Complete guide to fire resistance levels, cover requirements, spalling, and FRL compliance for concrete structures
Understand how fire resistance of concrete elements is determined, specified, and achieved in 2026. Covers FRL ratings, minimum cover to reinforcement, aggregate type effects, spalling prevention, and tabulated solutions for slabs, beams, columns, and walls under AS 3600 and the National Construction Code.
Technical guidance on fire resistance levels, thermal behaviour, cover specification, and compliant design for all concrete element types
A Fire Resistance Level (FRL) is expressed as three numbers — for example 120/120/120 — representing minutes of structural adequacy, integrity, and insulation resistance respectively. Concrete elements must meet the FRL required by the National Construction Code (NCC) for their building classification, occupancy, and location within the building. This guide explains every component of FRL specification and how concrete element design achieves each criterion.
The single most critical design parameter for fire resistance of concrete elements is the axis distance — the distance from the exposed face to the centreline of the reinforcing bar or tendon. Increasing cover delays heat conduction to the steel, which loses tensile strength rapidly above 400–500°C. AS 3600 provides tabulated minimum axis distances for slabs, beams, columns, and walls for each FRL period from 30 to 240 minutes.
Concrete spalling in fire — explosive or progressive loss of surface layers — is the primary failure mechanism that exposes reinforcement to heat prematurely. Spalling risk is influenced by aggregate type, concrete permeability, moisture content, concrete strength, and element geometry. High-strength concrete (above 65 MPa) is particularly susceptible to explosive spalling. This guide covers design and specification measures for spalling prevention in 2026 construction.
Expressed as Structural Adequacy / Integrity / Insulation (minutes) — e.g. 120/120/120
Fire resistance of concrete elements is the ability of a concrete structural member — slab, beam, column, or wall — to continue performing its structural and separating functions when exposed to a standard fire test for a specified period. Concrete is inherently more fire-resistant than steel or timber because it is non-combustible, has very low thermal conductivity, and retains structural integrity at temperatures that would cause steel to yield or timber to ignite. However, concrete is not immune to fire damage — elevated temperatures degrade its compressive strength, cause thermal expansion cracking, and can trigger explosive spalling that exposes reinforcement to direct heat.
Fire resistance performance is primarily governed by the protection concrete provides to embedded steel reinforcement. Reinforcing steel begins losing significant yield strength above approximately 400°C and reaches only 50% of its ambient-temperature yield strength at around 550°C. The cover depth — the thickness of concrete between the fire-exposed face and the steel — is therefore the primary design variable for fire resistance of concrete elements. For related structural assessment guidance, see our Assessing Existing Concrete Structures Guide.
Standard Fire (ISO 834) — Temperature vs. Time
ISO 834 standard fire curve — fire temperature rises rapidly in the first 30 minutes then increases more gradually. Concrete's low thermal conductivity means interior temperatures remain far below the surface temperature throughout the fire event.
Axis distance (a) = distance from exposed face to centre of reinforcing bar. Increasing axis distance delays the time at which steel reaches its critical temperature of ~500°C, directly increasing the FRL period achievable.
An FRL is expressed as three numbers separated by forward slashes — for example –/120/120 or 90/90/90 — where each number represents the minimum time in minutes that the element must satisfy each of three fire resistance criteria when tested to AS 1530.4 or assessed by calculation. A dash (–) indicates that criterion is not required for that element. Understanding what each number means is essential for correctly specifying and checking fire resistance of concrete elements.
The ability of the element to continue carrying its design load without collapse for the specified period. For a concrete beam or column, this means maintaining sufficient residual compressive strength and tensile capacity in the reinforcement despite the temperature rise in the cross-section. It is governed primarily by the axis distance to main reinforcement and the concrete cross-section dimensions. Larger cross-sections provide greater thermal mass and maintain structural capacity longer under fire exposure.
The ability of a fire-separating element — such as a floor slab or fire wall — to prevent flames or hot gases from passing through cracks, holes, or other openings to the unexposed side. For concrete slabs and walls, integrity failures typically occur through thermal cracking, joint failures, or penetration paths created by service penetrations. Integrity is maintained by adequate slab thickness, continuous reinforcement across potential crack locations, and properly sealed service penetrations.
The ability of a fire-separating element to limit the temperature rise on its unexposed face to a maximum average of 140°C above ambient (or a maximum of 180°C at any single point). This prevents ignition of materials on the protected side. For concrete, insulation performance is primarily governed by slab or wall thickness — thicker elements provide greater thermal resistance. Lightweight aggregate concrete performs better in insulation than normal-weight concrete due to lower thermal conductivity.
