A complete guide to planning, performing, and documenting concrete condition surveys
Learn everything about concrete condition surveys — from visual inspection and NDT methods to half-cell potential, carbonation testing, defect mapping, and professional reporting for 2026.
A structured approach to assessing the health, safety, and durability of concrete structures in 2026
A concrete condition survey is a systematic examination of a concrete structure to identify, record, and evaluate its physical state. It covers surface defects, cracking patterns, spalling, corrosion signs, and underlying material deterioration. Engineers use these surveys to decide whether a structure needs repair, monitoring, or full rehabilitation. The ACI PRC-228.4-23 guide defines it as the process of planning, performing, and documenting visual and physical observations of concrete in service.
Concrete deteriorates over time due to corrosion, carbonation, chloride ingress, freeze-thaw cycles, and overloading. Without regular condition surveys, hidden defects can progress undetected until structural failure becomes a risk. A well-executed survey in 2026 provides the factual baseline needed for repair design, lifecycle cost analysis, and compliance with building safety regulations. It also protects asset owners from liability and unexpected capital expenditure.
Concrete condition surveys should be conducted at key lifecycle stages: at handover of new construction, during routine maintenance intervals (typically every 5–10 years), after extreme events such as earthquakes, floods, or vehicle impacts, and whenever visible deterioration or serviceability concerns are reported. For critical infrastructure — bridges, parking structures, marine wharves, and industrial floors — more frequent surveys are standard practice to ensure ongoing structural integrity.
A concrete condition survey follows a defined sequence of stages — from initial planning through to final reporting. Each stage builds on the last, ensuring that findings are accurate, traceable, and actionable. The diagram below shows how a standard concrete condition survey progresses from desk study through to the final condition report.
Each stage feeds into the next — skipping stages reduces survey reliability and repair decision accuracy.
Before setting foot on site, a thorough desk study forms the foundation of any concrete condition survey. Engineers collect all available documentation including original structural drawings, material specifications, construction records, previous inspection reports, maintenance logs, and any known incident history. This background review identifies the original concrete mix design, reinforcement cover depths, expected loading history, and any prior repair work that may influence current condition.
The desk study also defines the survey scope and helps select appropriate testing methods. For example, if the records show the structure is in a marine environment, chloride testing and half-cell potential mapping will be prioritised. Without a proper desk study, field resources are deployed inefficiently and key deterioration mechanisms can be missed entirely. According to the ACI PRC-228.4-23 guide, the desk study is considered a mandatory first step in any condition survey plan.
Visual inspection is the first and most fundamental step of any concrete condition survey on site. It is a non-destructive method requiring no equipment beyond the inspector's trained eye, a crack gauge, marker chalk, and a good light source. According to the ACI visual inspection guide, a skilled engineer can gather a substantial amount of information about a structure's condition and likely deterioration mechanisms purely from a systematic visual walkover.
The visual survey maps all observable defects across structural elements — beams, columns, slabs, walls, and soffits. Engineers record crack locations, widths, orientations, and patterns; note areas of spalling, delamination, honeycombing, efflorescence, and staining; and identify any signs of rebar corrosion such as rust staining or section loss. The key limitation is that only surface conditions are visible — internal defects require NDT to detect. For this reason, visual inspection is always the starting point, not the complete survey.
| Defect Type | Visual Appearance | Likely Cause | Urgency Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plastic Shrinkage Cracks | Shallow, parallel surface cracks | Rapid moisture loss during curing | Low–Medium |
| Structural Cracks | Wide, deep cracks, often diagonal | Overloading, settlement, bending stress | High |
| Spalling | Concrete chunks breaking away | Rebar corrosion, freeze-thaw, impact | High |
| Efflorescence | White salt deposits on surface | Water migration through concrete | Low |
| Honeycombing | Voids/rough porous surface texture | Poor compaction or segregation | Medium |
| Delamination | Hollow sound when tapped, lifted layer | Bond failure, rebar expansion, freeze-thaw | High |
| Rust Staining | Brown/orange streaks from joints or cracks | Active rebar corrosion | High |
| Erosion / Abrasion | Worn, smooth surface, aggregate exposed | Traffic wear, water flow, chemical attack | Medium |
Non-destructive testing (NDT) extends the concrete condition survey beyond what the eye can see, allowing engineers to assess internal quality, corrosion risk, and material properties without damaging the structure. NDT methods are chosen based on the deterioration mechanisms suspected from the desk study and visual inspection. Each method has specific strengths, limitations, and applicable standards. The most widely used NDT methods for concrete condition surveys in 2026 are described below.
