A complete professional guide to understanding, designing, and building concrete block retaining walls
Everything you need to know about concrete block retaining walls in 2026 — how they work, the types available, design principles, drainage requirements, step-by-step construction, failure modes, geogrid reinforcement, and expert tips for durable, safe retaining wall construction.
Professional guidance for understanding, designing, and constructing concrete block retaining walls in residential, commercial, and civil applications — 2026
A concrete block retaining wall is a structure that holds back a mass of soil, rock, or fill on one side — the retained side — while maintaining a lower ground level on the other side. The wall resists the horizontal earth pressure (active pressure) exerted by the retained soil mass, as well as any surcharge loads from buildings, vehicles, or stockpiles on top of the retained soil. Without the wall, the soil would naturally slide or slump to its angle of repose, making the construction of terraced landscapes, road cuttings, basement walls, and embankment stabilisation structures impossible.
Concrete blocks — whether standard hollow masonry blocks, solid dense blocks, or purpose-made segmental retaining wall (SRW) blocks — are one of the most widely used materials for retaining wall construction globally. They offer high compressive strength, dimensional consistency, resistance to weathering and soil chemicals, and the ability to be stacked, bonded, and in larger walls, reinforced with steel and grout to form mass gravity or reinforced masonry retaining structures. Segmental retaining wall blocks with interlocking batter geometry are particularly versatile, requiring no mortar and tolerating differential settlement better than rigid grouted structures.
Every concrete block retaining wall must be designed to resist three primary failure modes: sliding — the wall moving horizontally at its base due to earth pressure; overturning — the wall rotating forward about its toe; and bearing failure — the foundation soil or rock being overloaded by the vertical reaction from the wall. Taller walls, walls retaining sloped or surcharged fill, and walls on poor soils require formal engineering design. Drainage design is equally critical — hydrostatic water pressure behind an undrained wall can exceed the lateral earth pressure and is the leading cause of retaining wall failure.
Soil exerts lateral (horizontal) pressure against any vertical surface that restrains it from moving outward. This pressure is governed by the active earth pressure coefficient (Ka), the soil unit weight, the wall height, and any surcharge loading. For a level backfill with no surcharge, the lateral earth pressure increases linearly with depth — it is zero at the top and maximum at the base. The total horizontal force on the wall from a triangular pressure distribution equals ½ × Ka × γ × H², where γ is the soil unit weight and H is the wall height. The wall must be heavy enough (gravity wall), embedded deeply enough, or reinforced sufficiently to resist this force without sliding, overturning, or failing in bending.
Water pressure adds significantly to the loading. A fully saturated backfill develops hydrostatic pressure equal to γ_water × H in addition to the effective earth pressure — effectively doubling or tripling the total lateral pressure on the wall compared to drained conditions. This is why drainage behind all retaining walls is non-negotiable — draining the backfill to prevent hydrostatic pressure buildup is the single most important design and construction requirement for any retaining wall. For related guidance on backfill materials, see our Backfill Materials for Retaining Walls Guide.
A correctly designed and drained concrete block retaining wall distributes earth pressure through its mass (gravity wall) or through the combined action of blocks and geogrid reinforcement (reinforced SRW). The drainage aggregate zone and outlet pipes prevent hydrostatic pressure — the primary cause of retaining wall failure.
Concrete block retaining walls span a wide range of systems — from simple dry-stacked garden borders to engineer-designed reinforced masonry walls retaining significant soil heights with surcharge loads. The type selected depends on the retained height, site geometry, loading, soil conditions, and aesthetic requirements. Understanding the distinctions between wall types is essential for selecting the appropriate system and design approach for each application.
Segmental retaining wall (SRW) blocks are purpose-manufactured concrete blocks with interlocking geometry, a setback (batter) profile on their front face, and either integral or pin-connected alignment systems. They are dry-stacked — no mortar is used — with each course set back slightly from the course below, creating a battered wall face that improves gravity stability and gives the wall its characteristic stepped-face appearance. SRW systems are available from multiple manufacturers (Allan Block, Versa-Lok, Keystone, and equivalents) and are designed for walls up to 3.5–6 m height when geogrid-reinforced and engineered. Below 1.0 m, most SRW systems can be installed without formal engineering.
Standard hollow concrete masonry units (CMU) — 190 mm or 140 mm wide — can be laid in mortar with vertical steel reinforcement bars placed in the hollow cores and filled with grout to create a reinforced masonry retaining wall. This type offers higher structural capacity than dry-stacked SRW, a vertical face, and the ability to span taller heights (up to 3–5 m) with appropriate steel and grout. Reinforced masonry retaining walls require engineering design specifying bar size, spacing, grout strength, and footing dimensions. They are common in commercial, civil, and infrastructure applications where a vertical face, durability, and high load capacity are required.
