ConcreteMetric Navigation Menu
Concrete Cracking Causes & Prevention – Full Guide 2026
Concrete Guide 2026

Concrete Cracking Causes & Prevention – Full Guide

The complete 2026 reference to every type of concrete crack — causes, identification, prevention, and repair

Understand why concrete cracks and how to stop it. This full guide covers plastic shrinkage, thermal, settlement, drying shrinkage, structural, and corrosion-induced cracking — with crack width limit tables, prevention checklists, and repair methods for 2026.

All Crack Types
Prevention Methods
Repair Solutions
Width Limit Tables

🔩 Concrete Cracking Causes & Prevention

A complete technical guide for engineers, contractors, and inspectors — understanding and preventing concrete cracking in 2026

✔ Why Concrete Cracks

Concrete is strong in compression but inherently weak in tension — its tensile strength is only about 8–15% of its compressive strength. Any tensile stress that exceeds this limit will cause cracking. These stresses arise from shrinkage (plastic and drying), thermal gradients (heat of hydration), settlement, overloading, foundation movement, and reinforcement corrosion. Understanding the specific cause of each crack type is essential for selecting the correct prevention strategy and repair method in 2026.

✔ When Cracks Are Acceptable

Not all cracks in concrete are structurally significant. Hairline cracks below 0.2 mm are generally considered cosmetic in dry, non-aggressive environments. However, cracks wider than 0.3 mm in reinforced concrete can allow chloride and water ingress, accelerating reinforcement corrosion and reducing service life. Standards including ACI 224R, BS EN 1992, and AS 3600 define permissible crack widths based on exposure class and structural function — wider limits for protected interior elements, tighter limits for elements exposed to aggressive environments.

✔ Prevention vs. Repair

Preventing concrete cracking through proper mix design, curing, joint detailing, and construction practice is far more cost-effective than repairing cracks after they form. Once cracking occurs, repair options range from epoxy injection (structural cracks), routing and sealing (non-structural surface cracks), overlay systems, and surface sealants to full-depth reconstruction for severe structural failures. This guide covers the full spectrum from cause identification through prevention to remediation in 2026.

Understanding Concrete Cracking — Fundamental Principles

Concrete cracking occurs when tensile stress within the concrete exceeds its tensile strength at that point in time. Fresh concrete has very low tensile strength in the first hours after placement — as low as 0.1–0.3 MPa — making it highly vulnerable to cracking before it develops full strength. Mature concrete typically has a tensile strength of 2–5 MPa depending on mix design, but tensile stresses from restrained shrinkage, thermal gradients, overloading, or foundation movement can easily exceed these values locally, initiating and propagating cracks.

The key to crack prevention is understanding that most concrete cracking is either restrained shrinkage cracking or load-induced cracking. Shrinkage is a natural property of concrete — it wants to reduce in volume as it loses moisture and as cement hydration progresses. When this shrinkage is restrained by adjacent structure, subgrade friction, reinforcement, or formwork, tensile stresses develop. Designers address this through structural assessment, appropriate reinforcement design, and well-placed contraction joints.

📐 Key Concrete Cracking Concepts — Definitions & Limits

Tensile Strength ≈ 0.3 × (fck)^(2/3) MPa — Eurocode 2 (EN 1992-1-1)
Crack Width w = s_r,max × (ε_sm − ε_cm) — Eurocode 2 crack width formula
Max permissible crack width (XC1 interior): w_max = 0.4 mm (ACI 224R)
Max permissible crack width (XS/XD aggressive): w_max = 0.1–0.2 mm (EN 1992)
Plastic shrinkage risk: Evaporation rate > 1.0 kg/m²/hr → high cracking risk
Thermal crack risk: ΔT > 20°C between core and surface → crack control reinforcement required

🔩 Concrete Crack Types — Visual Identification Guide

🌊
Plastic Shrinkage
0.1–3 mm
🌡️
Thermal / Early-Age
0.1–2 mm
⬇️
Plastic Settlement
0.5–5 mm
💧
Drying Shrinkage
0.1–1 mm
Structural / Load
0.1–5 mm+
🦀
Corrosion-Induced
0.2–10 mm+
< 0.2 mm Hairline
Cosmetic Only
0.2–0.4 mm Moderate
Monitor & Seal
> 0.4 mm Wide
Repair Required

Crack width is the primary indicator of severity. Cracks below 0.2 mm are typically cosmetic; cracks above 0.3–0.4 mm in reinforced concrete require investigation and repair to prevent corrosion and water ingress. All values are indicative — exposure class governs permissible limits per relevant standard.

