Systematic inspection, condition assessment, and treatment selection for concrete roads and pavements
Plan and prioritise concrete pavement maintenance effectively in 2026. Covers Pavement Condition Index (PCI) rating, distress identification, maintenance strategies, scheduling, treatment selection, and lifecycle cost planning for concrete road surfaces.
A structured approach to preserving concrete road surfaces, reducing lifecycle costs, and extending pavement service life in 2026
Concrete pavement maintenance planning is the systematic process of inspecting, assessing, prioritising, and scheduling repair works on concrete road and pavement surfaces. It uses condition data — primarily the Pavement Condition Index (PCI) — to identify deterioration, select the most cost-effective treatment, and allocate budget before minor defects escalate into costly structural failures. A well-executed plan can extend pavement service life by 15–25 years.
Reactive maintenance — repairing defects only after they fail — costs 4 to 6 times more than preventive treatment applied at the right time. Planning enables highway authorities, contractors, and asset managers to deploy maintenance resources strategically, comply with Highways Act 1980 duties, reduce road user risk, and maximise the return on infrastructure investment across the full pavement lifecycle.
This guide covers the complete concrete pavement maintenance planning process for 2026: condition inspection and PCI scoring, distress type identification, maintenance strategy selection (preventive, corrective, and reconstruction), treatment options for each distress type, maintenance scheduling and prioritisation, indicative costs, and a step-by-step planning framework applicable to highways, car parks, airfields, industrial yards, and hardstandings.
Enter your pavement condition data to calculate maintenance priority score and recommended action
The Pavement Condition Index (PCI) is the internationally recognised numerical rating system used in concrete pavement maintenance planning to quantify the structural integrity and surface condition of a pavement. Developed under ASTM D6433 for roads and car parks, the PCI runs from 0 (completely failed) to 100 (excellent new condition). Field inspectors walk each pavement section, identify and measure all distress types by severity (low, medium, high), and apply standardised deduct value curves to calculate the final PCI score.
In the UK, HD 29/08 (Design Manual for Roads and Bridges) and local authority highway inspection frameworks provide analogous guidance for condition rating of concrete carriageways. Regardless of the system used, the principle is the same: assign a numeric condition score, compare against trigger thresholds, and select the appropriate maintenance treatment before the pavement condition deteriorates beyond the cost-effective repair window. For assessing existing concrete structures, PCI provides a standardised baseline for multi-year maintenance programmes.
ASTM D6433 PCI rating scale. Optimal maintenance intervention occurs between PCI 55–70 (Fair) — the most cost-effective treatment window. Once PCI drops below 40, rehabilitation costs increase sharply.
Accurate identification of distress type is the foundation of effective concrete pavement maintenance planning. Each distress has a distinct cause, mechanism of progression, and appropriate treatment. The table below covers the 12 primary distress types identified under ASTM D6433 and referenced in UK highway maintenance practice. For a broader view of structural assessment methods, see the guide to assessing existing concrete structures.
| Distress Type | Primary Cause | Severity Indicators | Typical PCI Impact | Recommended Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corner Break | Load + loss of corner support | Crack ≤0.5m from corner joint | High (−15 to −25) | Corner repair / slab replacement |
| Longitudinal Cracking | Shrinkage, thermal cycling, subgrade settlement | Crack width, length, faulting | Medium–High (−10 to −20) | Crack sealing, full-depth repair |
| Transverse Cracking | Thermal contraction, saw-cut joints too deep | Crack width and spalling presence | Medium–High (−8 to −18) | Crack sealing, slab replacement if structural |
| Joint Sealant Failure | Age, UV degradation, incompatible sealant | Sealant missing, cracked, or extruded | Low–Medium (−3 to −10) | Joint resealing — highest ROI preventive action |
| Spalling (Joint) | Incompressibles in joint, freeze-thaw | Concrete fragments within 0.6m of joint | Medium (−8 to −15) | Partial-depth repair, joint reconstruction |
| Scaling / Map Cracking | Freeze-thaw, deicers, poor curing | Surface paste loss, aggregate exposure | Low–Medium (−5 to −12) | Surface sealing, overlay, resurfacing |
| Faulting | Pumping, erosion of base, load transfer failure | Step height at transverse joint ≥3mm | High (−10 to −22) | Slab grinding, undersealing, dowel bar retrofit |
| Blowup / Buckling | Thermal expansion, incompressibles in joint | Upward slab displacement | Very High (−20 to −40) | Emergency slab replacement |
| Pumping | Water + fine-grained subbase erosion | Muddy water ejected at joints under load | High (−12 to −25) | Pressure grouting / slab stabilisation |
| Delamination | Bonding failure between concrete layers | Hollow sound on chain drag test | Medium (−8 to −15) | Remove and replace delaminated area |
| Polished Aggregate | Traffic wear, soft aggregate | Low skid resistance (SFC <0.45) | Low (−3 to −8) | Surface texturing, high-friction surfacing |
| Settlement / Void | Subgrade consolidation, utility trench settlement | Rocking slab, hollow under slab | Very High (−15 to −35) | Slab lifting, pressure grouting, replacement |
Standard concrete pavement cross-section per HD 26/06 (DMRB) and BS EN 13877. Slab thickness and base specification vary by design traffic (nESAL). Use Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) to assess layer conditions non-destructively.
