 square feet of enclosed floor. The width is what sets this size apart from the narrower large footprints: 60 feet clears three over-deep work bays across, or a wide drive aisle with racking on both sides, and a red iron frame holds that span open with no center post in the way. The 80-foot depth keeps the building firmly in industrial territory, with room for a full production floor, a racked warehouse, or a riding arena with working space along the rails.

Think of a 60×80 as a building that runs an operation rather than stores a few toys. It swallows a row of service bays, a parts mezzanine, an office, and a wash bay and still leaves a clear drive down the middle. That reach is why the footprint suits dealers, contractors with a crew, small manufacturers, and owners housing a working fleet. If 4,800 square feet is more than you need, the 50×80 keeps the same 80-foot depth in a ten-foot-narrower box.

Large 60x80 clear-span steel building with tall roll-up doors, sized for a commercial warehouse, fleet maintenance shop, or indoor arena
A 60×80 reads as industrial space: 4,800 square feet of clear-span floor with room for a fleet, a production line, and an office.

What fits

What fits inside a 60×80 building

A working fleet, a warehouse of pallet racking, or a shop with a dozen-plus vehicles and wide aisles to move between them. The table below shows how a 60×80 handles the loads buyers most often put in this footprint, and where the building still draws the line.

What you want to storeHow a 60×80 handles it
A vehicle fleetRoughly fourteen or more vehicles parked in lanes ‹confirm›, with a turnaround inside
Warehouse rackingSeveral rows of pallet racking with wide forklift aisles and a loading door
Service or repair shopThree or more drive-through bays, lifts, a parts room, and an office walled off in one corner
RVs and toysThree or four Class A coaches nose to tail, plus boats, trailers, and daily drivers alongside
Farm equipmentA combine, a tractor with implements, and a shop bay, all under one roof with a tall door
Indoor arena or courtA practice riding arena, a sport court, or an event floor with room along the edges

What clears and what does not. A 60×80 is industrial-scale space, not a personal garage.

Mind the door, not just the floor

A tall RV, a stacked load, or a piece of farm equipment can fit the floor plan and still hit the door header. The roll-up opening sets your real clearance, so size the door height around the tallest thing you move through it, not the average. The how to choose a size guide walks through measuring before you buy.

Common uses

Common uses for a 60×80 footprint

The 4,800-square-foot footprint is where a building stops being storage and becomes infrastructure for a business. These are the jobs it does best:

  • Commercial or industrial shop. Fabrication, welding, diesel and fleet repair, or a contractor base with several bays, a parts counter, and an office.
  • Warehouse or distribution. Wide-aisle pallet racking, forklift lanes, and a loading door for an operation that has outgrown a rented unit. For layout ideas across uses, see what people build.
  • Fleet and equipment storage. Work trucks, trailers, and machines staged inside, off the yard and out of the weather.
  • Agricultural and equestrian. A machine shed for large implements, or a practice indoor riding arena with room along the rails.
  • Large RV and toy barn. Several motorhomes, boats, or off-road rigs under one tall roof with floor left over to service them.

If you want covered space more than a fully enclosed room, the same footprint works as an open or partly enclosed cover for less money. Weigh it against the narrower 40×80 and the longer 50×100 before you commit, since a few feet of width or depth changes what the building holds and what it costs to heat and insure.

Frame and options

The frame, doors, and clear height

At a 60-foot width, a kit this size uses a bolt-up red iron frame, because only a structural frame carries that span and leaves the floor clear. The primary frame is structural I-beam, not light tube, and that is what holds 60 feet open with no center column. The secondary members are sold by wall thickness in gauge, where a lower number means thicker steel. A clear-span frame earns its keep here: it keeps the full 60-foot width usable for forklift aisles, drive-through bays, or an open arena floor.

Clear height is where buyers most often under-order. The eave height, the wall height at the side, sets how tall a door you can hang and how much headroom you keep inside. A 60×80 is commonly offered with side walls from about 14 to 24 feet ‹confirm›. Sixteen feet suits a shop with lifts; step up to 20 feet or more for stacked racking, a drive-through for tall trucks, an overhead crane, or a mezzanine. A taller eave costs more steel, so order the height your tallest job needs and not a foot beyond it.

