Selecting, specifying, and installing vapour control layers under concrete slabs in Australia
A comprehensive guide to concrete slab vapour control layers in Australia 2026 — covering membrane types, thickness requirements, AS 2870 and NCC compliance, installation methods, lap and seal details, protection layers, and how to prevent the most common vapour barrier failures seen under Australian residential and commercial slabs.
Why vapour control layers under concrete slabs are critical for durability, flooring performance, and occupant health in Australian buildings
A vapour control layer (VCL) — also called a vapour barrier or sub-slab membrane — is a sheet material installed beneath a concrete slab to restrict the upward movement of ground moisture vapour into the slab and finished floor above. In Australian construction, the VCL is typically a polyethylene sheet placed on the compacted subgrade or sand blinding layer before reinforcement and concrete are placed. Without a correctly installed VCL, moisture vapour rising through the slab can cause flooring adhesive failures, timber floor swelling, mould growth, and concrete carbonation in 2026.
Vapour control layers under concrete slabs in Australia are governed by AS 2870-2011 – Residential Slabs and Footings, which specifies minimum membrane thickness and installation requirements for residential ground-bearing slabs. The National Construction Code (NCC) 2022 Volume One (commercial) and Volume Two (residential) also reference sub-slab vapour control requirements, particularly in relation to flooring system durability and moisture management under Section F (Health and Amenity). Additional guidance is provided by AS 1884-2012 – Floor Coverings for moisture-sensitive finishes.
A vapour control layer is required under all ground-bearing concrete slabs in Australia where moisture-sensitive floor finishes are to be installed — including timber flooring, carpet, vinyl, ceramic tiles with adhesive, and epoxy coatings. VCLs are also required where the water table is shallow, where the subgrade is reactive clay or poorly drained fill, and in tropical and subtropical Australian climate zones where high groundwater humidity is persistent year-round. In commercial construction, VCL specification is almost always required regardless of floor finish type to protect the slab concrete itself.
Indicative build-up only — actual specification per engineer's drawings, AS 2870 site classification, and NCC requirements
Several vapour control layer products are available for use under concrete slabs in Australia in 2026. Selection depends on the required vapour resistance, site conditions, flooring finish sensitivity, and project budget. The main types used in Australian residential and commercial construction are described below.
Standard 0.2 mm (200 micron) black or clear polyethylene sheet is the most widely used vapour control layer under residential concrete slabs in Australia. It is specified in AS 2870 as the minimum acceptable VCL thickness for residential slab-on-ground construction. The sheet is placed on the compacted sand blinding layer before reinforcement is laid. At 0.2 mm, this membrane provides adequate vapour resistance for most residential applications with standard flooring systems including carpet, ceramic tiles, and vinyl. It is low cost, readily available throughout Australia, and easy to handle on site.
Heavy-duty polyethylene membranes ranging from 0.3 mm to 1.0 mm thickness are specified where a higher level of vapour resistance is required — typically under commercial and industrial slabs, beneath moisture-sensitive hardwood timber flooring, and on sites with shallow water tables or high groundwater humidity. Thicker membranes are more resistant to puncture during reinforcement placement and concrete pouring, which is their primary practical advantage on busy commercial sites. Heavy-duty PE membranes in the 0.5–1.0 mm range are commonly specified under epoxy-coated warehouse floors where even minor moisture transmission can cause coating delamination.
Reinforced vapour barrier membranes combine a polyethylene film with a woven or non-woven reinforcing scrim or aluminium foil laminate to provide enhanced puncture resistance, tear strength, and extremely low vapour transmission rates. Products in this category — including reinforced foil-faced membranes — are used beneath high-specification floor finishes such as solid hardwood timber, floating engineered timber, and moisture-sensitive adhesive vinyl where the measured moisture vapour emission rate (MVER) of the slab must remain below strict limits. Reinforced membranes are also appropriate under cold store and refrigerated warehouse slabs where extreme moisture gradients exist.
Liquid-applied vapour membranes are polymer-based coatings applied directly to the top surface of the hardened concrete slab — rather than installed beneath it — as a remedial measure when existing slabs are found to have excessive moisture vapour emission after construction. These systems include epoxy moisture barriers and polyurethane moisture-tolerant primers and are used when floor finishes are being installed on slabs that lack an adequate sub-slab VCL or where the slab is still emitting moisture above acceptable limits. Liquid-applied systems are a secondary solution; a correctly installed sub-slab VCL remains the preferred approach for new construction in Australia in 2026.
Common vapour control layer products used on Australian building sites in 2026 include Raven Enviroseal, Nuraply, Kingspan Thermafloor (combined insulation/VCL), and standard 200 µm black poly from major hardware suppliers. Always verify the product's published vapour permeance value (measured in ng/Pa·s·m²) against the flooring manufacturer's maximum allowable moisture vapour emission rate before specifying.