Measures surface hardness by recording the rebound of a spring-loaded hammer struck against the concrete surface. Results correlate roughly with compressive strength. It is fast, inexpensive, and widely used for a rapid preliminary strength assessment across large areas. Results are affected by surface carbonation, moisture content, and aggregate type, so they should always be correlated with core sample data. Standardised under ASTM C805 / EN 12504-2.
Transmits ultrasonic pulses through concrete and measures the travel time to assess material homogeneity, internal cracking, and approximate compressive strength. Higher pulse velocity indicates denser, higher-quality concrete. UPV is excellent for detecting delamination and internal voids and for evaluating concrete uniformity over large areas. Standardised under ASTM C597 / BS EN 12504-4. Often combined with rebound hammer for more accurate strength estimation.
Measures the electrochemical potential at the concrete surface to assess the probability of active rebar corrosion. A copper/copper sulfate reference electrode (Cu/CuSO₄) is connected to the reinforcing steel and readings are taken across a grid. Per ASTM C876, a reading more negative than –350 mV (CSE) indicates a greater than 90% probability of active corrosion. HCP mapping is particularly valuable for parking decks, bridges, and marine structures exposed to chlorides.
Uses electromagnetic induction (or GPR) to locate embedded steel reinforcement, measure concrete cover depth, and determine rebar spacing and size. Cover depth is critical because insufficient cover accelerates carbonation-induced and chloride-induced corrosion of rebars. Cover meter surveys are routinely performed at the start of any corrosion-related concrete condition survey to build an accurate picture of reinforcement layout without cutting or drilling.
Detects subsurface delamination and voids by capturing differences in surface temperature that arise from thermal conductivity changes. Areas of delamination heat up and cool down at different rates compared to sound concrete, making them clearly visible in thermal images. Infrared thermography is highly effective for rapid scanning of large slab areas, bridge decks, and facade panels. It is non-contact, fast, and does not require direct surface access.
Sends radar pulses into the concrete and records reflections to produce cross-sectional images of the internal structure. GPR can locate rebars, post-tension tendons, voids, delamination layers, and embedded utilities. It is especially useful for thick structures or when access to both faces is unavailable. GPR surveys can be conducted at walking pace, making them highly efficient for bridge decks and large floor slabs. Results require skilled interpretation by a qualified engineer.
Two of the most significant chemical mechanisms causing concrete deterioration are carbonation and chloride ingress, and both require specific testing as part of a thorough concrete condition survey. These tests help engineers determine the depth of the aggressive front relative to the reinforcement depth, and thereby estimate residual service life or the urgency of repair works.
Carbonation occurs when atmospheric CO₂ reacts with the calcium hydroxide in the cement paste, gradually lowering the concrete pH from around 12–13 down to below 9. This destroys the passive oxide layer protecting steel reinforcement and initiates corrosion. Carbonation depth is measured by spraying freshly broken concrete with phenolphthalein indicator solution — sound concrete turns pink/purple, while carbonated concrete remains colourless. The depth of the colourless zone is measured in millimetres.
This relationship shows that carbonation depth increases with the square root of time. Typical K values: dense concrete 0.5–1.5; average concrete 1.5–3.5; porous/low-quality concrete 3.5–6.0 mm/√year.
Chloride ingress — primarily from seawater, deicing salts, or marine spray — penetrates concrete and initiates rebar corrosion once the chloride concentration at the steel surface exceeds a threshold level (typically 0.4% by weight of cement for reinforced concrete). Chloride profiles are obtained by drilling powder samples at incremental depths (e.g., 0–10 mm, 10–20 mm, 20–30 mm) and performing laboratory titration (Volhard method) or ion chromatography analysis. The profile is used to predict the time to depassivation and inform repair strategy. For more on chloride exposure in concrete, see the related guide on assessing existing concrete structures.
Half-cell potential (HCP) mapping is one of the most widely adopted NDT methods for concrete condition surveys involving potential corrosion of reinforcement. Readings are taken on a defined grid (typically 300 mm × 300 mm or 500 mm × 500 mm) across the concrete surface and plotted as an equipotential contour map. Areas with very negative readings correspond to zones of high corrosion activity, helping engineers target intrusive investigation and repair work efficiently.
| HCP Reading (mV vs CSE) | Corrosion Probability | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| More positive than −200 mV | <10% probability of corrosion | Monitor; no immediate action required |
| −200 mV to −350 mV | Uncertain / intermediate range | Further investigation recommended |
| More negative than −350 mV | >90% probability of active corrosion | Detailed investigation and repair planning |
| More negative than −500 mV | Very high — severe active corrosion likely | Immediate inspection; rebar condition assessment |
HCP values can be shifted by concrete moisture content, cover depth, oxygen availability, carbonation, and concrete resistivity. Wet, chloride-contaminated concrete produces the most negative readings (−600 to −400 mV), while dry or carbonated concrete may give misleadingly positive values even where corrosion is active. Per ASTM C876 guidance, HCP results must always be interpreted alongside other data — chloride content, cover depth, and visual findings — not in isolation.