Mass gravity retaining walls using large precast concrete blocks (often 500–1,000 kg each), Lego-style interlocking blocks, or gabion baskets filled with rock rely entirely on their self-weight to resist overturning and sliding. Large precast concrete block gravity walls are used in civil, mining, agricultural, and industrial applications where rapid construction without mortar or reinforcement is required and aesthetic finish is secondary. These systems can retain heights up to 4–6 m with appropriate block size and setback. Their flexibility and tolerance for differential settlement make them suitable for temporary, semi-permanent, and permanent applications.
Mechanically Stabilised Earth (MSE) walls combine concrete block facing with horizontal layers of geogrid reinforcement extending into the retained fill zone. The geogrid connects the block facing to the reinforced soil mass behind, creating a composite gravity structure that can retain heights of 3–12 m. Geogrid layers are typically placed every 0.5–0.75 m of wall height and extend 0.6–1.0 × H into the retained soil. The reinforced soil mass acts as a large gravity block that resists overturning and sliding. MSE walls with concrete block facing are a mainstream solution for highway embankments, bridge abutments, and large commercial terracing projects. They require engineering design to specify geogrid type, length, vertical spacing, and block connection capacity.
For residential garden walls up to 600–900 mm retained height, standard concrete masonry blocks, besser blocks, or purpose-made garden retaining wall blocks can be used in a simple dry-stacked or mortar-bonded configuration without engineering design (subject to local council and building code requirements). At these heights, the earth pressure forces are manageable with correct base preparation, adequate block weight, a battered face, and drainage gravel behind the wall. Even low garden walls must have drainage provision — omitting drainage from even a 600 mm garden wall leads to hydrostatic pressure building behind the wall, causing it to bulge and overturn progressively over time.
Concrete crib walls are constructed from interlocking precast concrete stretcher and header units assembled to form an open-faced box crib structure filled with granular material. The open face allows vegetation to grow through the wall, and the flexible crib construction tolerates differential settlement better than rigid grouted walls. Crib walls are gravity structures typically suited to retained heights of 1–5 m in moderate soil conditions. Their open structure provides excellent drainage and a natural appearance suitable for landscaped embankments, road cuttings, and erosion control applications. Standard crib wall units are designed to work with the wall's self-weight plus the weight of fill inside the cribs to resist overturning and sliding.
The table below provides key design reference values for concrete block retaining walls across the main wall types and height ranges. These values are used as starting points for preliminary design and height classification. All walls exceeding 1.0 m retained height should be assessed by a structural or geotechnical engineer in line with local building codes and council requirements in 2026.
| Wall Type | Max Height (Unengineered) | Max Height (Engineered) | Footing Type | Drainage Required | Geogrid Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dry-stacked SRW (residential) | 0.6–1.0 m | 3.5–6.0 m (with geogrid) | Compacted gravel pad | Always | Above 1.0 m |
| Grouted CMU (masonry) | Not recommended | Up to 4–5 m | Reinforced concrete footing | Always | No (steel reinforced) |
| Large precast block (gravity) | 1.5–2.0 m | 4–6 m | Compacted gravel pad | Always | Some systems above 3 m |
| MSE wall (geogrid reinforced) | N/A — always engineered | 6–12 m | Levelling pad on stable ground | Always | Yes — integral to design |
| Crib wall | 1.0–1.5 m | 3–5 m | Compacted gravel pad or concrete strip | Always (open-faced) | Typically not required |
| Garden block wall (low) | 0.6–0.9 m | N/A | Compacted gravel pad | Always | Not required |
Drainage is the most critical and most frequently neglected aspect of concrete block retaining wall design and construction. Hydrostatic water pressure — the pressure exerted by water accumulated behind the wall — can be two to three times greater than the earth pressure alone, and is the primary cause of retaining wall bulging, overturning, and collapse. A retaining wall designed only for earth pressure with no drainage provision is structurally under-designed for the conditions it will encounter in service.
Every concrete block retaining wall — regardless of height, type, or location — must have drainage provision. At minimum, this means: a 300 mm zone of free-draining aggregate (20 mm crushed rock or equivalent) directly behind the wall face; a 100 mm slotted agricultural drain (ag pipe) at the base of the wall, bedded in the drainage aggregate and wrapped in geotextile filter fabric; and outlet points through or around the wall ends at regular intervals to allow collected water to discharge freely. Walls without drainage progressively fill with water during wet periods, the hydrostatic pressure causes cracking and displacement, and failure typically occurs suddenly after or during sustained rainfall — often years after construction. Drainage cannot be retrofitted economically once the wall is built and backfilled — it must be installed during construction.
