How to assess, classify, and repair cracked concrete slabs — from hairline surface cracks to structural failures — in Australian residential and commercial construction
A complete 2026 guide to repairing cracked concrete slabs. Covers crack types and causes, width classification, structural vs. non-structural assessment, repair methods including epoxy injection, routing and sealing, polyurethane foam, dry-pack mortars, and concrete overlays — plus when to stop DIY and call a structural engineer.
Concrete cracks are one of the most common issues encountered in Australian construction — understanding what caused a crack, whether it is structural or cosmetic, and selecting the correct repair method is the key to a durable and effective repair in 2026
Concrete is strong in compression but weak in tension — its tensile strength is approximately one-tenth of its compressive strength. Any tensile stress in a concrete slab that exceeds this tensile capacity will cause cracking. The sources of tensile stress in Australian concrete slabs are numerous: plastic shrinkage during early curing (evaporation of surface moisture before the concrete has gained sufficient strength); drying shrinkage as the hardened concrete loses moisture over weeks and months (concrete shrinks approximately 0.04–0.08% of its length); thermal contraction in cold conditions; structural overload from loads exceeding the slab's design capacity; differential settlement of the supporting subgrade; and reactive soil movement (soil shrink-swell on highly reactive clays common across large areas of eastern Australia). Understanding which mechanism caused a crack determines the correct repair strategy.
The most critical distinction in assessing any cracked concrete slab is whether the crack is structural (indicating loss of load-carrying capacity and a safety concern) or non-structural (a cosmetic or durability concern that does not affect structural performance). Non-structural cracks include shrinkage cracks, plastic settlement cracks, and thermal cracks that are stable (not growing), narrow (typically ≤ 0.3 mm), and have no differential vertical movement (no step between the two sides of the crack). Structural cracks are typically wide (≥ 0.3–0.5 mm), show differential vertical displacement (one side of the crack has moved up or down relative to the other), are active (growing or changing width over time), or are located in areas of high bending stress (mid-span of suspended slabs, support zones). Any crack with differential vertical movement, width greater than 0.5 mm, or progressive growth must be assessed by a structural engineer before repair is attempted.
The most important principle in concrete crack repair is: identify and eliminate the cause of cracking before applying any repair material. Filling a crack without addressing the cause — ongoing soil movement, excessive loading, inadequate drainage, or active structural distress — will result in the repair material failing, the crack re-opening adjacent to the repair, or new cracks forming nearby. In Australian residential construction, cracks caused by reactive soil movement (particularly in Victoria, Queensland, and NSW inland areas with highly reactive clays) require soil moisture stabilisation, improved drainage, and sometimes foundation rectification before surface crack repairs will be durable. The crack repair itself is the final step — investigation and root-cause elimination come first.
The principal repair methods for cracked concrete slabs in Australian residential and commercial construction
Low-viscosity, two-part epoxy resin injected under low pressure into the crack through surface-mounted injection ports. The epoxy fills the full depth of the crack and cures to a strength exceeding the parent concrete. Best for dry, stable, non-moving structural cracks where load transfer restoration is required. Not suitable for active (growing) cracks or cracks contaminated with moisture, oil, or dust.
The crack is chased (routed) with an angle grinder or crack chaser to a uniform V-shape or rectangular profile (typically 6–10 mm wide, 6–10 mm deep), cleaned, and filled with a flexible polyurethane or polysulfide sealant. Best for active or moving cracks — the flexible sealant accommodates ongoing movement without re-cracking. The standard repair for control joints that have cracked, and for cracks subject to thermal or moisture movement.
Expanding polyurethane foam injected into cracks and voids beneath slabs to fill voids, stabilise loose subgrade, and lift settled slab sections (slab jacking or slab lifting). Widely used in Australia for lifting settled concrete driveway slabs, footpath panels, warehouse floors, and pool surrounds. Fast, minimally invasive, and effective — the foam expands to fill voids and gently lifts the slab back toward level before curing rigid.