Types of Concrete Cracking — Causes & Identification

Each type of concrete crack has a distinct cause, timing, pattern, and appearance. Correctly identifying the crack type is the essential first step before any prevention or repair strategy can be applied. The descriptions below correspond to the main crack types encountered in structural and civil concrete construction in 2026. For related guidance on structural assessment see our Assessing Existing Concrete Structures Guide.

🌊 Plastic Shrinkage Cracking

Timing: Within 0–6 hours of placement, while concrete is still plastic.
Cause: Rapid evaporation of surface bleed water exceeds the rate at which fresh concrete can bleed — typically when evaporation rate exceeds 1.0 kg/m²/hr. Hot weather, low humidity, wind, and direct sun dramatically accelerate evaporation. The surface dries and shrinks while the interior remains plastic, creating tensile stress at the surface.
Pattern: Random or roughly parallel diagonal cracks, typically 25–75 mm deep, spaced 0.3–1.0 m apart.
Where: Flat slabs (floors, pavements, bridge decks), horizontal surfaces exposed to the elements.

⬇️ Plastic Settlement Cracking

Timing: Within 0–4 hours of placement, during the bleeding and initial setting phase.
Cause: As fresh concrete bleeds and settles under gravity, solid particles and aggregate move downward. Where settlement is restrained — by reinforcing bars, formwork tie bolts, aggregate pieces, or a change in depth — the concrete tears apart above the restraint point, forming a crack at the surface directly above the bar or step.
Pattern: Linear cracks directly above reinforcing bars at shallow cover, or transverse cracks at changes in section depth.
Where: Wide beams, pile caps, deep ground-bearing slabs, any section with shallow-cover reinforcement.

🌡️ Thermal / Early-Age Cracking

Timing: 12 hours to 7 days after placement.
Cause: Cement hydration is exothermic — large or thick concrete pours generate significant internal heat (mass concrete can reach 60–80°C core temperature). The surface cools faster than the interior, creating a temperature differential. When this exceeds ~20°C, the surface is in tension relative to the contracting core and cracks. On cooling, the overall contraction of the element can crack it if externally restrained.
Pattern: Irregular through-cracks perpendicular to the direction of restraint; surface map cracking in severe cases.
Where: Raft foundations, pile caps, retaining walls, bridge piers — any thick pour exceeding 500 mm.

💧 Drying Shrinkage Cracking

Timing: Days to months after placement, continuing for years as concrete dries.
Cause: Concrete loses moisture over time as drying progresses from the surface inward. This long-term moisture loss causes the concrete paste to shrink. When this shrinkage is restrained by subgrade friction, adjacent structure, or reinforcement, tensile stress builds until cracking occurs. Higher water-cement ratios, more paste content, and inadequate curing all increase drying shrinkage magnitude.
Pattern: Map (crazing) cracking on surfaces; widely spaced transverse cracks in slabs and pavements between contraction joints.
Where: Ground-bearing slabs, pavements, walls — any large area or volume losing moisture to the environment.

⚡ Structural / Load-Induced Cracking

Timing: After loading — can be immediate (overload) or gradual (fatigue, creep).
Cause: Applied loads create tensile and shear stresses exceeding concrete's tensile capacity. In a simply supported beam, bending causes flexural cracks at the bottom mid-span tensile zone. Shear forces near supports create diagonal cracks at 45°. Column overloading can produce vertical splitting cracks. These cracks are inherent in reinforced concrete design — the reinforcement carries the tension — but excessive crack widths indicate inadequate or damaged steel.
Pattern: Perpendicular to tension direction (flexural); 45° diagonal (shear); vertical splitting under axial load.
Where: Beams, slabs, columns — wherever structural loads generate tensile stresses.

