Complete step-by-step excavation and site preparation process for concrete construction
Learn the full excavation and site preparation workflow for 2026 — from initial site survey and clearing to soil testing, trenching, compaction, and final inspection before concrete placement. Covers equipment, soil types, depth requirements, and safety.
Professional excavation process covering every phase from survey to compaction for residential, commercial, and civil concrete projects
This guide covers every stage of excavation and site preparation in sequence — site survey, utility marking, vegetation clearing, topsoil stripping, bulk excavation, trench cutting, soil testing, dewatering, compaction, and pre-pour inspection. Whether you are preparing a residential slab, a strip foundation, or a retaining wall base, each step is explained with practical detail for 2026 construction standards.
The correct equipment selection depends on soil classification, excavation depth, and site access. This guide covers excavator types, compaction equipment, and hand tools. It also explains the five main soil categories — topsoil, clay, silt, sand, and rock — and how each affects excavation method, wall support requirements, moisture management, and final bearing capacity for concrete foundations.
Excavation is one of the highest-risk activities on a construction site. This guide includes trench safety requirements, shoring and battering standards, underground utility precautions, and site hazard controls aligned with 2026 occupational health and safety regulations. Proper site preparation also prevents costly failures such as foundation settlement, concrete cracking, and waterlogging — making compliance a direct investment in build quality.
Follow these steps in sequence for safe and compliant excavation before concrete placement
Commission a registered surveyor to establish site boundaries, existing levels, and datum points. Obtain a geotechnical report identifying soil classification, bearing capacity (kPa), groundwater depth, and any contamination. This report drives all subsequent excavation and foundation design decisions.
Contact your local dial-before-you-dig service to locate and mark all underground utilities — gas, water, sewer, electrical, and communications. Mark all services on the ground with spray paint using the standard colour code. Maintain mandatory exclusion distances (typically 300–500 mm) from live services throughout excavation.
Obtain all required excavation permits, council approvals, and environmental consents. Erect site fencing, safety signage, and temporary erosion controls. Establish a site compound, set out traffic management if required, and install temporary drainage to manage stormwater runoff during earthworks.
Remove all vegetation, tree stumps, roots, and organic material within the building footprint plus a minimum 1 m buffer. Remove existing structures, slabs, and hardstand. Dispose of cleared material off-site or on-site in designated waste zones. Retain topsoil separately if it will be reused for landscaping after construction.
Strip topsoil to a minimum depth of 150–300 mm across the entire excavation area. Topsoil contains organic matter that compresses under load and must be fully removed from beneath any concrete foundation. Stockpile stripped topsoil on-site if reuse is planned; otherwise remove from site immediately to avoid contamination of subgrade material.
Excavate the site to the design formation level using appropriate machinery — typically a hydraulic excavator for larger sites or a bobcat/mini-excavator for confined areas. Maintain batter slopes or install temporary shoring as required by soil type and depth. Leave a 50–100 mm hand-trim allowance above final formation level to avoid over-excavation.
Cut trenches for strip footings, pad footings, and services to the depths specified in structural drawings. Trench widths must accommodate formwork plus a minimum 300 mm working clearance per side. Trench walls in unstable soils must be battered or shored. Hand-trim trench bottoms to exact depth — over-excavation requires engineered fill, not loose backfill.
Remove any groundwater, surface water, or rainfall accumulation from excavations before proceeding. Install sump pumps or wellpoints if groundwater is encountered. Do not allow water to pond on subgrade — saturated soils lose bearing capacity rapidly. Allow adequate drying time between rain events before compaction or concrete placement.
Compact the subgrade to the specified density ratio (typically 95–98% standard Proctor) using a vibrating plate compactor, jumping jack tamper, or roller depending on area size. Test compaction using a nuclear density gauge or dynamic cone penetrometer. Compaction must be completed in lifts no greater than 200 mm for fill material.
Place and compact a granular sub-base (typically 75–150 mm of compacted crushed rock or road base) to provide a stable, level working platform. For slab-on-ground construction, a 40–75 mm blinding concrete layer or sand blinding may be placed over the sub-base to seal the surface, protect the vapour barrier, and provide a clean working platform for reinforcement placement.
Conduct a pre-pour inspection with the structural engineer, geotechnical engineer, and building inspector as required. Verify formation levels, trench dimensions, compaction test results, dewatering adequacy, and clearance from utilities. Obtain written sign-off before any formwork, reinforcement, or concrete placement proceeds.