Damaged, spalled, or wide-crack concrete is cut back to sound material, primed with bonding agent, and filled with a polymer-modified cementitious repair mortar (dry-pack or flowable) trowelled or rodded into the repair area. Suitable for wide surface cracks, spalled edges, impact damage, and surface defects. Does not restore structural load transfer across a crack — the slab must be structurally assessed separately.
U-shaped steel staples (stitching anchors) or reinforcing bars are installed perpendicular to the crack in dog-leg slots cut across the crack face, then grouted with epoxy or cementitious grout. The stitches transfer tensile and shear force across the crack, restoring structural continuity. Used for wide structural cracks in slabs, walls, and beams where load transfer restoration is critical. Requires specialist assessment and installation.
A bonded concrete or polymer-modified overlay (typically 25–50 mm) is applied over the cracked slab surface after full crack repair and surface preparation. The overlay conceals repaired cracks, provides a new wearing surface, and can improve structural capacity if designed as a composite topping. Used for extensively cracked slabs where individual crack repair is impractical — industrial floors, warehouse slabs, and driveway resurfacing in Australia.
Width alone does not determine structural significance — differential vertical displacement, crack activity (growth), location, and slab loading history must also be assessed. When in doubt, engage a structural engineer.
This flow is a guide only — all concrete crack assessments in occupied or load-bearing structures should be confirmed by a qualified structural engineer
Identifying the type of crack — based on its pattern, location, timing of appearance, and geometry — is the first and most important step in selecting the correct repair method. Different crack types have different causes, different structural implications, and require different repair approaches. The following are the most common crack types encountered in Australian concrete slabs in residential and commercial construction in 2026. For detailed assessment methodology including half-cell potential testing, carbonation depth testing, and crack mapping for existing structures, refer to the assessing existing concrete structures guide on ConcreteMetric.
Appear within the first few hours of concrete placement, before the concrete has hardened, when surface evaporation exceeds the rate of bleed water reaching the surface. Typically parallel cracks at approximately 0.3–1.0 m spacing, or diagonal cracks over rebar — common in hot, windy Australian conditions during summer pours without adequate evaporation retarder or shade protection. Usually shallow (20–50 mm depth) and non-structural. Prevention is far preferable to repair — use evaporation retarder spray and shade the fresh concrete in conditions above 25°C with low humidity or wind above 15 km/h.
The most common crack type in Australian residential slabs. Concrete shrinks as it dries over weeks to months after placement — a 6 m long slab bay can shorten by 2–5 mm, generating tensile stress if restrained. Shrinkage cracks typically appear at slab re-entrant corners (inside corners of L-shaped slabs), at changes in cross-section, and at locations of stress concentration. They are usually stable once they open (concrete has reached equilibrium moisture content) and are non-structural in domestic slabs. Control joints — pre-formed grooves that concentrate shrinkage cracking at predictable locations — are the standard prevention measure in Australian practice.
Caused by bending stresses exceeding the slab's design capacity — typically due to overloading (heavy vehicles on a domestic driveway slab, forklift on a warehouse floor designed for pedestrian use), inadequate reinforcement, or loss of subgrade support (void beneath the slab from soil erosion, tree root decay, or settlement). Flexural cracks in suspended slabs typically appear at mid-span on the tension face (soffit) and at supports on the top face. In ground-bearing slabs, transverse cracks across the full slab width indicate loss of subgrade support. Always requires structural engineering assessment — do not repair structural cracks without understanding the cause.
Caused by uneven settlement of the supporting subgrade or foundation — the slab follows the soil movement and cracks where the differential displacement creates tensile stress. In Australian residential construction, the most common cause is reactive soil movement on highly reactive clay sites (AS 2870 Site Classifications P, E, H1, H2) where uneven seasonal moisture changes cause differential soil shrink-swell beneath the slab. Settlement cracks typically show differential vertical displacement (a step across the crack), progressive growth with seasonal soil moisture changes, and may be accompanied by cracking in the walls and doors of the structure above. Requires geotechnical assessment and potentially underpinning or drainage works before crack repair.
