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Slump Test Results Interpretation – Easy Guide 2026 | ConcreteMetric
Concrete Quality Control Guide 2026

Slump Test Results Interpretation

Read your slump test correctly every time — on site, in plain language

A complete easy guide to interpreting concrete slump test results in 2026 — covering the four slump types, slump class tables (S1–S5), acceptable ranges by application, corrective actions, and a live slump checker tool for site use.

4 Slump Types Explained
S1–S5 Class Tables
Live Slump Checker
Pass / Fail / Reject Guide

📐 Slump Test Results Interpretation – Easy Guide

Everything you need to read, record and act on a concrete slump test result — fast and correctly

✔ What Is the Slump Test?

The concrete slump test — performed using an Abrams cone (slump cone) — is the most widely used site test for assessing the workability and consistency of fresh concrete. A sample of fresh concrete is compacted into a 300 mm high steel cone in three layers, each tamped 25 times. The cone is then lifted vertically, and the concrete slumps under its own weight. The vertical drop — measured to the nearest 5 mm — is the slump value. Governed by ASTM C143, AS 1012.3.1, and EN 12350-2 in 2026.

✔ Why Slump Interpretation Matters

The slump value is more than a number — it is a real-time signal of mix quality and water-cement ratio. A slump that is too high indicates excess water has been added, which directly reduces 28-day compressive strength (every 10 kg/m³ of additional water reduces strength by approximately 3–5 MPa). A slump that is too low indicates insufficient workability — the concrete may not compact properly around reinforcement, leaving voids. Correct slump interpretation is the first line of defence for structural concrete quality on any construction site.

✔ The Four Possible Results

When you lift the slump cone, only four outcomes are possible: a True Slump (valid — concrete drops evenly), a Shear Slump (invalid — one side shears off, indicating poor cohesion), a Collapse Slump (invalid — complete collapse, mix too wet), or a Zero Slump (valid but extreme — concrete holds the cone shape, mix too dry). Only a true slump gives a useful workability reading. Shear and collapse slumps require the test to be repeated; if the second test also fails, the load must be rejected.

The Four Slump Test Results — Visual Guide

✅ True Slump
Even drop — valid result
⬜ Zero Slump
Holds cone shape — too dry
⚠️ Shear Slump
Slides sideways — repeat test
🚫 Collapse Slump
Completely flat — too wet

Figure 1 — The four possible outcomes of a concrete slump test (2026)

The Four Slump Types — Detailed Interpretation

Understanding which of the four slump types you have observed is the first and most critical step in slump test interpretation. Only a true slump gives a valid, measurable workability reading. The other three types tell you something is wrong with the mix or test procedure, but do not yield a usable slump value. The cards below explain exactly what each result means, what causes it, and what action to take on site.

True Slump
Valid result — measure and record
✔ VALID RESULT

The concrete mass drops evenly and symmetrically from the cone, maintaining its general shape and cohesion. The top surface subsides in a uniform dome. This is the only slump type that gives a valid, measurable workability reading.

What it indicates: Good mix cohesion, adequate paste content, and a mix-water ratio that falls within the workable range. The measured slump value directly reflects the mix's water content and workability.

Action: Measure the vertical drop from the top of the cone to the highest point of the slumped concrete to the nearest 5 mm. Check the result against the specified slump or slump class for the pour. Accept if within tolerance (typically ±25 mm of target, or within the specified slump class range).

⚠️
Shear Slump
Invalid — repeat the test immediately
⟳ REPEAT TEST

One side of the concrete mass shears or slides away from the main body when the cone is lifted. The failure is asymmetric — part of the sample collapses sideways while the rest holds.

What it indicates: Poor cohesion in the mix — typically caused by insufficient fine aggregate (sand) content, a gap-graded aggregate blend, or inadequate mixing time. The mix lacks the paste volume needed to hold the aggregate together.

Action: Discard the result. Take a new sample from the same load and repeat the test immediately. If the second test also produces a shear slump, the load has poor cohesion and must be rejected. Document both results and report to the engineer. Do not add water — this is a mix design issue, not a water deficiency.

🚫
Collapse Slump
Invalid — load likely too wet
✖ REJECT / INVESTIGATE

The concrete completely collapses and spreads flat when the cone is lifted, losing all form. Most or all of the sample fails to hold together. There is no measurable slump height.

