The complete guide to sealing concrete joints correctly — sealant types, joint preparation, backer rod, and step-by-step methods
Learn all concrete joint sealing methods used in 2026 — including sealant selection by joint type, joint preparation procedures, backer rod installation, sealing depths and widths, curing times, and how to avoid the most common joint sealing failures on floors, driveways, and pavements.
Professional concrete joint sealing guidance for floors, driveways, pavements, and industrial slabs in 2026
Concrete joints — whether saw-cut contraction joints, construction joints, or isolation joints — are planned gaps in the slab that must be sealed to prevent water, oils, chemicals, and debris from entering. Unsealed joints allow water to penetrate to the subbase and subgrade, causing erosion, frost heave, and differential settlement. In trafficked environments, debris packing in joints prevents movement, leading to spalling of joint faces. Correct joint sealing extends slab life by 15–30 years compared to unsealed joints.
Timing is critical. For new concrete, contraction joints must not be sealed immediately after saw cutting — the concrete must complete its initial shrinkage movement before sealant is applied. This means waiting a minimum of 28 days after pouring (longer in cold weather or with slow-setting blended cements). Sealing too early traps movement within the sealant, splitting it prematurely. For existing joints, reseal every 10–15 years as part of a planned maintenance programme.
In 2026, concrete joint sealant specification in the UK follows BS EN ISO 11600 (Classification and Requirements for Sealants) and BS 6093 (Design of Joints and Jointing in Building Construction). These standards classify sealants by movement accommodation factor (MAF) and application type. For trafficked floor joints, a semi-rigid two-part polyurethane or epoxy sealant is standard. For external movement joints, a flexible one-part or two-part polyurethane is specified.
Figure 1: Concrete joint sealing cross-sections — contraction joint (saw-cut + backer rod + sealant), construction joint (full-depth + backer rod + sealant), and isolation joint (compressible filler + surface sealant cap). 2026 standard details.
A concrete joint is only as good as its sealant. The saw-cut or formed joint gap in the slab controls where cracking occurs, but without a correctly installed sealant, the open joint becomes a direct pathway for water to reach the subbase and subgrade. Once water penetrates below the slab, it softens the subbase, promotes frost heave, and can erode fine particles from the subgrade — a process called pumping — that progressively undermines slab support and leads to settlement, cracking, and eventual structural failure.
In chemically aggressive environments — industrial floors exposed to oils, acids, food processing effluents, or de-icing salts — an unsealed joint allows direct chemical contact with the subbase and reinforcement, accelerating both structural and chemical deterioration. Correct joint sealing is therefore not a cosmetic finish but a critical structural protection measure. For context on how joint layout influences sealing requirements, see our guide on concrete floor joint layout planning.
The most important rule in joint sealing is the shape factor — the ratio of sealant width to sealant depth. The correct shape factor is width : depth = 2 : 1 (width twice the depth). This ensures the sealant deforms by stretching across its width when the joint opens and closes, rather than tearing in tension at the bond line. A backer rod controls the sealant depth and achieves the correct shape factor. Never fill the full joint depth with sealant.
Choosing the correct sealant type for each joint application is the most important decision in the joint sealing process. The wrong sealant in a trafficked joint will fail within months; the right sealant correctly installed will perform for 10–15 years or more.
The standard sealant for trafficked concrete floor joints in industrial and commercial applications. Semi-rigid (Shore A hardness 40–60) provides edge support to resist fork-lift tyre damage while still accommodating ±15–25% joint movement. Two-component systems are mixed on site and cure within 4–24 hours. Suitable for XF3/XF4 freeze-thaw environments. Products: Sikaflex PRO-3, Tremco THC-900, Fosroc Nitoseal MS600.
A rigid epoxy sealant (Shore D hardness 60–80) used exclusively in joints where no movement is expected and maximum edge protection is needed — typically construction joints in heavy-duty industrial floors used by narrow-aisle fork-lifts with solid tyres. Provides excellent chemical resistance and supports joint arrisses under repeated hard tyre loading. Must not be used in joints subject to thermal movement — will debond or crack the surrounding concrete.
A flexible moisture-curing sealant for external movement joints, perimeter isolation joints, expansion joints, and low-traffic internal joints. Shore A hardness 20–35. Accommodates ±25% movement. Single-component — applied directly from cartridge without mixing. Suitable for driveways, footpaths, and external paving joints. UV-stable grades available for exposed applications. Typical products: Sikaflex-11FC+, Tremco Dymonic, Fosroc Nitoseal P40.