🦀 Corrosion-Induced Cracking

Timing: Years to decades after construction — part of long-term deterioration.
Cause: When chlorides or carbonation reach the reinforcing steel, corrosion begins. Rust products occupy 2–6 times the volume of the original steel. This expansion generates outward radial pressure on the surrounding concrete, eventually exceeding its tensile strength and causing splitting cracks parallel to the bar, followed by delamination and spalling of the cover concrete.
Pattern: Linear cracks running along the line of reinforcement, followed by rust staining, delamination, and spalling.
Where: Marine structures, chloride-contaminated bridges, carbonated facades — anywhere steel cover is insufficient or compromised.

🏔️ Alkali-Silica Reaction (ASR) Cracking

Timing: Years to decades — a slow chemical reaction.
Cause: Reactive silica minerals in certain aggregates react with alkalis (Na₂O, K₂O) in cement and moisture to form an expansive silica gel. This gel absorbs water, swells, and generates internal pressure that cracks the concrete from within.
Pattern: Map (crazing) or random cracking over large areas, often with white or yellow gel exudate visible at cracks. Associated with a characteristic "map cracking" pattern also called "crocodile skin".
Where: Dams, bridges, pavements, any structure using reactive aggregates in a moist environment.

🧊 Freeze-Thaw Cracking

Timing: Cyclic — recurring every winter in cold climates.
Cause: Water in concrete pores freezes and expands by approximately 9% in volume. In repeated freeze-thaw cycles, this expansion progressively disrupts the concrete microstructure, causing surface scaling, pop-outs, and eventually deep internal cracking. High-porosity concrete with low w/c ratio and inadequate air entrainment is most vulnerable.
Pattern: Surface scaling and pop-outs first, progressing to deep cracking and aggregate exposure over many cycles.
Where: Pavements, bridge decks, retaining walls, any surface exposed to freezing temperatures and moisture in 2026.

🏗️ Settlement / Foundation Cracking

Timing: Weeks to years — as ground consolidation and settlement occur beneath the structure.
Cause: Differential settlement of the supporting soil causes one part of a concrete element to move down relative to another, inducing bending and shear stresses in the concrete. This can occur due to variable subgrade bearing capacity, poorly compacted fill, water table changes, adjacent excavation, or tree root activity.
Pattern: Diagonal stepped cracks at corners of openings, wide at top and tapering downward (or vice versa) depending on settlement pattern. Cracks typically propagate at 45° from window or door corners.
Where: Ground floor slabs, strip and pad foundations, basement walls — any element founded on variable or consolidating ground.

Permissible Concrete Crack Widths — Standards Reference Table

All major concrete design standards specify maximum permissible crack widths based on exposure class and element type. These limits balance durability protection (narrower cracks for aggressive environments) against construction practicality. The table below summarises the key limits from ACI 224R, Eurocode 2 (EN 1992), and AS 3600 for 2026.

Exposure Class / Condition ACI 224R w_max EN 1992 w_max AS 3600 w_max Notes
Dry interior / protected 0.41 mm 0.4 mm 0.3 mm Cosmetic crack control only
Humid / moist interior 0.30 mm 0.3 mm 0.3 mm Most common limit for RC design
Exposed to weather / rain 0.30 mm 0.3 mm 0.25 mm Water ingress risk begins to matter
Deicing salts / road splash 0.18 mm 0.2 mm (XD2) 0.2 mm Chloride-laden environments
Marine — tidal / splash zone 0.15 mm 0.2 mm (XS2) 0.2 mm Most aggressive exposure for RC
Water-retaining structures 0.10 mm 0.2 mm (leakage class 1) 0.2 mm Tightened for water tightness
Prestressed concrete (bonded) No visible cracking 0.2 mm (decompression) 0.1 mm Prestress prevents crack opening
Chemical / industrial exposure 0.10 mm 0.1–0.2 mm (XA classes) 0.1 mm Acid / sulfate attack risk