Defect mapping is the systematic process of recording all observed and detected defects onto accurate drawings or digital models of the structure. Rather than listing defects descriptively, defect maps give repair engineers an immediate visual understanding of which areas are affected, how severely, and what percentage of the surface requires attention. In 2026, defect mapping is increasingly performed using photogrammetry, 3D scanning, or drone-captured imagery overlaid on digital structure models, replacing time-consuming manual sketch methods.
A complete defect map for a concrete condition survey typically identifies and distinguishes between crack types (active vs. dormant, structural vs. non-structural), delaminated zones, spalled areas, carbonation fronts, chloride-contaminated zones, and locations of corrosion-active rebars from HCP surveys. The map forms the core technical annex of the condition report and directly drives the repair specification. For related guidance on structural assessment workflows, visit the guide on assessing existing concrete structures.
Field NDT provides rapid, broad-coverage assessment, but laboratory testing on extracted samples delivers definitive quantitative data. Core samples drilled from the structure are tested for compressive strength per BS EN 12504-1 or ASTM C42, with results compared to the original design strength to assess material degradation. Laboratory testing also allows petrographic analysis — thin-section microscopy that can identify alkali-silica reaction (ASR) products, freeze-thaw damage patterns, and aggregate quality issues that no field test can detect.
Chloride content analysis of drilled powder samples produces a depth profile that is fitted to Fick's second law of diffusion to model future ingress rates and predict time to corrosion initiation. Cement content, water-to-cement ratio, and sulfate content can also be determined from extracted samples where the original mix design records are unavailable. These results collectively give the engineer the full picture needed to make defensible, technically sound repair recommendations as part of the condition report.
The condition report is the formal deliverable of a concrete condition survey and must be structured clearly enough for both technical and non-technical stakeholders to act on. A professional report produced in 2026 typically follows a defined format aligned with industry standards such as ACI 201.1R, ACI 364.1R, or client-specific specifications. It must be fully traceable — every finding referenced to a location on the defect map, every test result referenced to its sample ID and test standard.
No single survey method is sufficient on its own — the most reliable concrete condition surveys combine visual inspection with targeted NDT and, where warranted, confirmatory laboratory testing. The choice of methods depends on the structure type, environment, suspected deterioration mechanism, available access, and budget. The table below summarises common survey scenarios and the recommended combination of methods for a concrete condition survey in 2026.
| Structure / Scenario | Primary Survey Methods | Supporting Tests | Key Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge Deck (coastal) | Visual + HCP mapping + GPR | Chloride profiling, cover meter | ASTM C876, ACI 201.1R |
| Car Park Structure | Visual + HCP + Rebound Hammer | Chloride sampling, carbonation test | BS EN 1504, ASTM C805 |
| Residential Building Facade | Visual + Thermal Imaging + Cover Meter | Carbonation depth, core strength | ACI PRC-228.4-23 |
| Industrial Floor Slab | Visual + UPV + GPR | Core strength, wear/abrasion testing | ASTM C597, ACI 360R |
| Marine Wharf / Jetty | Visual + HCP + Chloride profiling + UPV | Cover meter, carbonation depth | ISO 11306, ACI 357R |
| Post-Event (Earthquake / Fire) | Visual + Rebound Hammer + UPV | Core testing, petrographic analysis | ACI 364.1R, ASTM C42 |
Explore more concrete assessment and construction guides on ConcreteMetric
Full methodology for evaluating existing concrete structures — inspection, analysis, and decision-making.
🔊How concrete floors perform acoustically — impact sound, airborne sound, and design considerations.
🧱Best practices for backfilling around concrete foundations to avoid damage and ensure long-term stability.
💨What air entrained concrete is, why it's used, and how it improves freeze-thaw resistance and durability.
The ACI Visual Condition Survey of Concrete guide — the primary reference for planning, performing, and documenting visual concrete condition surveys. Includes defect image library and cause analysis chapters.
View ACI Publications →Standard test method for corrosion potentials of uncoated reinforcing steel in concrete. Defines the reference electrode requirements, measurement procedure, and interpretation thresholds for HCP surveys.
View ASTM C876 →European standard series covering products and systems for the protection and repair of concrete structures. Defines principles of condition assessment and how survey findings map to repair principles P1–P11.
View BSI Standards →