What it indicates: The mix is too wet — the water-cement ratio is excessively high, typically because water was added at the plant or in the drum on the way to site. Alternatively, it may indicate an excessively high dosage of superplasticiser. Either way, the mix's strength potential is seriously compromised.

Action: Repeat the test with a new sample. If the second test also collapses, reject the load — do not place it in the structure. Check the delivery docket for water additions and compare slump with the target class. If water was added without authorisation, this is a non-conformance requiring formal documentation and notification to the structural engineer.

Zero Slump
Valid but extreme — very stiff mix
◼ VALID — VERY DRY

The concrete holds the shape of the cone after lifting — slump = 0 mm. There is essentially no workability. The concrete is very stiff and will be extremely difficult to place and compact around reinforcement.

What it indicates: Very low water-cement ratio — the mix is too dry for most conventional placement methods. Zero slump concrete is intentional in some specialist applications (roller-compacted concrete, dry-cast precast, road base) but is non-conforming for most poured reinforced concrete applications.

Action: Check the specified slump class. If zero slump is outside the specified range, investigate the cause (batching error, excess cement, insufficient water or admixture). Do not simply add water to the drum without engineer authorisation — recalculate and document. For roller-compacted concrete or mass concrete applications, a zero/near-zero slump may be the specification intent.

Slump Classes S1–S5 — EN 12350 & BS 8500 (2026)

Under the European standard EN 12350-2 and BS 8500, concrete workability is classified into five slump consistency classes (S1 to S5). Each class covers a defined slump range in millimetres and is associated with particular applications. The slump class is specified on the project drawings or in the concrete specification, and every delivery must be tested to confirm the class is met. The chart below shows the full range, and the table provides the precise limits and typical applications for each class.

Slump Class Scale — S1 to S5 (EN 12350-2 / BS 8500)

S1 — 10–40 mm
Stiff — S1
S2 — 50–90 mm
Medium — S2
S3 — 100–150 mm
Plastic — S3 ★ Most Common
S4 — 160–210 mm
Soft — S4
S5 — ≥ 220 mm
Fluid — S5 (SCC range)

Figure 2 — Slump consistency classes S1–S5 per EN 12350-2 / BS 8500:2015+A2:2019

Slump Class Slump Range (mm) Consistency Description Typical Applications Placement Method Notes
S1 10 – 40 mm Stiff Road bases, kerbs, unreinforced mass concrete, roller-compacted concrete Heavy compaction / roller Not suitable for reinforced elements — poor compaction risk
S2 50 – 90 mm Medium Lightly reinforced slabs, ground-bearing slabs, footings with simple reinforcement Poker vibrator required Widely used in Australia (N20–N32 mixes). Check admixture if specified at high grade
S3 100 – 150 mm Plastic Reinforced beams, columns, walls, suspended slabs, most building structural elements Poker vibrator + formwork vibration Most common structural specification. Standard for most poured RC elements in 2026
S4 160 – 210 mm Soft Densely reinforced elements, pumped concrete, deep columns, pile caps Pump placement, minimal vibration Superplasticiser required to maintain w/c at high slump. Monitor for segregation
S5 ≥ 220 mm Fluid / SCC Self-compacting concrete (SCC), tremie pours, bored piles, congested reinforcement Self-compacting — no vibration Slump flow test (EN 12350-8) preferred over slump cone for true SCC. Use carefully — segregation risk high without proper SCC admixtures

S1 — Stiff (10–40 mm)

ApplicationRoad base, kerbs, RCC
PlacementHeavy compaction / roller
NoteNot for reinforced elements

S2 — Medium (50–90 mm)

ApplicationLight slabs, footings
PlacementPoker vibrator required
NoteCommon AU ground slabs

S3 — Plastic (100–150 mm) ★

ApplicationBeams, columns, walls, slabs
PlacementPoker vibrator
NoteMost common structural spec

S4 — Soft (160–210 mm)

ApplicationPumped, dense reinforcement
PlacementPump, minimal vibration
NoteSP admixture required

S5 — Fluid (≥ 220 mm)

ApplicationSCC, tremie, bored piles
PlacementSelf-compacting
NoteUse slump flow test for SCC

📐 Slump Test Results Checker

Enter your measured slump value — get instant interpretation, pass/fail status and corrective action

Measure to the nearest 5 mm from top of cone to highest slumped point
Select the type of slump you observed when the cone was lifted
From the project specification or engineer's concrete schedule
Only used when 'Target Slump' is selected above
Element type affects the recommended slump range and actions
The nominal target slump specified for the mix
Select the testing standard applicable to your project
The actual slump value measured on the delivered load
Slump Interpretation
Full details below

Site Action Summary

Detailed Interpretation

Acceptable Slump Ranges by Concrete Application

Different concrete elements require different workability to ensure proper placement and compaction. A column with dense reinforcement needs a much higher slump than a lightly reinforced ground slab. The cards below provide the recommended slump ranges for the most common concrete elements encountered on construction sites in Australia in 2026, along with the workability rationale for each.