Max Permissible Crack Width by Exposure (EN 1992)

Dry interior (protected)0.4 mm
Humid / normal interior0.3 mm
Exposed to weather0.3 mm
Deicing salts (XD2)0.2 mm
Marine tidal/splash (XS2)0.2 mm
Water-retaining structures0.2 mm
Prestressed concrete0.2 mm (decompression)
Chemical / industrial0.1–0.2 mm

Concrete Cracking Prevention — By Crack Type

Every type of concrete crack has specific prevention measures that address its root cause. Generic "good concrete practice" helps across all crack types, but targeted prevention requires understanding which mechanism is driving cracking on a specific element or project. The following sections detail the most effective prevention strategies for each major crack category in 2026.

Preventing Plastic Shrinkage Cracking

Plastic shrinkage cracking is the most preventable crack type because it is entirely a function of construction practice and site conditions at the time of placement. The key is to keep surface evaporation below 1.0 kg/m²/hr using the nomograph method (ACI 305R) and to protect the surface from the moment of finishing.

✅ Plastic Shrinkage Cracking — Prevention Checklist

  • Monitor evaporation rate: Calculate using ACI 305R nomograph before every pour. If rate ≥ 1.0 kg/m²/hr, implement wind breaks, evaporation retarders, or reschedule.
  • Apply evaporation retarder: Spray monomolecular film (e.g., Confilm) immediately after screeding and before finishing — reapply if surface dulls.
  • Wind breaks: Erect hessian or polythene sheeting screens around pours in exposed locations to reduce wind speed over the surface.
  • Shade and cool: Pour in early morning or evening in hot climates. Shade the pour from direct sun during and after placement.
  • Lower concrete temperature: Use chilled water, ice, or liquid nitrogen to cool mix to below 30°C at delivery — reduces evaporation driving force.
  • Reduce water-cement ratio: Lower w/c ratio mixes have less free bleed water available to evaporate, reducing shrinkage potential.
  • Polypropylene fibres: Add 0.6–0.9 kg/m³ of polypropylene micro-fibres to concrete mix — they bridge micro-cracks in the plastic state and significantly reduce plastic shrinkage crack widths.
  • Apply curing immediately: Begin wet hessian or plastic sheet curing as soon as the surface can be walked on without damage — do not delay.

Preventing Thermal and Early-Age Cracking

Thermal cracking control in mass concrete is addressed by CIRIA C766 (UK) and ACI 207.2R (USA). The design approach involves calculating the expected temperature rise, checking the temperature differential, and specifying crack control measures if the calculated values exceed thresholds. For related structural durability topics, see our guide on Air-Entrained Concrete Uses and Benefits.

✅ Thermal Cracking Prevention — Key Measures

  • Low-heat cement: Specify CEM III (GGBS blend) or CEM II/B-V (fly ash blend) to replace 30–70% of Portland cement — dramatically reduces heat of hydration. GGBS at 50% replacement reduces peak temperature by ~15–20°C.
  • Limit pour thickness: Break mass concrete pours into layers (typically ≤ 1.5 m lifts) to allow surface heat dissipation between pours.
  • Pre-cool materials: Ice or chilled water replacement for mix water, cooled aggregate stockpiles — aim for concrete delivery temperature ≤ 20°C in hot climates.
  • Insulate to control differential: In cold weather, insulate the pour surface to slow surface cooling — keeping core/surface temperature differential ≤ 20°C (CIRIA C766 limit).
  • Cooling pipes: For very large mass concrete pours (dams, large raft foundations), embed post-cooling water pipes in the concrete to actively control peak temperature.
  • Minimum reinforcement: Provide minimum crack control reinforcement at surfaces (typically T12–T16 bars at 150–200 mm centres) to distribute and limit crack widths even if cracking occurs.
  • Temperature monitoring: Embed thermocouples in large pours and monitor core/surface differential in real time — trigger insulation or cooling response if limit approached.