Selecting the right maintenance strategy depends on PCI score, traffic loading, budget, and remaining service life. The three broad strategies below form the framework of any concrete pavement maintenance plan. The key principle is to intervene at the right time — too early wastes budget; too late means structural repair costs multiply. See also backfilling around concrete foundations for guidance on adjacent earthwork maintenance that directly affects pavement performance.
Applied to pavements in Good to Satisfactory condition to slow deterioration and extend service life. Treatments include joint resealing, crack filling, surface sealing, and minor surface texturing. Cost is low (typically £1–£8/m²) but return on investment is exceptional — every £1 spent preventively avoids £4–£6 in future rehabilitation. Scheduled on a routine cycle, typically every 5–8 years for joint resealing.
Targets specific defects that have developed despite preventive measures. Includes partial-depth repairs, full-depth slab repairs, spall repairs, grinding for faulting, and undersealing for voids. Costs range from £15–£80/m² depending on treatment depth. This is the most common maintenance band for managed road networks. Treatments should be scoped by a full condition survey and prioritised by PCI and traffic volume.
Required when the pavement has deteriorated beyond cost-effective repair. Options include concrete overlay (bonded or unbonded), full-depth reclamation, slab replacement, or complete reconstruction. Costs range from £50–£200+/m². Reconstruction should always be preceded by a forensic investigation of distress causes — particularly subgrade conditions — to ensure the new pavement does not suffer the same failures. Assess using structural assessment methods.
Immediate safety-driven response to sudden failures including blowups, sudden slab collapse, major potholing, and severe faulting creating step hazards. Under the Highways Act 1980, highway authorities have a statutory duty to respond to dangerous defects within hours. Emergency repairs are typically temporary (rapid-setting concrete infill, steel plate covering) with permanent repair programmed within 28 days. Document all emergency works for budget recovery and insurance purposes.
The lifecycle cost of concrete pavement maintenance follows a strongly non-linear curve. A pavement deteriorating from PCI 70 to PCI 50 (Fair to Poor) can typically be treated for £10–£25/m². The same pavement allowed to fall to PCI 25 (Serious) requires £60–£120/m² to rehabilitate. Below PCI 10, full reconstruction at £150–£250/m² is often the only viable option. This "maintenance cost cliff" is why planned preventive maintenance — even when the pavement looks superficially acceptable — delivers the greatest long-term value for highway asset managers in 2026.
Skipping condition surveys: Maintenance without current PCI data leads to misallocation of budget — treating low-priority areas while critical defects worsen. Survey every 2–3 years on high-traffic routes and every 4–5 years on lightly trafficked surfaces. Wrong treatment selection: Applying surface sealant over a pavement with active base failure is ineffective and wastes resources. Always investigate root cause before specifying treatment. Ignoring drainage: The majority of premature concrete pavement failures involve water — blocked edge channels, failed joint sealant, and inadequate subbase drainage accelerate all distress types. Drainage maintenance must be included in every concrete pavement maintenance plan.