🧱 Ground-Bearing Slabs

Recommended slump: 60–100 mm (S2–S3). Ground slabs are typically placed by direct discharge, crane bucket, or short pump runs. A medium slump (S2) is often adequate for lightly reinforced slabs placed by screed machine or bull float, as the large flat pour area allows spread without high workability. Higher slump (S3) is preferred when using a pump or when reinforcement is denser. Avoid S4+ for unreinforced or lightly reinforced ground slabs — the excess water weakens the surface zone.

🏗️ Columns and Piers

Recommended slump: 100–160 mm (S3–S4). Columns require higher workability because the concrete must flow around dense reinforcement cages and be compacted in a confined, deep pour. A low slump in a column pour risks honeycombing — visible voids in the hardened concrete face after formwork is struck. For heavily reinforced columns with bars at minimum spacing, S4 or a superplasticised S3+ mix is recommended. Trial mixes should verify flow characteristics before the first pour.

🏢 Suspended Slabs and Beams

Recommended slump: 100–150 mm (S3). S3 is the standard specification for most suspended reinforced concrete slabs and beams in building construction. It provides adequate workability for pump placement and poker vibration while maintaining a water-cement ratio consistent with N32–N40 concrete strength requirements. For flat slab systems with drop panels or post-tensioned slabs, verify that the slump is compatible with the specified mix design and does not require additional water to achieve.

🔧 Pumped Concrete

Recommended slump: 120–180 mm (S3–S4). Pumping concrete imposes significant shear forces on the mix, and concrete that is too stiff will block the pump line — often catastrophically. A minimum slump of 100 mm is generally required for pump operation; 120–150 mm is the practical optimum for most line configurations. For long horizontal runs (>50 m) or high vertical lifts, S4 is advisable. Always use a superplasticiser to achieve higher slump without adding free water — adding water to pump concrete is the most common cause of structural non-conformance on site.

🌊 Bored Piles and Tremie Pours

Recommended slump: 160–220 mm (S4–S5). Concrete placed by tremie pipe (bored piles, diaphragm walls, underwater pours) must be highly workable to flow laterally from the tremie tip and displace the bentonite or water above it without segregation. S4–S5 with a cohesive SCC-style mix is standard. Slump alone is insufficient for these applications — also check slump flow (EN 12350-8) and T500 flow time to confirm adequate flowability without segregation.

🏛️ Retaining Walls

Recommended slump: 80–150 mm (S2–S3). Reinforced concrete retaining walls are typically poured in lifts of 1.5–3.0 m. An S2–S3 mix provides adequate workability for poker vibration between closely spaced reinforcement while minimising formwork pressure (which increases significantly with very high slump mixes). For walls with tight bar spacing or complex geometry, S3 is preferred. Avoid S4+ in retaining walls unless the formwork has been designed for the increased lateral pressure of a highly workable mix.

Corrective Actions for Out-of-Tolerance Slump Results

When a slump test result falls outside the specified range, the correct response depends on whether the slump is too high (over-slump) or too low (under-slump), and on the magnitude of the deviation. The key rule is: never add water to a delivered load without explicit engineer authorisation — even if the intent is to bring a low-slump load up to the target. Unauthorised water addition changes the water-cement ratio and reduces 28-day strength.

1

Over-Slump (Too High) — Immediate Steps

If the measured slump exceeds the upper limit of the specified class by more than 25 mm (or per ASTM C143, more than ¾ inch), the load is potentially non-conforming. First, confirm the test was correctly performed (level base, correct tamping, smooth cone lift). Retest with a fresh sample. If the second test also exceeds the limit, check the delivery docket for any water added during transport. Refer the load to the engineer — in many cases the engineer may accept the load after reviewing structural implications, particularly for non-critical elements or if the concrete still meets the maximum specified w/c ratio.