Complete construction sequence for segmental retaining wall (SRW) block systems — residential and light commercial applications
Before excavation, check local building code and council requirements for retaining wall height thresholds requiring development approval and engineering certification. In most Australian jurisdictions, walls exceeding 600–1,000 mm retained height require council approval. Walls exceeding 1.0 m (and in many cases walls of any height near boundaries, structures, or slopes) require a structural engineer's design. Obtain a geotechnical investigation if the wall exceeds 1.5 m or if the retained soil is clay, fill, or shows signs of instability. Proceeding without required approvals can result in mandatory demolition and significant liability exposure.
Mark the wall alignment with a string line and pegs. Excavate the base trench to the required depth — typically 150–200 mm below finished grade for the levelling pad plus the full height of the buried base course. The trench width should accommodate the full block depth plus 300–600 mm behind the blocks for the drainage aggregate zone. Slope the base of the excavation slightly toward the drainage outlet end to assist water collection. Remove all loose material, organic soil, and soft spots from the base of the excavation and replace with compacted granular material.
Place 100–150 mm of well-graded road base, crusher dust, or concrete (for taller engineered walls) as the levelling pad in the base of the trench. Compact to 95% Modified Proctor using a plate compactor. Check the level carefully across the full length of the wall — the levelling pad must be accurate to ±5 mm to ensure the base course of blocks is level and consistent. For walls with curves, set the inner radius of the curved sections first and work outward. A precisely levelled base course is the foundation of a correctly constructed wall — errors here compound with every subsequent course.
Place the first (base) course of blocks directly on the compacted levelling pad, buried a minimum of 150 mm below finished grade (or as specified by the manufacturer — typically 25–50 mm per metre of exposed wall height). Check each block for level in both directions and for alignment with the string line. Tap blocks into final position with a rubber mallet. The base course must be completely level, straight (or correctly curved), and fully bedded on the levelling pad — no rocking, no gaps, no high points. This course sets the geometry for every subsequent course and cannot be corrected after backfilling.
Before placing the second course of blocks or any drainage aggregate, install a 100 mm diameter slotted agricultural drain pipe (ag pipe) along the full length of the wall base, immediately behind the base course blocks. Bed the ag pipe in free-draining aggregate and wrap in geotextile sock filter fabric to prevent fines migration into the pipe. Plan outlet locations at both ends of the wall and at maximum 6 m intermediate intervals — outlets can pass through the wall (through purpose-made block slots or between blocks) or exit at the wall ends. Installing the drain pipe at this stage, before backfilling, is critical — it cannot be added after the wall is complete.
Place subsequent courses of blocks with the specified setback (batter) per course — typically 10–15 mm for standard SRW systems, applied by setting each block back from the face of the course below as specified by the manufacturer. Stagger vertical joints by half a block length between courses (running bond pattern) to maximise interlocking and wall stability. Check level, alignment, and batter on every course. Where geogrid reinforcement is required (typically above 1.0 m wall height), install it at the specified vertical intervals as detailed in the following step before continuing with block placement.
At the geogrid installation courses specified by the wall design (typically every 0.5–0.75 m of wall height), place a full sheet of approved geogrid on top of the block course, extending from the back face of the blocks into the retained fill zone to the minimum embedment length specified (typically 0.6–0.8 × wall height). Trim the geogrid to length and pull it taut — no wrinkles, folds, or bridging. Place the next block course over the geogrid, pinching it between the blocks to achieve the manufacturer-specified connection capacity. The geogrid must be kept taut during fill placement — use temporary stakes or pins to hold it in position until the first 150 mm lift of fill is placed and compacted over it.
Place free-draining crushed aggregate (20 mm clean crushed rock or equivalent) in the 300–600 mm zone immediately behind the wall face, in lifts of 150–200 mm, and compact with a plate compactor. Do not use vibratory rollers within 1.0 m of the wall face — the lateral compaction pressure can destabilise courses before sufficient wall height and fill resistance have been built up. Beyond the drainage aggregate zone, place approved granular fill (no clay, no organic material, no oversized particles) in 150 mm compacted lifts. Keep the fill level on both sides of the geogrid layers reasonably balanced to prevent lateral loading on unrestrained wall courses. Compact to 95% Modified Proctor.