The schedule below provides indicative maintenance intervals and treatments by pavement type and use. Actual intervals should be adjusted based on site-specific PCI trends, traffic growth, local climate (freeze-thaw cycles), and drainage conditions. For pavements incorporating air-entrained concrete, freeze-thaw scaling is significantly reduced, potentially extending preventive maintenance cycles.
| Pavement Type | Inspection Cycle | Joint Resealing | Crack Repair | Surface Treatment | Typical Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trunk Road / Motorway | Annual visual; PCI every 2 years | Every 7–10 years | As identified; <6 months | Grinding when fault >3mm | 30–50 years |
| Primary / Distributor Road | Annual visual; PCI every 3 years | Every 8–12 years | As identified; <12 months | Surface seal at PCI 70–75 | 25–40 years |
| Local / Estate Roads | Visual every 2 years; PCI every 5 years | Every 10–15 years | As identified; <18 months | Surface seal at PCI 70 | 20–35 years |
| Industrial Yard / HGV Area | Visual every 12 months; PCI every 2 years | Every 5–8 years | As identified; <3 months | Partial-depth repair as needed | 20–30 years |
| Car Park (Surface) | Visual every 2 years; PCI every 5 years | Every 10–15 years | As identified; <24 months | Surface seal every 10–12 years | 25–40 years |
| Airport Apron / Taxiway | Monthly visual; PCI every 12 months | Every 4–6 years | As identified; <1 month | Grinding / FOD removal continuous | 25–40 years |
| Footway / Shared Path | Visual every 3 years; PCI every 6 years | Every 12–18 years | As identified; <24 months | Surface seal when scaling begins | 30–50 years |
Indicative UK treatment costs for 2026 are shown below. Prices vary by region, contract size, access conditions, and materials specification. All figures are supply and install costs excluding VAT, prelims, and traffic management. Always obtain competitive tenders for works over £5,000. For projects involving acoustic performance, refer also to the acoustic performance of concrete floors guide when specifying surface textures.
| Treatment | PCI Trigger | Unit Cost 2026 | Typical Area | Expected Life Extension | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joint Resealing | PCI 70–100 (preventive) | £8–£18/lin.m | All joints | 8–15 years | Best ROI preventive action |
| Crack Filling (narrow) | PCI 60–85 | £5–£12/lin.m | Active cracks <6mm | 3–7 years | Polyurethane or epoxy sealant |
| Surface Sealing | PCI 65–85 | £4–£10/m² | Full section or areas | 5–10 years | Penetrating silane/siloxane |
| Partial-Depth Repair | PCI 45–70 | £35–£75/m² | Localised spalls, joint edges | 10–20 years | Key corrective treatment |
| Full-Depth Slab Repair | PCI 30–55 | £80–£160/m² | Cracked / failed slabs | 20–30 years | Rapid-hardening concrete |
| Diamond Grinding | Faulting >3mm | £12–£25/m² | Faulted joints and panels | 8–15 years | Restores ride quality + friction |
| Pressure Grouting / Undersealing | Pumping / voids confirmed | £20–£50/m² | Voided slab areas | 10–20 years | Must confirm void by GPR first |
| Bonded Concrete Overlay | PCI 30–50 | £60–£110/m² | Full carriageway sections | 20–30 years | 50–100mm overlay on sound base |
| Unbonded Concrete Overlay | PCI 20–45 | £80–£140/m² | Full carriageway sections | 25–35 years | Slip membrane between layers |
| Full Reconstruction | PCI 0–25 | £150–£280/m² | Full section | 30–50 years | Includes subbase and drainage |
A complete concrete pavement maintenance plan follows these eight structured steps. This process applies to highway authorities, estate managers, airport operators, and private landowners managing concrete pavement assets in 2026.
Full guide to structural condition assessment methods, testing techniques, and inspection frameworks for concrete.
🔊How surface texture and concrete specification affect sound transmission and noise levels in floor and pavement design.
💧How air entrainment protects concrete pavements from freeze-thaw scaling, extending maintenance cycles significantly.
🏗️Correct backfill procedures adjacent to concrete structures — critical for preventing pavement settlement and subgrade failure.
The internationally adopted standard for Pavement Condition Index surveys on roads and car parks. Defines distress types, severity levels, measurement methods, deduct value curves, and PCI calculation procedures for concrete and asphalt pavements. Essential reference for any condition inspection programme in 2026.
View Standard →Design Manual for Roads and Bridges Volume 7 Section 3 Part 2. UK standard for condition surveys and inspection of concrete and flexible road pavements. Defines UK condition rating categories and links to maintenance treatment selection for national highway network assets.
DMRB Online →British and European standard covering the design, specification, and construction of concrete road pavements. Parts 1–3 cover materials, functional requirements, and construction practices. The key reference for specifying repair concrete mixes and joint systems in maintenance works to UK highway standards in 2026.
Structural Assessment Guide →