2

Under-Slump (Too Low) — Immediate Steps

If the slump falls below the lower limit, first check that the sample was taken correctly (not from the first or last discharge) and that the test base was level. Retest. If confirmed under-slump, contact the batching plant immediately — ask whether a superplasticiser addition at the plant is possible on a return trip, or whether the load can be supplemented with admixture on site (if approved by the mix designer). Do not add water. If the load cannot be brought to specification and no engineer waiver is available, the load must be rejected and a replacement ordered.

3

Shear or Collapse Slump — Immediate Steps

Take a fresh sample from the same truck immediately and repeat the test. If the repeat test is also a shear or collapse slump, the load has fundamental mix problems and must be rejected — do not place it in structural elements. Complete a non-conformance report documenting: truck number, batch number, arrival time, both test results, and disposition of the load. Notify the structural engineer and the batching plant. For collapse slump specifically, measure the approximate slump if possible and check delivery docket for unauthorised water additions.

4

Document and Report All Non-Conformances

Every slump test result — pass or fail — must be recorded in the site concrete register with: date, time, truck number, load volume, element being poured, measured slump, slump type, disposition (accepted/rejected/referred to engineer), and tester's name. Non-conforming results require a formal NCR (non-conformance report). Retain all records for the life of the structure. Most structural compliance frameworks in 2026 require digital records including delivery docket images cross-referenced to test results.

5

Can Water Be Added on Site?

In exceptional circumstances, a small amount of water may be added to a delivered load on site to restore workability lost during a long transit — but only if: (a) the batching plant has included a water allowance in the design w/c ratio for this purpose, (b) the addition is documented on the delivery docket, (c) the resulting slump is retested, and (d) the addition does not exceed the maximum w/c ratio specified for the mix. In Australia, AS 1379 requires that any field water addition is recorded on the docket and that the resulting batch is retested before placement.

6

When to Reject a Load Outright

A concrete load must be rejected without placing if: two consecutive tests produce a collapse or shear slump; the slump exceeds the upper class limit by more than 30 mm and the delivery docket confirms unauthorised water addition; the slump is S1 for a structural element requiring S3; the concrete has partially set (no longer fully plastic); or the concrete temperature exceeds the maximum specified (typically 32°C in hot weather). Never allow time pressure to override a rejection decision on structural concrete.

⚠️ The Most Common Slump Test Errors That Produce False Results

  • Testing on an uneven or tilted base plate — causes asymmetric slump that may be misread as a shear slump; always use a level, rigid, non-absorbent base
  • Lifting the cone too fast or at an angle — can cause a shear slump in a perfectly good mix; lift vertically and smoothly in 5–10 seconds
  • Taking the sample from the first or last discharge — the first and last portions of a truck load are not representative; sample from the middle third of the discharge
  • Not filling in three equal layers and tamping 25 times each — under-rodding causes a false high slump; the cone must be filled correctly for a valid result
  • Waiting too long before testing — the sample must be tested within 5 minutes of sampling; concrete begins to stiffen rapidly and the slump will read low
  • Measuring to the wrong reference point — measure from the original cone height (300 mm) to the highest point of the slumped concrete, not to the side

Slump Test Procedure — Step by Step

Consistent slump test technique is essential for reproducible results. Small variations in procedure — the rate of tamping, the cone lifting speed, the location of sampling — can cause slump readings to vary by 20–40 mm on the same batch. The following procedure conforms to AS 1012.3.1, EN 12350-2, and ASTM C143 as applicable in 2026.

📋 Standard Slump Test Procedure (AS 1012.3.1 / EN 12350-2 / ASTM C143)

  • Step 1 — Prepare equipment: Place the slump cone on a flat, rigid, non-absorbent base plate (steel preferred). Dampen the inside of the cone. Stand on the foot pieces to hold the cone steady throughout filling.
  • Step 2 — Sample the concrete: Take the sample from the middle third of the truck discharge — not the first or last 10% of the load. Sample volume: minimum 7 litres (1½ × cone volume).
  • Step 3 — Fill Layer 1: Fill the cone to approximately one-third of its height. Rod 25 times with the tamping rod, distributing the strokes uniformly over the cross section. The rod should just penetrate into the layer below.
  • Step 4 — Fill Layer 2: Fill to approximately two-thirds. Rod 25 times, penetrating into the first layer by about 25 mm.
  • Step 5 — Fill Layer 3: Overfill the cone, then strike off level with the top using the tamping rod. Rod 25 times, penetrating into the second layer. Remove excess concrete from the base.
  • Step 6 — Lift the cone: Remove your feet from the foot pieces. Grip the handles and lift the cone straight up vertically in one smooth motion over 5–10 seconds. Do not twist, tilt or jerk.
  • Step 7 — Measure: Place the cone alongside the slumped concrete immediately. Lay the tamping rod across the top of the cone. Measure the vertical distance from the bottom of the rod to the highest point of the slumped concrete to the nearest 5 mm. This is the slump value.
  • Step 8 — Record: Record: slump value (mm), slump type (true/shear/collapse/zero), time of test, truck number, element poured, and ambient/concrete temperature.