Rust (iron oxide) occupies approximately three times the volume of the steel it replaces — corroding reinforcement expands within the concrete, generating tensile splitting stress that creates longitudinal cracks along the rebar line and eventually causes the concrete cover to spall off. In Australia, reinforcement corrosion is most common in coastal structures exposed to marine chlorides, slabs with inadequate concrete cover (below 20 mm), and slabs in carbonated concrete (concrete that has lost its alkaline protective chemistry through CO₂ reaction). Visible as rust staining, longitudinal cracking parallel to the reinforcement, and delaminating concrete patches. Requires removal of contaminated concrete, corrosion treatment of steel, and full patch repair — cosmetic crack filling alone will not stop corrosion progression.
Caused by temperature gradient stresses — either between the hot interior of a mass concrete pour and its cooler surface during hydration, or from ambient temperature cycling. In Australian mass concrete pours (large pile caps, ground beams, thick slabs), the temperature differential between the core and the surface during hydration can exceed 20°C, generating thermal tensile stress at the surface that causes surface cracking. In existing thin slabs, large diurnal and seasonal temperature swings (particularly in arid and semi-arid Australian climates) generate repeat thermal cycling stresses that eventually cause fatigue cracking at stress concentrations. Exterior slabs without adequate expansion joints or with thermal expansion restrained by fixed abutments are particularly susceptible.
Epoxy injection is the most technically demanding but structurally effective method for repairing stable, dry, structural cracks in concrete slabs. When correctly executed, epoxy injection restores full structural continuity across the crack — the cured epoxy typically has a tensile strength greater than the parent concrete, meaning re-cracking will occur in the adjacent concrete rather than through the repair. Epoxy injection is used by structural engineers and specialist concrete repair contractors in Australia for bridge deck cracks, suspended slab cracks, column cracks, and any situation where structural load transfer across the crack must be restored. It is not appropriate for active cracks (still growing or moving), wet or moisture-contaminated cracks (water prevents epoxy bonding), or cracks with internal contamination. For crack widths below 0.1 mm, the epoxy cannot penetrate and alternative methods are required.
Professional epoxy crack injection sequence for stable, dry concrete slab cracks
Confirm the crack is stable (not growing — monitor with crack gauge for 2–4 weeks before repair), dry (no active moisture seepage — use a moisture meter on both faces), structurally significant (requiring load transfer restoration), and accessible on at least one face. Measure crack width with a crack comparator gauge. Mark the crack path on the surface. Confirm the repair specification with the structural engineer and select the appropriate epoxy viscosity for the crack width — ultra-low viscosity (grade 1–2) for cracks 0.05–0.3 mm; low viscosity (grade 3) for 0.3–1.0 mm; medium viscosity (grade 4) for cracks above 1.0 mm.
Clean the crack and a 50 mm band either side of the crack surface using an oil-free compressed air lance to remove all loose concrete, dust, debris, and contamination from the crack interior. For contaminated cracks (oil, concrete curing compound, efflorescence), flush with acetone or a proprietary crack cleaner and allow to dry fully before proceeding. Do not use water to clean the crack — residual moisture will prevent epoxy adhesion. For hairline cracks, a vacuum extraction followed by hot air drying may be required to open and dry the crack adequately for epoxy penetration.
Install surface-mounted injection ports (plastic nipples bonded to the concrete surface over the crack line) at 150–300 mm spacings along the crack — closer spacing for thinner slabs and narrower cracks; wider spacing for thick slabs and wide cracks. Ports are either bonded over the crack with fast-setting epoxy paste, or inserted into drilled holes intersecting the crack at a 45° angle (preferred for horizontal slabs — the angled port allows injection directly into the crack plane). Install ports from the lowest point upward on slabs with any vertical component, so epoxy fills from bottom to top under gravity assistance.
Apply a surface seal (epoxy paste or crack paste) along the crack between the ports to seal the crack face and prevent injected epoxy leaking back out during injection. Leave the port nipple openings clear. Allow the surface seal to cure fully (typically 2–4 hours at 20°C) before injection commences — injecting before the surface seal has cured will cause it to blow out under injection pressure and waste epoxy. On the underside of suspended slabs (soffit injection), the surface seal must be applied carefully and given adequate cure time as gravity works against the fresh paste.