When the final block course is reached, place cap blocks (solid or purpose-made cap units) to seal the top of the wall, using construction adhesive or mortar to fix them permanently in place. Cap blocks prevent water entry into the hollow block cores and provide a finished, clean top edge. Install geotextile filter fabric over the top of the drainage aggregate zone before placing the final topsoil or surface layer — this prevents surface fines from migrating into the drainage aggregate over time and clogging it. Confirm all drainage outlets are unobstructed and direct discharge water away from the wall base and adjacent structures.
Retaining wall failures can be sudden and dangerous. Understanding the root causes of the most common failure modes allows designers, builders, and property owners to prevent failures during construction and identify early warning signs in existing walls before they progress to structural collapse. The table below covers the primary failure mechanisms for concrete block retaining walls, their causes, signs, and prevention.
| Failure Mode | Primary Cause | Warning Signs | Prevention / Remedy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overturning | Wall too light or too narrow for retained height; no batter; surcharge underestimated | Forward lean of wall face; top courses displacing outward | Increase base width; add batter; add geogrid; engineer the wall for actual loading |
| Sliding at Base | Lateral earth pressure exceeds base friction; no footing; wet base soil | Wall moving forward uniformly at base; no rotation | Deeper burial; concrete footing with key; drainage to reduce hydrostatic pressure |
| Hydrostatic Pressure Failure | No drainage behind wall — water accumulates and builds pressure | Bulging after rain; water seeping through wall face; collapse during wet season | Install drainage aggregate + ag pipe + outlets; cannot be added after construction |
| Foundation / Bearing Failure | Foundation soil too weak to support wall weight; settlement under wall | Base of wall sinking; differential settlement along wall length | Geotechnical investigation before design; improve foundation; concrete footing on piles |
| Internal Shear Failure (MSE) | Geogrid too short; geogrid not connected to blocks; fill not compacted | Mid-wall bulge; tension cracks in backfill surface behind wall | Extend geogrid to designed length; verify connection capacity; compact fill correctly |
| Differential Settlement Cracking | Variable foundation conditions along wall length; fill poorly compacted | Stepped cracking at joints; sections of wall at different heights | Uniform foundation preparation; control joints at variable condition zones; uniform fill compaction |
| Surcharge Overload | Vehicle traffic, building loads, or soil stockpile placed on retained fill without design allowance | Sudden or rapid forward displacement; cracking at wall face | Design wall for actual surcharge; exclusion zone for vehicles; structural assessment before adding loads |
The trigger heights requiring formal engineering design vary by jurisdiction, but the following situations always require a structural or geotechnical engineer's assessment regardless of local thresholds: walls exceeding 1.0 m retained height; walls near property boundaries where surcharge from neighbouring structures applies; walls on slopes, near waterways, or on reactive or unstable soils; walls within 1.5× the wall height of any existing structure or service; walls with vehicle surcharge; tiered wall systems where the combined retained height exceeds 1.0 m; and any wall where wall failure could endanger life or cause significant property damage. The cost of engineering a retaining wall is always far less than the cost of repairing or replacing a failed wall — and immeasurably less than the liability consequences of wall collapse.
Selection and placement guide for retaining wall backfill and drainage layers
🏚️Best practices for backfill materials, compaction, and drainage around concrete foundations
🏗️Subgrade and subbase compaction standards and testing methods for concrete slabs
🔍Methods for inspecting and evaluating the condition of existing concrete elements
The selection of correct backfill materials directly determines the long-term performance of any concrete block retaining wall. Incorrect fill — including clay, organic material, or construction rubble — generates excessive lateral pressure, poor drainage, and progressive wall failure. Our backfill materials guide covers approved granular fill specifications, drainage aggregate selection, geotextile filter fabric requirements, and compaction procedures tailored specifically to retaining wall applications in 2026.
Backfill Guide →Concrete block retaining walls are often constructed in combination with concrete foundations and slabs. Proper backfill and drainage around the foundation elements adjacent to retaining walls is critical to preventing water migration between the retained zone and the foundation, and preventing differential settlement between the wall and adjacent structures. Our foundation backfilling guide covers the interaction between retaining walls and foundation elements in detail.
Foundation Guide →When a concrete block retaining wall shows signs of distress — cracking, leaning, or differential settlement — a systematic condition assessment is needed to determine whether repair, reinforcement, or replacement is required. Our concrete structure assessment guide covers inspection methods, non-destructive testing, cracking diagnosis, and remediation option assessment for retaining walls and other concrete structures showing signs of structural distress in 2026.
Assessment Guide →