AS 3600:2018 Section 5 provides tabulated solutions for fire resistance of concrete elements based on axis distance (a) and minimum element dimensions. The axis distance is measured to the centre of the main tensile reinforcement bar — not to the outer face of the stirrup or ligature. Where a concrete element has multiple layers of reinforcement, the axis distance applies to the centroid of the reinforcement group. The table below provides the key minimum values from AS 3600 for standard FRL periods.
| Element Type | FRL Period | Min. Axis Distance (mm) | Min. Width / Thickness (mm) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simply Supported Beam | 60 min | 35 mm | 120 mm wide | Exposed on 3 sides |
| 90 min | 45 mm | 150 mm wide | Exposed on 3 sides | |
| 120 min | 55 mm | 200 mm wide | Exposed on 3 sides | |
| 180 min | 70 mm | 240 mm wide | Exposed on 3 sides | |
| One-Way Slab (simply supported) | 60 min | 20 mm | 80 mm thick | Exposed on soffit only |
| 90 min | 25 mm | 100 mm thick | Exposed on soffit only | |
| 120 min | 35 mm | 120 mm thick | Exposed on soffit only | |
| 180 min | 45 mm | 150 mm thick | Exposed on soffit only | |
| Column (fully exposed) | 60 min | 35 mm | 200 mm dia / side | All sides exposed |
| 120 min | 45 mm | 250 mm dia / side | All sides exposed | |
| 180 min | 53 mm | 350 mm dia / side | All sides exposed | |
| Load-Bearing Wall (one face exposed) | 60 min | 25 mm | 130 mm thick | One face only |
| 120 min | 35 mm | 150 mm thick | One face only | |
| 180 min | 45 mm | 175 mm thick | One face only |
Explosive spalling is the most dangerous failure mode in fire-exposed concrete. It occurs when rapidly heated surface concrete expands while cooler interior concrete restrains that expansion — generating tensile stresses that exceed the concrete's tensile strength. Simultaneously, water vapour pressure from evaporating free and chemically bound moisture becomes trapped in low-permeability concrete, creating internal pore pressure that contributes to the explosive ejection of surface material. Spalling exposes reinforcement directly to flame, causing rapid strength loss and accelerated structural failure — drastically reducing the effective FRL.
Free moisture content above 2–3% by weight significantly increases spalling risk. Newly cast concrete with high residual moisture is most susceptible — a minimum curing period of 28 days is recommended before fire exposure in testing, but in real fires newly completed structures face elevated risk. Concrete elements cast in winter conditions or with high water-cement ratios retain more moisture for longer, increasing pore pressure during fire exposure.
Concrete with f'c above 65 MPa is highly susceptible to explosive spalling due to its very low permeability — trapped pore pressure has nowhere to dissipate. AS 3600 requires spalling protection for HSC elements by specifying polypropylene fibres (typically 2 kg/m³) added to the mix. These fibres melt at approximately 160°C, creating a network of micro-channels that allow pore pressure to escape, dramatically reducing spalling severity.
Siliceous aggregates (quartz-based — granite, sandstone, greywacke) undergo a phase transformation at approximately 573°C causing a sudden volume expansion that contributes to cracking and spalling. Calcareous aggregates (limestone, dolomite) and lightweight aggregates perform significantly better in fire, with calcareous concrete retaining approximately 75% of its compressive strength at 600°C compared to only 55% for siliceous aggregate concrete. Specifying calcareous or lightweight aggregate is an effective fire performance improvement strategy.
Rapid heating rates — as occur in hydrocarbon pool fires, tunnel fires, or high-flashover room fires — dramatically increase spalling risk compared to the standard ISO 834 curve. The faster the temperature rise at the concrete surface, the steeper the thermal gradient through the cross-section, and the higher the thermal shock stresses. Elements designed for standard fire (ISO 834) may fail early when exposed to hydrocarbon fire curves (HC curve), which are significantly more severe in the critical first 10 minutes.
Thin sections, sharp corners, and re-entrant angles concentrate heat exposure and generate high biaxial thermal stress, increasing spalling susceptibility. Columns with small cross-sections or sharp rectangular corners are particularly vulnerable. Rounding column corners (chamfering to minimum 25 mm radius) significantly reduces corner spalling. Thin prestressed slabs (less than 100 mm) require careful attention to both spalling protection and axis distance to tendons.
Effective spalling protection options for 2026 construction include: polypropylene fibres (0.1–0.3% by volume) for HSC; supplementary cementitious materials (silica fume, fly ash) which reduce permeability but require PP fibres to compensate; applied intumescent coatings or fire-rated board linings; sacrificial concrete layers with mesh reinforcement; and ensuring adequate curing and moisture reduction before service. The most cost-effective approach for standard NWC is ensuring adequate cover and using calcareous aggregate where available.