Excavation and site preparation is the foundational phase of any concrete construction project — the process of removing soil, rock, and debris to create a stable, level subgrade at the correct depth to support a concrete foundation, slab, or structure. Without proper excavation and site preparation, even the best concrete mix and reinforcement design will fail due to uneven bearing, differential settlement, moisture ingress, or organic decomposition beneath the structure. A properly prepared site directly determines the long-term performance of every concrete element placed on it.
Site preparation encompasses a broader scope than excavation alone. It includes the full sequence from initial survey and utility identification through to subgrade compaction, sub-base placement, and final engineer sign-off. For related foundation guidance, see our Backfilling Around Concrete Foundations Guide, which covers the equally critical process of restoring material around completed foundations.
The excavation process always follows this top-to-bottom sequence — survey and plan first, then clear, then excavate, then manage water, compact, and finally inspect before any concrete is placed.
Soil classification is the single most important variable in excavation planning. The geotechnical report will identify the site soil type, which determines excavation method, trench wall stability, compaction requirements, bearing capacity, and whether engineered fill or ground improvement is needed. Understanding soil behaviour prevents costly surprises during excavation.
Always unsuitable as a foundation bearing stratum. Topsoil contains decomposing organic matter that compresses under load, causing differential settlement. Strip to a minimum 150–300 mm depth. Never use topsoil as fill beneath concrete. Bearing capacity is effectively zero for structural purposes — full removal is mandatory before any compaction or foundation work begins.
Clay is the most problematic soil for excavation and foundations. It expands when wet and shrinks when dry, causing heave and settlement. Reactive clay (Class M, H1, H2, E) requires specific foundation design as per AS 2870. Trench walls in clay are initially stable but can collapse rapidly if rained on or left open. Clay subgrades must be protected from moisture changes before concrete is placed.
Silt is a fine-grained soil with poor drainage and low bearing capacity when wet. Silt subgrades become unstable (pump and rut) under machinery traffic and are highly susceptible to frost heave in cold climates. Silt must be thoroughly compacted at its optimum moisture content. In poor conditions, geotextile fabric and crushed rock sub-base are required to bridge silty subgrades before concrete placement.
Sand and gravel drain freely and compact well, making them ideal foundation materials. However, loose dry sand can flow into open trenches without cohesion, and fine sand can liquefy under vibration or water saturation. Trench walls in sand require shoring or tight batter slopes. Compacted gravel provides excellent bearing capacity (150–300+ kPa) and is often used as engineered sub-base fill beneath concrete slabs.
Rock provides the highest bearing capacity and requires no compaction. However, excavating rock requires rock breakers, hydraulic hammers, or controlled blasting — significantly increasing cost and time. Rock surfaces must be cleaned of loose fragments and dust before concrete is placed. Where rock is uneven, a levelling blinding layer is placed to provide a consistent flat surface for formwork and reinforcement.
Previously disturbed or imported fill is unpredictable and often poorly compacted. Made ground may contain demolition rubble, organic waste, or contaminated material. Always assume unknown fill is unsuitable as a bearing stratum until proven by testing. Uncontrolled fill must be either removed to natural ground or densified by compaction testing to demonstrate adequate and consistent bearing capacity before any concrete foundation is placed.
Excavation depth is set by structural design, soil bearing capacity, frost depth (in cold climates), and the requirement to get below the reactive zone for clay sites. The geotechnical report and structural engineer's drawings define the minimum formation level — and excavating shallower than specified is not permitted. The table below provides typical minimum excavation depths for common foundation types in 2026.
| Foundation Type | Typical Depth (mm) | Soil Condition | Bearing Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slab-on-Ground (residential) | 300 – 450 mm | Class A/M site, strip topsoil | 100+ kPa | Includes topsoil strip + sub-base |
| Strip Footing (brick veneer) | 450 – 600 mm | Good soil, non-reactive | 100+ kPa | Below topsoil and organic layer |
| Strip Footing (reactive clay) | 600 – 1,200 mm | Class H1/H2/E site | Below active zone | Depth set by AS 2870 / engineer |
| Pad Footing (column base) | 600 – 1,500 mm | Variable by load & soil | 150+ kPa | Depth from structural drawings |
| Retaining Wall Footing | 500 – 900 mm | Competent natural ground | 100–200 kPa | Passive pressure zone required |
| Basement / Raft Foundation | 1,500 – 3,000+ mm | Engineered design required | 200+ kPa | Shoring + dewatering typically needed |
| Services Trench (concrete encased) | 600 – 1,200 mm | Any soil — minimum cover | N/A | Service-specific depth requirements apply |
Equipment selection is determined by excavation volume, soil type, available site access, and proximity to existing structures. Using oversized machinery in confined spaces causes damage to adjoining structures, underground utilities, and the very subgrade you are trying to protect. The right machine for the task saves both time and cost while achieving the required formation quality.