Preventing Drying Shrinkage Cracking

Drying shrinkage cracking is controlled through a combination of mix design (reducing shrinkage-prone materials), joint provision (allowing controlled movement), and extended curing (slowing early moisture loss). The relationship between water content and drying shrinkage is approximately linear — every 10 litre/m³ increase in mix water increases free drying shrinkage by approximately 0.004% (40 microstrain).

Factor Effect on Drying Shrinkage Recommended Action Typical Reduction
Water content (w/c ratio) ↑ water = ↑ shrinkage Minimise total mix water; use HRWR admixtures 20–40% reduction
Cement paste volume ↑ paste = ↑ shrinkage Maximise aggregate content; optimise grading 10–25% reduction
Aggregate type & size Larger, stiffer aggregate restrains shrinkage Maximise aggregate size; avoid soft/porous types 15–30% reduction
Shrinkage-reducing admixture (SRA) Reduces surface tension of pore water Add SRA at 5–8 L/m³ for critical floor slabs 25–50% reduction
Curing duration Longer curing delays/reduces shrinkage onset Minimum 7 days wet curing; 28 days preferred 10–20% reduction in early cracking
Supplementary cementitious materials GGBS/FA reduce shrinkage vs OPC Specify 30–50% GGBS or 20–30% fly ash replacement 5–15% reduction
Contraction joint spacing Joints limit restraint length; distribute cracking Joints at 4–6× slab thickness spacing for slabs-on-ground Cracks confined to joints

Drying Shrinkage — Prevention Factors

Lower mix water / w/c ratio20–40% reduction
Maximise aggregate content10–25% reduction
Larger aggregate size15–30% reduction
Shrinkage-reducing admixture25–50% reduction
7-day+ wet curing10–20% early crack reduction
GGBS / fly ash replacement5–15% reduction
Contraction joints 4–6× depthCracks confined to joints

Concrete Joint Design — Controlling Cracking by Design

Contraction (control) joints, construction joints, and expansion joints are the primary design tool for managing drying shrinkage and thermal cracking in concrete slabs, pavements, walls, and frames. By providing a planned plane of weakness, joints allow concrete to crack in a controlled location — under the joint — rather than randomly across the surface. Understanding joint spacing, detailing, and sealing is fundamental to crack control in 2026.

Joint Type Purpose Typical Spacing Depth Sealant Required?
Contraction / Control Joint Allow drying shrinkage cracks to occur at planned location 4–6 m (slabs-on-ground); 30–40× thickness for pavements 1/4 to 1/3 slab depth Yes — traffic or liquid exposure
Construction Joint Planned stop/start between pours At end of each day's pour Full depth Surface sealant optional
Isolation (Expansion) Joint Allow independent movement between slab and fixed object (column, wall) Around all columns and fixed elements Full depth Yes — compressible filler + sealant
Movement Joint (structural) Accommodate thermal and seismic movements in frame Project-specific (typically 30–60 m in buildings) Full structure width Yes — engineered joint system
Day Joint (pour stop) Stop end for large slab pour segments At end of each pour panel Full depth Optional

Concrete Joint Types — Quick Reference

Contraction joint4–6 m spacing | ¼ depth
Construction jointAt each pour stop | full depth
Isolation jointAround columns | full depth + filler
Movement joint30–60 m in buildings | full width
Day / pour stop jointAt pour panel end | full depth

Curing — The Most Overlooked Crack Prevention Tool

Adequate curing is the single most cost-effective intervention for reducing concrete cracking. Curing maintains moisture in the concrete during the critical early hydration period, allowing the cement to continue developing strength and microstructure. Without sufficient curing, surface drying begins immediately, causing early drying shrinkage before concrete has developed adequate tensile strength to resist it. Curing is governed by ACI 308 and BS EN 13670.