Frequently Asked Questions — Slump Test Results Interpretation

What is a good slump for normal reinforced concrete?
For most standard reinforced concrete structural elements — slabs, beams, columns, and walls in buildings — the typical target slump in 2026 is 100–150 mm (Slump Class S3). This range provides good workability for poker vibration, is compatible with pump placement, and is achievable with N32–N40 concrete mixes using a normal or mid-range water-reducing admixture at a water-cement ratio of 0.45–0.55. S3 is the default specification on the majority of building structural projects in Australia when no special conditions apply. For pumped concrete, the lower end of S4 (160 mm) may be needed for long pump lines.
What does a shear slump actually mean — is it a failed test?
A shear slump means the concrete lacks cohesion — one side of the sample slides away from the main body asymmetrically when the cone is removed. It is not automatically a failed batch, but it is an invalid test result that must be repeated. Per AS 1012.3.1 and ASTM C143, a shear slump result is to be disregarded and a second test performed with a fresh sample immediately. If the second test also produces a shear slump, it indicates a genuine mix problem — likely insufficient fine aggregate (sand) content, poor aggregate grading, or inadequate mixing — and the load should be rejected and the plant notified. Do not accept a shear slump as a valid workability result.
Does a high slump mean the concrete will be weaker?
A high slump caused by excess water directly reduces strength — every 10 kg/m³ of additional mix water at a constant cement content increases the water-cement ratio and reduces 28-day compressive strength by approximately 3–5 MPa. However, a high slump achieved by adding superplasticiser (without adding water) does not reduce strength — the water-cement ratio is unchanged. This is why the delivery docket must be checked when a slump is unexpectedly high: if the w/c ratio is within specification and the slump was achieved by admixture dosage, the concrete's strength is not compromised. If the slump was achieved by adding water, strength is reduced and the load may need to be rejected.
What is the slump tolerance allowed under Australian standards?
Under AS 1379:2007 (Supply of Concrete), the permitted tolerance on specified slump is: ±25 mm for target slumps between 50 mm and 100 mm, and ±30 mm for target slumps above 100 mm. For EN 12350-2 (European standard), the tolerance is expressed by slump class boundaries rather than as a fixed tolerance — a result is non-conforming if it falls outside the class range specified. Under ASTM C143 (USA), the slump of the delivered concrete shall not deviate from the slump at the point of acceptance by more than ¾ inch (19 mm). Always check the project specification, as some projects specify tighter tolerances for critical structural elements or high-grade mixes.
How often should slump tests be performed on a structural concrete pour?
Under AS 3600 and most structural concrete quality plans in Australia, the minimum slump testing frequency is: first load of every pour (always), then at least once per 50 m³ of concrete placed, and on any load that appears visually inconsistent with previous deliveries. For critical structural elements (columns, prestressed elements, transfer plates), many engineers specify one slump test per truck load or per 25 m³. Slump tests should also be performed whenever: a new truck arrives from a different batch, there is a significant change in ambient temperature, the concrete appears different in colour or consistency, or a truck has had an unusually long transit time.
Can the slump test be used for self-compacting concrete (SCC)?
The standard slump cone test is not appropriate for true self-compacting concrete (SCC) because SCC is designed to be highly fluid (typically S5 class, slump ≥ 220 mm) and the slump cone cannot differentiate workability within the SCC range. For SCC, the primary fresh concrete test is the Slump Flow Test (EN 12350-8 / ASTM C1611), which measures the diameter of the spread of the concrete across a flat surface after the cone is lifted — typically 550–750 mm for conforming SCC. Additional tests used for SCC include the T500 flow time (resistance to flow), J-Ring (passing ability around reinforcement), and L-Box (filling ability). These tests together characterise the full fresh concrete performance of SCC.