The primary earthmoving machine for bulk excavation on medium to large sites. Bucket sizes range from 0.1 m³ (mini) to 1.5 m³ (large). Used for topsoil stripping, bulk cut-to-level, trench excavation, and rock breaking with hydraulic hammer attachment. Tracked units are required on soft or sloping ground. Minimum 2.5 m site access width is required for a 5-tonne machine.
Ideal for confined residential sites, tight access areas, and excavation adjacent to existing structures. A 1.5-tonne mini-excavator can pass through a standard 900 mm gate. Used for strip footing trenches, service trenches, and hand-trim finishing. Rubber tracks minimise surface damage on driveways and finished areas. Essential tool for urban infill and renovation projects in 2026.
Used for topsoil stripping, bulk material loading and spreading, sub-base placement, and site cleanup. Highly manoeuvrable on confined sites. Fits through 1.2 m gate openings. Not suited for deep trench excavation — it is a bulk material handler, not a precision trenching machine. Commonly paired with an excavator on larger residential and commercial sites.
Plate compactors (400–700 kg) are standard for granular sub-base compaction on slab preparation. Jumping jack tampers (rammer compactors) are used in narrow trenches and confined spaces where plate compactors cannot operate. Vibrating smooth-drum rollers are used for large-area compaction on commercial or civil sites. Always match compactor weight and type to the specified fill material and lift depth.
Any excavation deeper than 1.5 m that a worker may enter must be either battered (sloped sides) or shored (supported sides) in accordance with Work Health & Safety regulations in Australia, or equivalent local standards. Batter slopes depend on soil type: 1:1 (45°) for stiff clay, 1.5:1 for cohesionless sands, and 0.5:1 for very stiff compacted material. Shoring systems include hydraulic trench boxes, steel sheet piling, or timber shoring frames. Never work in an unsupported excavation deeper than 1.5 m — trench collapses are fatal. See our Assessing Existing Concrete Structures Guide for related structural inspection guidance.
Most concrete foundation failures can be traced back to inadequate site preparation. The following errors are consistently identified in building defect reports and structural failures — and all are entirely preventable with proper process adherence.
Concrete must never be placed on unsatisfactory subgrade. Stop work and seek engineering advice if any of the following are encountered: pumping or rutting subgrade under foot traffic; standing water in excavation; unexpected fill material below original ground surface; soft spots that deflect more than 25 mm under a 100 kg static load; or soil bearing capacity below the geotechnical report minimum. Proceeding without resolution leads to foundation failure that is far more expensive to rectify than a short programme delay. For guidance on evaluating ground conditions around existing structures, refer to our Backfill Materials for Retaining Walls Guide.
Step-by-step guide to correctly backfilling around completed concrete foundations to prevent movement and settlement
🪨Complete guide to selecting and placing the correct backfill materials behind concrete retaining walls
🔍How to inspect and assess existing concrete structures for defects, damage, and ongoing serviceability
🔊Guide to understanding and improving the acoustic performance of concrete floor systems in 2026
Excavation and site preparation in Australia is governed by AS 2870 (Residential Slabs and Footings), AS 3798 (Guidelines on Earthworks for Commercial and Residential Developments), and the relevant state Work Health & Safety regulations for excavation safety. Always confirm applicable standards with your structural engineer and local building authority before commencing earthworks in 2026.
Structural Guide →Proper site preparation is the first step — but foundation design must be completed before excavation commences. Our related guides cover backfilling methods, retaining wall construction, and concrete structural assessment, providing a complete resource library for every stage of the concrete construction process from ground preparation to finished structure.
Backfilling Guide →Once your site is prepared and concrete is placed, ongoing performance considerations include acoustic isolation, structural deflection, and surface durability. Our acoustic performance guide covers how slab thickness, subgrade stiffness, and surface treatments affect sound transmission through concrete floors — relevant for multi-storey residential and commercial construction in 2026.
Acoustic Guide →