AS 3600 fire resistance tables specify axis distance (a), not cover. The axis distance is measured from the exposed concrete face to the centre of the reinforcing bar. Standard durability cover (c) is measured from the face to the outer surface of the reinforcing bar. The relationship is: a = c + (bar diameter / 2). For a 16 mm bar with 35 mm cover: a = 35 + 8 = 43 mm. Always check whether a fire design specification is referring to axis distance or cover — confusing the two is a common and potentially dangerous error. See our Assessing Existing Concrete Structures Guide for guidance on measuring cover in existing elements.
Each concrete element type presents a different fire exposure condition and failure mode. The design approach — section dimensions, axis distance, reinforcement detailing, and any supplementary protection — must address the specific geometry and loading condition of each element type. The following sections address the key considerations for each element class.
Concrete slabs are typically fire-exposed on their soffit (underside) only, making them one of the more straightforward elements to design for fire resistance. One-way simply supported slabs require the minimum axis distance from the bottom face to the main tensile reinforcement. Two-way slabs benefit from load redistribution capacity, which allows reduced axis distances compared to one-way systems. Flat plates and waffle slabs require special attention as their reduced soffit area and thinner sections provide less thermal mass. For floor slabs serving as fire-separating elements, both structural adequacy and insulation criteria apply, with insulation governed by minimum slab thickness rather than reinforcement cover.
Beams are typically exposed on three sides — both sides and the soffit — making them more thermally vulnerable than slabs. Corner bars in rectangular beams receive heat from two faces simultaneously and require increased axis distance, typically 10 mm more than web bars at FRL periods of 90 minutes and above. Continuous beams have an advantage over simply supported beams — negative moment redistribution at internal supports means the top reinforcement can partially compensate for bottom bar strength loss, allowing reduced bottom cover. T-beams with wide flanges acting as part of the floor slab benefit from the thermal protection the flange provides to the web and are the preferred section form for achieving high FRL ratings economically.
Columns are the most critical element type for fire resistance because their failure causes progressive structural collapse. Columns are typically exposed on all four faces and carry high axial loads with limited redistribution capacity. AS 3600 requires increased minimum cross-section dimensions for columns compared to beams and slabs, with fully exposed columns needing a minimum 200 mm dimension for 60-minute FRL and 350 mm for 180-minute FRL. The load level at the time of fire (the ratio of fire load to design load) significantly influences performance — columns at lower utilisation ratios outperform those at high utilisation. Circular columns outperform square columns of equivalent cross-section area due to their more uniform thermal gradient.
Load-bearing concrete walls are typically exposed on one face only, giving them significant advantage over columns. The minimum thickness for a load-bearing wall exposed on one face is 130 mm for 60-minute FRL and 175 mm for 180-minute FRL. Non-load-bearing fire walls and partitions need only satisfy integrity and insulation criteria — no structural adequacy criterion applies. A 150 mm solid concrete wall exposed on one face will typically achieve at least 240-minute integrity and insulation performance without any special reinforcement or mix design requirements, making concrete walls highly effective fire barriers.
The most frequent errors in specifying fire resistance of concrete elements include: confusing cover with axis distance (a is always larger than c); applying standard cover for durability without checking fire requirements — fire cover often governs over durability cover in 90+ minute FRL elements; neglecting corner bar increases in beams exposed on 3 sides; omitting PP fibres from HSC mix designs for fire-rated elements; not checking insulation thickness separately from structural adequacy for slab designs; and failing to seal service penetrations through fire-rated concrete floors and walls, which can reduce an otherwise fully compliant slab to zero effective fire integrity rating. Always have fire resistance compliance confirmed by the structural engineer of record before construction commences.
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Australian Standard AS 3600:2018 Section 5 provides all tabulated fire resistance requirements for concrete elements, including minimum axis distances, section dimensions, and special provisions for high-strength concrete and prestressed elements. The standard is referenced by the National Construction Code and is mandatory for all concrete fire design in Australia. Designers must use the 2018 edition for 2026 projects unless a specific amendment supersedes it.
Structural Assessment →Fire resistance is one of several key performance requirements for concrete floor and wall systems. Our related guides cover acoustic performance, durability in aggressive environments, and air entrainment for freeze-thaw resistance — providing a complete technical library for specifying concrete to meet all building performance requirements simultaneously in 2026 construction projects.
Acoustic Floor Guide →Concrete mix design affects both fire resistance and long-term durability. Air-entrained concrete, supplementary cementitious materials, water-cement ratio control, and aggregate selection all influence fire spalling risk, thermal conductivity, and residual strength after fire exposure. Understanding the interaction between mix design and fire performance is essential for achieving compliant, durable concrete elements in a single well-specified mix.
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