💡 Minimum Curing Requirements — 2026 Reference

  • Portland cement (CEM I): Minimum 7 days moist curing — equivalent to minimum 5°C ambient.
  • GGBS / fly ash blended cements (CEM II/III): Minimum 10–14 days — SCM cements hydrate more slowly and need extended curing to develop early strength.
  • Hot weather (> 35°C ambient): Begin curing immediately after final finishing — use wet hessian + polythene, or spray-applied curing compound.
  • Cold weather (< 5°C ambient): Heated enclosures or insulated blankets — concrete must not fall below 5°C during curing period.
  • Curing compound: Apply at minimum one coat to the manufacturer's spread rate immediately after finishing — provides temporary moisture barrier. Not suitable for bonded overlays.
  • Wet hessian: Most effective method — keep fully saturated. Hessian must be pre-wetted before placement to avoid absorbing water from fresh concrete surface.
  • Ponding: Most effective for flat slabs — maintain 50–100 mm of water on horizontal surfaces for minimum 7 days.

Concrete Crack Repair Methods

When cracking does occur, the correct repair method depends on crack type (structural vs. non-structural), crack width, whether the crack is active or dormant, and the intended service environment. Using the wrong repair method — for example sealing a structurally active crack without addressing its cause — leads to repair failure and recurring cracking.

Crack Type / Width Activity Repair Method Materials Used Expected Life
Hairline (< 0.2 mm) Dormant Surface sealant only Silane / siloxane penetrating sealer 5–10 years
Non-structural (0.2–0.5 mm) Dormant Route & seal Polyurethane or polysulfide sealant 10–20 years
Structural (> 0.3 mm) Dormant Epoxy injection Low-viscosity structural epoxy resin 20+ years (monolithic)
Active / moving crack Active Route & seal with flexible sealant Polyurethane foam / flexible epoxy 5–15 years
Water-leaking (live) Active / wet Chemical grouting / hydrophilic injection Polyurethane hydrophilic resin (swells on contact with water) 10–20 years
Corrosion-induced (spalling) Progressive Full concrete removal, treat steel, patch repair Cementitious polymer-modified repair mortar 15–25 years
Map cracking / ASR Active/chemical Penetrating sealant + monitor; overlay if severe Silane impregnation + lithium silicate 5–15 years (slows not stops ASR)
Structural failure (wide) Structural Full investigation; demolition and reconstruction may be required Structural assessment first New design life

Concrete Crack Repair by Type & Width

Hairline < 0.2 mm (dormant)Surface silane sealer
0.2–0.5 mm non-structuralRoute & seal (PU sealant)
> 0.3 mm structural (dormant)Epoxy injection
Active / moving crackRoute & flexible sealant
Live water leakHydrophilic PU injection
Corrosion-induced spallingRemove concrete, treat steel, patch
ASR map crackingSilane impregnation + monitor

⚠️ Never Seal an Active Structural Crack Without Investigation

If a crack is actively growing, or if crack width varies with load or temperature, the crack is active and the underlying cause has not been addressed. Sealing or injecting an active structural crack without first determining and resolving the root cause (overloading, foundation movement, corrosion, ASR) is a temporary cosmetic fix that will fail and potentially mask a deteriorating structural condition. Always commission a structural engineer's assessment before repairing any crack wider than 0.5 mm or any crack showing signs of active movement, rust staining, or water ingress in a structural element.

Concrete Cracking — Design and Specification Best Practices 2026

Crack prevention starts at the design and specification stage, not on the construction site. The following design-stage measures are the most effective tools available to the structural engineer, specifier, and contractor working together in 2026. Understanding how foundation conditions affect cracking risk is covered in our guide to Backfilling Around Concrete Foundations.

📋 Mix Design for Crack Resistance

Specify the lowest practical water-cement ratio (target w/c ≤ 0.45 for exposed elements). Use GGBS or fly ash at 30–50% replacement to reduce heat of hydration and drying shrinkage. Specify maximum aggregate size consistent with cover and spacing requirements — larger aggregate restrains shrinkage. Consider shrinkage-reducing admixtures (SRA) for critical jointless floor slabs. Specify polypropylene micro-fibre reinforcement at 0.6–0.9 kg/m³ for all exposed horizontal surfaces at high plastic shrinkage risk.