In Australian climate zones 4–8 (cool temperate, alpine, and heating-dominated climates including Victoria, Tasmania, ACT, and alpine NSW), combined sub-slab insulation and vapour control products are increasingly specified to simultaneously meet NCC 2022 Section J thermal performance requirements and sub-slab moisture control requirements. Products such as expanded polystyrene (EPS) boards with an integral PE or foil facing provide both thermal resistance (R-value) and vapour resistance in a single layer, reducing installation complexity and programme time on site.
Selecting the correct concrete slab vapour control layer for an Australian project in 2026 requires consideration of several interdependent factors. Choosing an undersized or incorrect VCL is a costly mistake — remediation after slab placement is expensive and disruptive.
The key performance criterion for sub-slab VCL selection is its ability to reduce the moisture vapour emission rate of the finished slab below the flooring system manufacturer's limit — typically 5–7 g/m²/day for most resilient flooring and 2–3 g/m²/day for moisture-sensitive timber floor adhesives. Higher groundwater tables and wetter subgrades require higher-performance membranes.
Australia's climate zones significantly affect sub-slab moisture conditions. Tropical north Queensland, Darwin, and Broome experience extremely high year-round groundwater humidity requiring heavy-duty membranes. Southern and alpine regions require combined thermal and vapour control. Coastal sites within tidal influence require membranes rated for continuous high moisture exposure without degradation.
The intended floor finish determines the required VCL performance level. Ceramic tiles with cement-based adhesive tolerate higher moisture levels than timber or vinyl. Solid hardwood timber floors and moisture-sensitive adhesive-applied finishes require the highest-performance VCL system. Always cross-reference the floor covering manufacturer's maximum acceptable MVER with the VCL's published vapour permeance rating before specifying.
On sites where the sand blinding layer is thin, subgrade is rough, or reinforcement placement involves heavy foot traffic over the membrane, puncture resistance is a critical selection criterion. Standard 0.2 mm PE sheet is easily punctured by bar chairs, rebar ends, and aggregate points. Heavy-duty and reinforced membranes provide significantly greater puncture resistance and should be specified wherever membrane integrity during construction is at risk.
Under NCC 2022 Volume Two Section J energy efficiency requirements, slab-on-ground construction in climate zones 4–8 requires sub-slab thermal insulation. This requirement can be satisfied simultaneously with the VCL requirement by specifying a combined EPS insulation board with integral vapour control facing — avoiding a separate membrane installation step and reducing overall programme time.
In Australian residential construction, the sub-slab membrane must be correctly integrated with the perimeter termite management barrier required under AS 3660.1. Physical termite barriers such as Kordon are typically installed beneath and lapping over the slab edge, and their installation must be coordinated with the VCL placement sequence to avoid gaps or discontinuities at the membrane-to-barrier interface that could compromise either system.
| VCL Type | Thickness | Vapour Resistance | Typical Use | Relative Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard PE Sheet | 0.2 mm (200 µm) | Moderate | Standard residential slabs | Low |
| Heavy-Duty PE Sheet | 0.3–1.0 mm | Good–High | Commercial, timber floors | Low–Medium |
| Reinforced Foil Membrane | Varies | Very High | Hardwood timber, epoxy floors | Medium–High |
| Liquid-Applied Membrane | Wet film applied | High (remedial) | Remedial on existing slabs | High |
| EPS + Integral VCL | 50–100 mm EPS | Moderate–High | Climate zones 4–8, NCC J compliance | Medium |
| Bituminous Membrane | 3–4 mm SBS | Very High | Below-ground, wet areas | High |
Correct installation of the vapour control layer is as important as product selection. A correctly specified membrane that is poorly installed — with inadequate laps, unsealed joins, and punctures — provides little more protection than no membrane at all. The installation sequence below applies to a standard residential slab-on-ground with 0.2 mm PE vapour barrier in Australia.
Before placing the vapour control layer, the subgrade or engineered fill must be compacted to the specified density and levelled to provide a smooth, uniform surface. Sharp stones, concrete rubble, glass, or reinforcement offcuts projecting from the surface must be removed or pushed down — they will puncture a 0.2 mm PE sheet almost immediately. On particularly rough subgrades or sites with angular fill, a sand blinding layer of minimum 50 mm compacted sand should be placed and screeded level before the VCL is installed. The sand blinding also provides a clean working surface for reinforcement placement. For guidance on fill material suitability around concrete structures, refer to our detailed guide on backfilling around concrete foundations.
The VCL sheet should be unrolled across the slab area starting from one side and working across systematically. Adjacent sheets must be lapped a minimum of 200 mm per AS 2870 requirements — and 300 mm is recommended on sites with high groundwater to provide additional overlap security. All lap joins must be sealed with a compatible self-adhesive tape — standard duct tape is not suitable as it loses adhesion when wet. Use purpose-made membrane joining tapes such as Sisalation tape, butyl rubber tape, or the product manufacturer's specified tape. All laps must be pressed down firmly and inspected before reinforcement is placed over the membrane.