Mix the two-part epoxy resin and hardener at the specified ratio (typically 2:1 or 1:1 by volume) in a cartridge gun or low-pressure injection pump. Inject into the lowest port first at low pressure (typically 0.1–0.5 MPa maximum — do not exceed this; high pressure will widen the crack). Inject slowly until epoxy is observed flowing from the adjacent port, then cap the injected port and move to the next. Continue progressively from lowest to highest port until the full crack length is filled — confirmed by epoxy flowing from the final port at the top. Maintain pressure on the final port until the epoxy begins to gel. Injection rate and pressure vary with crack width, epoxy viscosity, and ambient temperature.
Allow the injected epoxy to cure fully — typically 24–48 hours at 20°C; longer in cool conditions. After cure, remove the injection ports by striking them sideways with a hammer (they will snap off at the bonded base). Grind the port bases and surface seal flush with the concrete surface using an angle grinder. Verify injection completeness by drilling small test cores across the crack at selected locations — a properly injected crack will show epoxy-filled cross-sections through the core. If voids are found, re-inject via the test core holes. Apply a surface coating or paint finish over the repair area as required to match the surrounding concrete appearance.
Selecting the correct repair method requires matching the crack characteristics — width, activity (stable or growing), moisture condition, structural significance, and location — to the capabilities and limitations of each repair technique. The table below provides a quick reference guide for the most common crack scenarios encountered in Australian concrete slabs in 2026. Always confirm the repair specification with the structural engineer for cracks wider than 0.3 mm or showing any differential vertical displacement.
| Crack Scenario | Width | Activity | Moisture | Recommended Method | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hairline shrinkage crack | < 0.1 mm | Stable | Dry | Penetrating sealer or monitor only | Cosmetic only; no structural repair needed |
| Fine stable non-structural crack | 0.1–0.3 mm | Stable | Dry | Epoxy injection or routing & sealing | Epoxy if load transfer needed; sealant if movement possible |
| Active / moving crack | Any | Active | Either | Routing & sealing with flexible sealant | Never use rigid epoxy in active cracks — it will re-crack |
| Wet / leaking crack | 0.3–5 mm | Either | Wet | Polyurethane foam injection or hydraulic cement | Hydrophilic PU foam expands on contact with water |
| Wide structural crack (dry, stable) | 0.5–3 mm | Stable | Dry | Epoxy injection + stitching if shear transfer needed | Engineer assessment mandatory before repair |
| Spalled / damaged surface | N/A (area damage) | Stable | Dry | Cut back to sound concrete; patch with repair mortar | Minimum 20 mm repair depth; bonding agent required |
| Settled slab with void beneath | Any | Stable | Either | Polyurethane foam slab lifting (slab jacking) | Fills void and lifts slab; then repair residual surface cracks |
| Extensively cracked slab | Multiple cracks | Mixed | Dry | Concrete overlay / bonded topping | All cracks repaired before overlay; structural check first |
Many concrete slab cracks in Australian residential construction are cosmetic or minor durability issues that can be safely repaired by a competent DIY practitioner or general builder following the guidance in this article. However, certain crack characteristics are indicators of structural distress that require professional engineering assessment before any repair work is attempted. Attempting to repair a structurally significant crack without understanding its cause — and without engineering guidance on the appropriate repair method — is dangerous, ineffective, and potentially exposes the property owner to liability if the structure subsequently fails.
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The CIA publishes technical notes, recommended practices, and data sheets on concrete crack assessment and repair in Australian conditions — including Z7 (Guide to Concrete Repair and Protection) and Z17 (Assessment and Maintenance of Concrete Structures), the primary Australian references for concrete repair practice.
Visit CIA →Sika is one of Australia's leading concrete repair product manufacturers. Their technical library includes product data sheets, application guides, and system specifications for epoxy injection, crack sealants, repair mortars, and protective coatings used in Australian concrete repair in 2026.
Visit Sika →AS 3600:2018 (Concrete Structures) is the primary Australian Standard for the design, construction, and maintenance of concrete structures — including durability requirements, crack width limits, and assessment criteria that underpin all concrete crack repair practice in Australia in 2026.
Visit Standards Australia →