🏗️ Reinforcement Detailing

Provide minimum crack control reinforcement in all elements subject to restrained shrinkage — typically ρ_min = 0.2–0.4% of cross-section depending on standard and element type. Use smaller bar diameters at closer spacing (e.g., T12@150 rather than T20@400) for the same steel area — many small bars distribute cracking more effectively than few large bars. Maintain specified cover — cover deficiency is a leading cause of both corrosion-induced cracking and premature carbonation. Adequate lap lengths prevent bond failure cracks at bar ends.

🗺️ Joint Layout Planning

Design contraction joints at regular spacing before construction starts — do not leave joint layout to the contractor's discretion on site. For ground-bearing slabs, joints at 4–6 m centres in both directions are typical for office/industrial use. Saw-cut joints within 4–12 hours of placement while concrete is still green — delayed sawcutting allows random cracking to occur before the joint provides relief. Ensure all joints are cut to the correct depth (≥ 25% of slab thickness) to guarantee the crack activates at the joint rather than elsewhere.

🌡️ Early-Age Thermal Management

For elements with any dimension exceeding 500 mm, prepare a thermal analysis per CIRIA C766 or ACI 207.2R before specifying the concrete mix. Calculate expected peak temperature and core/surface differential. If temperature differential exceeds 20°C (CIRIA) or 19°C (ACI), revise the mix (reduce OPC, add GGBS), reduce pour size, or specify surface insulation. Include temperature monitoring in the specification for all mass concrete elements, with clear action thresholds and response procedures.

Frequently Asked Questions — Concrete Cracking

Why does concrete crack even when it looks perfect after placing?
Concrete almost always develops some cracking because it is strong in compression but weak in tension — its tensile strength is only 8–15% of its compressive strength. Shrinkage during drying, temperature changes during hydration, restraint from adjacent structures or subgrade friction, and applied loads all generate tensile stresses that can exceed this low tensile capacity. Reinforcement controls crack widths but does not prevent cracking entirely. The goal of good concrete practice is to limit crack widths to acceptable levels, not to achieve zero cracking.
What is the maximum acceptable crack width in concrete?
The maximum permissible crack width depends on the exposure class and structural function. Under Eurocode 2 (EN 1992), the limit is 0.4 mm for protected interior elements, 0.3 mm for elements exposed to normal weather, and 0.2 mm for elements exposed to aggressive chloride or marine environments. ACI 224R uses similar limits: 0.41 mm for dry interior, 0.30 mm for humid conditions, and 0.18 mm for deicing salt environments. Water-retaining structures typically require crack widths below 0.2 mm or even 0.1 mm to prevent leakage. Cracks wider than these limits should be investigated by a structural engineer.
How do I prevent plastic shrinkage cracks in concrete?
Plastic shrinkage cracks are caused by rapid surface evaporation of bleed water before concrete sets. Prevention measures include: monitoring evaporation rate using the ACI 305R nomograph and acting if it exceeds 1.0 kg/m²/hr; applying a monomolecular evaporation retarder immediately after screeding; erecting wind breaks on exposed sites; scheduling pours in cooler parts of the day; cooling the concrete mix; and adding polypropylene micro-fibres (0.6–0.9 kg/m³) to the mix. Once cracking has started in fresh concrete, it is very difficult to reverse — prevention is the only effective strategy.
What causes map cracking (crazing) on concrete surfaces?
Map cracking (also called crazing or alligator cracking) can have several causes. In fresh concrete, it typically results from premature surface drying causing shallow shrinkage cracks in the surface paste. In mature concrete, map cracking over a large area is the classic pattern of Alkali-Silica Reaction (ASR), where reactive aggregates expand in the presence of alkalis and moisture. Map cracking can also result from steel corrosion forcing cracks in multiple directions, or from freeze-thaw surface scaling. Gel exudate at crack intersections strongly suggests ASR. A petrographic examination of a concrete core is required to definitively diagnose the cause.
When should I use epoxy injection to repair a concrete crack?
Epoxy injection is appropriate for dormant (non-moving) structural cracks where restoring structural continuity and tensile strength across the crack is required. Suitable conditions: crack is clean and dry or only slightly damp; crack is inactive and has stopped moving; crack width is 0.05–10 mm (ideal range for low-viscosity epoxy); and a structural engineer has confirmed the crack requires structural repair. Epoxy injection is not appropriate for active cracks (they will re-crack through or beside the injection site); epoxy-injected repairs through ASR-affected concrete will re-crack as the reaction continues; and cracks with active water flow require hydrophilic polyurethane injection first to stop the water before epoxy can be used. Always confirm a crack is dormant (measure width at marked reference points over 4–8 weeks) before proceeding with structural epoxy injection.
Do polypropylene fibres prevent concrete cracking?
Polypropylene micro-fibres (added at 0.6–0.9 kg/m³) are highly effective at reducing plastic shrinkage crack widths and crack frequency in fresh concrete. They act as a three-dimensional micro-reinforcement throughout the mix, bridging micro-cracks as they initiate and limiting their propagation. However, fibres do not significantly increase the tensile strength of hardened concrete and do not replace conventional reinforcement for structural crack control. Macro-fibres (steel or synthetic, added at 20–40 kg/m³) can replace minimum reinforcement in some ground-bearing slab applications (SFRC — Steel Fibre Reinforced Concrete) but require specific design to AS 3600, TR 34, or fib Model Code.
How does w/c ratio affect concrete cracking?
The water-cement (w/c) ratio has a direct and significant effect on concrete cracking. Higher w/c ratios mean more free water in the mix — this excess water evaporates over time, increasing drying shrinkage magnitude and plastic shrinkage cracking risk. A mix at w/c 0.60 will typically have 30–50% more drying shrinkage than a mix at w/c 0.40 with the same aggregates. Additionally, higher w/c ratios produce more porous, weaker concrete with lower tensile strength, making it less able to resist shrinkage stresses. Specifying a maximum w/c ratio of 0.45–0.50 for exposed concrete and using high-range water-reducing (HRWR) admixtures to maintain workability is one of the most effective crack prevention strategies available.
What is the difference between active and dormant concrete cracks?
A dormant crack has stopped moving — its width remains constant over time, with no seasonal or load-related variation. These cracks can typically be permanently repaired by epoxy injection (structural) or sealing (non-structural). An active crack continues to move — opening and closing with temperature, load, or moisture changes, or progressively widening due to ongoing deterioration such as ASR, corrosion, or foundation settlement. Active cracks must be repaired with flexible sealants that can accommodate movement, not rigid epoxy. To determine if a crack is active or dormant, mark reference points across the crack and measure width with a crack gauge or microscope over a period of 4–12 weeks across different seasons or load conditions before deciding on a repair method.