On the options list you pick a roof style, the doors, and any openings. A row of large roll-up doors plus walk-in doors and a few windows covers most commercial builds, with a drive-through pair on opposite walls if you want to pull straight through. The roof comes as standard, A-frame, or vertical-rib, with the vertical roof shedding water and snow better for a small premium. Order the certified load rating for your county so the kit is stamped for local snow and wind, not just the base spec.

Open clear-span interior of a wide 60x80 steel building with no center columns, leaving the full width usable for racking and work bays
A clear-span red iron frame keeps the full 60-foot width open, with no center column to route a forklift or a vehicle around.

Order the size you will grow into, not the one that just fits today. A few feet of eave height or a second drive-through door costs far less now than a rebuild later.

Price

What a 60×80 metal building kit costs in 2026

As a 2026 illustration, a 60×80 steel shell kit runs roughly $58,000 to $125,000 ‹confirm› for the bare building. The spread is wide because eave height, roof style, door count, and the certified load rating each move the number. A basic enclosed shell with a low eave sits near the bottom; a fully certified red iron building with a tall eave, several roll-up doors, and a vertical roof sits near the top ‹confirm›.

That figure is the kit alone. Budget separately for a concrete slab, delivery, permits, and any insulation or interior finish, which can add tens of thousands of dollars ‹confirm› on top of the shell at this footprint. For the full breakdown of what drives the total, see the metal building kit prices pillar.

Treat any single number with care, since prices move with the steel market, your location, and the season. Get a written quote stamped for your address, confirm the frame type and the load rating, and check it against current ranges in the size chart before you sign.

FAQ

60×80 metal building kits: common questions

How many square feet is a 60×80 building?

A 60×80 building is 4,800 square feet, found by multiplying 60 feet of width by 80 feet of depth. That is the footprint of a large commercial shop, a small warehouse, or an indoor arena, with a clear-span frame that keeps the whole floor open and no interior columns to work around.

How many cars fit in a 60×80 garage?

Roughly fourteen or more vehicles fit, depending on your door layout and how much floor you keep for work ‹confirm›. The clear-span frame leaves the 60-foot width open, so you can run lanes deep or set up service bays. Most owners trade some parking for a shop, racking, or a wide turnaround lane inside.

How much does a 60×80 metal building cost?

As a 2026 illustration, the bare shell kit runs roughly $58,000 to $125,000 ‹confirm›, depending on eave height, doors, roof style, and the certified load rating. A slab, delivery, permits, and insulation are extra. Get a written quote stamped for your location before you compare prices.

How tall can a 60×80 building be?

Side wall, or eave, heights of about 14 to 24 feet ‹confirm› are common at this size. Sixteen feet suits a shop with lifts; order 20 feet or taller for stacked racking, a tall drive-through, an overhead crane, or a mezzanine. The eave height sets how tall a door you can hang.

Will an RV fit in a 60×80 building?

Yes, with room for several. The 80-foot depth clears even the longest motorhomes nose to tail, and the 60-foot width leaves space for boats, trailers, or two coaches abreast. The roof height is the real limit, so a tall Class A coach needs a 16-foot or taller eave and door. Confirm the clear door opening, not just the floor length.

Does a 60×80 kit use tube steel or red iron?

Red iron. At a 60-foot width a bolt-up structural frame gives you the clear span with no center column and the load rating a building this size needs. Light-gauge tube is suited to narrow carports and small garages, not a 60-foot span carrying a commercial or industrial roof.

Can a 60×80 building be an indoor riding arena?

Yes. A 60×80 makes a roomy practice arena with a clear-span floor and space along the rails, and the bolt-up red iron frame holds the full 60-foot width open so nothing breaks up the ride. A regulation dressage court wants a wider footprint, but a 60×80 suits training, lessons, and small-stock work well.

Related guides

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Comparing this footprint against its neighbors and the hubs that put it in context:

Informational only. Not engineering, legal, or financial advice. Codes, permits, and load requirements vary by location, so verify with a licensed local professional and your building department before you buy or build. Pricing is illustrative and dated.

DH
Reviewed by Dale Hartman
Licensed General Contractor · Metal Building Specialist
Twenty plus years erecting pre engineered steel buildings, bolt up kits, and barndominiums across the South and Midwest. Dale reviews every guide on this site for structural, code, and buyer safety accuracy.

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