A two-part chemically curing sealant with excellent resistance to fuel, oils, jet fuel, and hydraulic fluids. Used for joints in fuel-resistant flooring, fuel forecourts, airport aprons, and chemical-resistant floors. Shore A hardness 20–40. Good UV stability. More expensive than polyurethane but essential where chemical resistance to petroleum products is required. Must be used with a compatible primer on concrete substrates.
High-flexibility silicone (±50% movement accommodation) is suitable for non-trafficked perimeter joints, wall-to-floor joints, and sanitary applications in wet rooms and food production areas. Excellent UV and temperature resistance (−50°C to +150°C). Not suitable for trafficked floor joints — silicone is too soft and will be damaged by wheel loads. Cannot be overpainted. Use neutral-cure silicone on concrete as acetoxy-cure (acid-releasing) silicone can attack the concrete surface.
A thermoplastic sealant applied as a hot pour at 150–180°C, used primarily for road and highway pavement joints, airfield joints, and bridge deck expansion joints. Fast application over long joint lengths. Flexible when warm, becomes brittle at low temperatures — not suitable for areas with severe frost. Products comply with BS EN 14188. Requires hot-pour melting equipment — not suitable for small domestic or commercial projects.
The correct sealant type depends on three key variables: the amount of movement the joint must accommodate, the traffic loading the joint will experience, and the chemical environment. Use the following selection table as a guide for the most common concrete joint sealing applications in 2026.
| Joint Application | Joint Type | Recommended Sealant | Movement Class | Resealing Interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Industrial floor (fork-lift trafficked) | Contraction / Construction | Semi-rigid 2-part polyurethane | ±15–25% | 10–15 years |
| Industrial floor (heavy fork-lift, narrow aisle) | Construction joint only | Two-part rigid epoxy | Nil movement | 15–20 years |
| Residential driveway | Contraction / Isolation | One-part flexible polyurethane | ±25% | 10–15 years |
| External paving / footpath | Contraction / Isolation | One-part flexible polyurethane | ±25% | 10–15 years |
| Car park deck | All joint types | Semi-rigid 2-part polyurethane | ±25% | 10 years |
| Fuel forecourt / chemical floor | All joint types | Two-part polysulphide | ±25% | 10–12 years |
| Road / highway pavement | All joint types | Hot-applied bituminous | ±15% | 8–12 years |
| Wall-to-floor / perimeter (non-trafficked) | Isolation | Neutral-cure silicone or 1-part PU | ±25–50% | 15–20 years |
A backer rod is a compressible foam rope installed into the joint gap before the sealant is applied. It serves two critical functions: it controls the depth of the sealant (achieving the correct 2:1 width-to-depth shape factor) and it provides a backing surface against which the sealant can be tooled. Without a backer rod, sealant flows to the bottom of deep joints, creating a sealant column that is too deep and tears in tension when the joint moves rather than stretching correctly across its width.
Example: 12 mm wide joint → sealant depth = 6 mm → backer rod dia = 15–16 mm, installed at 6 mm below surface. Apply 6 mm depth of sealant above the backer rod, tooled flush or slightly concave with surface.
Two main types of backer rod are used in concrete joint sealing. Closed-cell polyethylene foam backer rod is the standard type — it is non-absorbent, provides a clean backing surface for the sealant, and resists compression cycling. It must not be punctured during installation as this degrades its performance. Open-cell polyurethane foam backer rod (bond-breaker rod) is used where out-gassing of trapped air through the rod is required — for example in very wide joints where trapped air could cause the sealant to blister as it cures. For virtually all standard concrete joint sealing applications, closed-cell polyethylene backer rod is correct.
Follow this process exactly for correctly sealed concrete joints that achieve full design performance life. Shortcuts at any stage — particularly joint preparation — are the leading cause of premature sealant failure.
Existing joint sealant that has debonded, torn, hardened, or degraded must be fully removed before new sealant is applied — partial re-sealing over failed sealant never performs adequately. The following process applies to joint re-sealing as part of a planned maintenance programme:
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BS EN ISO 11600 (Building Construction — Jointing Products — Classification and Requirements for Sealants) and BS 6093 (Design of Joints and Jointing in Building Construction) are the primary UK standards for joint sealant specification and design in 2026. All movement accommodation class (MAF) values and application classifications referenced in this guide are drawn from these standards.
BSI Standards →Concrete Society TR34 (Ground-Bearing Slabs) covers joint design and sealing requirements for industrial and commercial floor slabs. TR66 (External In-Situ Concrete Paving) covers joint sealing for external pavements, driveways, and roads. Both are essential references for joint sealant specification on concrete construction projects in the UK.
Concrete Society →Use ConcreteMetric's free tools to calculate sealant quantities, joint dimensions, and backer rod sizing for your concrete floor or pavement project. All calculators are updated for 2026 standards and are fully mobile-friendly for on-site use.
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