📖 Standards & Technical References — Concrete Cracking 2026

ACI 224R — Control of Cracking

The primary ACI document covering causes, significance, and control of cracking in concrete structures. Covers all crack types, permissible widths, and repair methods. Essential reference for US and international practice in 2026.

ACI 224R →

ACI 305R — Hot Weather Concreting

Guides plastic shrinkage cracking prevention in hot, dry, or windy conditions. Includes the evaporation rate nomograph used to determine when protective measures are required during concrete placement.

ACI 305R →

CIRIA C766 — Thermal Cracking

UK guidance on control of cracking in concrete from restrained contraction — the definitive design guide for thermal crack risk assessment and early-age crack control in mass concrete and large pours in 2026.

CIRIA C766 →

Eurocode 2 (EN 1992-1-1)

Section 7.3 covers crack control for reinforced and prestressed concrete structures. Defines permissible crack widths, minimum reinforcement requirements, and the full Eurocode crack width calculation method using s_r,max and strain difference.

EN 1992-1-1 →

ACI 207.2R — Mass Concrete

Covers thermal cracking in mass concrete — heat of hydration, temperature differentials, cooling pipe design, and crack control reinforcement for large-volume concrete pours including raft foundations, dams, and bridge piers.

ACI 207.2R →

TR 34 — Concrete Industrial Ground Floors

The Concrete Society Technical Report 34 covers joint design, joint spacing, FF/FL requirements, and crack control for industrial concrete floors in the UK and internationally. Essential for warehouse and logistics floor design in 2026.

TR 34 →