The VCL must be turned up at all slab edges by a minimum of 50 mm against the inside face of the edge formwork — this prevents moisture vapour from bypassing the membrane at the perimeter. At all service penetrations — plumbing pipes, conduits, column starter bars — the membrane must be cut to fit tightly around the penetration and taped to form a continuous seal. Penetration sleeves and purpose-made boot flashings are available from membrane suppliers and significantly simplify sealing at pipe penetrations, which are otherwise a common failure point in the VCL installation.
Before concrete placement commences, a dedicated membrane inspection must be carried out to identify and repair all punctures, tears, and unsealed laps. Even a single unsealed puncture or lap in the VCL can allow sufficient moisture vapour migration to cause flooring adhesive failure over an area significantly larger than the puncture itself — moisture vapour disperses laterally within the slab. Inspect the full membrane area after reinforcement is placed — this is when most punctures occur — and repair every defect with tape before the concrete truck arrives on site.
Vapour control layer failures are one of the most common and costly defect categories in Australian construction. The following defects are regularly identified during building inspections, flooring failure investigations, and construction quality audits in 2026.
The most common VCL defect — punctures caused by bar chairs, rebar ends, aggregate points, or foot traffic during reinforcement placement. Punctures in 0.2 mm PE sheet may be as small as 2–3 mm in diameter but allow continuous moisture vapour migration through the slab. Prevention requires a 50 mm sand blinding layer below the membrane and a thorough post-reinforcement inspection with tape repair of all punctures before concrete is placed.
Laps between adjacent membrane sheets that are too narrow (less than 200 mm) or not taped allow moisture to bypass the membrane at every join. On a typical residential slab, there may be four to eight membrane joins — any one of which, if unsealed, can allow sufficient moisture ingress to cause floor covering failures. Laps must always be taped with compatible self-adhesive membrane tape — never relying on the overlap weight alone to maintain the seal.
On Australian construction sites, VCL membranes are occasionally omitted — either through oversight, cost-cutting, or misunderstanding of the specification. When moisture-sensitive floor finishes are subsequently installed on a bare slab without a VCL, adhesive failures, timber floor cupping, and vinyl bubbling are inevitable, often appearing within the first six to twelve months after completion. Omission of the VCL constitutes a non-compliance with AS 2870 and NCC requirements in most circumstances.
Specifying a standard 0.2 mm PE sheet on a project where higher vapour resistance is required — such as beneath solid hardwood timber flooring, high-build epoxy coatings, or on sites with shallow water tables — will result in moisture emission levels that exceed the flooring system's tolerance. Always verify the specified VCL's vapour permeance rating against the flooring manufacturer's maximum allowable MVER before specification is finalised.
Failing to turn the VCL membrane up against the slab edge formwork allows ground moisture to migrate laterally into the slab edge and underneath the floor covering around the perimeter of the building. This is a particularly common defect in Australian construction and produces a characteristic pattern of flooring damage and mould growth along internal wall perimeters — often mistaken for a roof or wall leak during subsequent building inspections.
VCL membranes can be displaced, bunched, or folded during concrete placement and vibration — particularly on large slabs poured with a boom pump where concrete falls from height onto the reinforcement and membrane. Displaced membrane creates areas of no vapour protection that are invisible once the slab is placed. Prevention involves taping the membrane to the edge formwork to prevent movement and minimising concrete drop height above the membrane during placement.
Before installing moisture-sensitive floor finishes over a concrete slab, the moisture vapour emission rate (MVER) of the slab must be measured and confirmed to be within the flooring manufacturer's specification. In Australia, moisture testing of slabs is governed by guidance in AS 1884-2012 and the Resilient Floor Covering Institute (RFCI) test methods. The two primary field test methods used on Australian sites in 2026 are:
The vapour control layer must be correctly integrated with the concrete slab edge detailing — particularly at the perimeter turn-up and the interface with the termite management barrier. For full guidance on slab edge construction in Australia including formwork, reinforcement, and moisture management at the perimeter, read our guide on assessing existing concrete structures and our dedicated article on slab edge detailing for complete perimeter construction practice.
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🪨Material selection and placement practices for backfill adjacent to concrete foundation elements
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Vapour control layers are one component of the complete residential slab system governed by AS 2870-2011. Understanding how membrane requirements interact with site classification, edge beam design, sand blinding, and reinforcement placement helps practitioners build fully compliant slabs first time in every Australian climate zone in 2026.
Read Guide →Sub-slab moisture management does not end at the vapour control layer — correct backfilling, surface drainage, and subgrade preparation around the entire foundation perimeter are equally critical to keeping groundwater away from the slab and maintaining the integrity of the vapour barrier over the building's lifetime.
Read Guide →NCC 2022 introduced updated requirements for sub-slab thermal insulation in Australian climate zones 4–8 that intersect directly with vapour control layer specification. Understanding how to satisfy both thermal and moisture control requirements with a single combined product simplifies design and reduces construction cost and programme time on Australian residential and light commercial projects.
Read Guide →