ConcreteMetric Navigation Menu
Deep Foundation Calculator Australia 2026 | Pile Capacity Tool
AS 2159 & AS 3600 Compliant

Deep Foundation Calculator

Calculate pile capacity, foundation depth, and bearing capacity for deep foundations

Professional deep foundation calculations for piles, piers, and caissons in Australian construction projects. Accurate bearing capacity, pile length, and foundation design calculations compliant with 2026 standards.

Australian Standards
Multiple Pile Types
Instant Results
Free Tool

🏗️ Deep Foundation Calculator

Engineering-grade calculations for pile foundations and deep foundation design

✓ Pile Capacity Analysis

Calculate ultimate and allowable pile capacity for driven piles, bored piles, CFA piles, and drilled shafts. Our calculator uses geotechnical parameters and Australian Standard AS 2159 for accurate bearing capacity determination in various soil conditions.

✓ Foundation Depth Design

Determine optimal pile penetration depth based on soil stratification, bearing layer characteristics, and structural loading requirements. Calculate embedment depth for end-bearing piles and friction piles in Australian geological conditions.

✓ Multiple Foundation Types

Support for various deep foundation systems including concrete piles, steel H-piles, pipe piles, timber piles, micro-piles, and caisson foundations. Calculate capacity for compression, tension, and lateral loading scenarios in 2026 construction projects.

🏗️ Calculate Deep Foundation Capacity

Select pile type and enter geotechnical parameters

Pile Dimensions

Nominal pile diameter
Total pile penetration depth

Soil Parameters

Based on SPT N-values or undrained shear strength
Ultimate bearing at pile toe
Average shaft friction along pile
Groundwater level affects pile capacity

Design Parameters

For pile group calculations
Influences capacity calculations
Allowable Pile Capacity
0 kN
Safe working load per pile
Ultimate Capacity
0 kN
End Bearing
0 kN
Shaft Friction
0 kN
Total Group Capacity
0 kN

📊 Capacity Breakdown

Pile Diameter 0 mm
Pile Length 0 m
Pile Surface Area 0 m²
Base Area 0 m²
Factor of Safety Applied 0

💡 Design Summary

Foundation Type -
Soil Conditions -
Loading Type -
Number of Piles 1

What are Deep Foundations?

Deep foundations are structural support systems that transfer building loads to competent bearing strata located well below the ground surface, typically at depths greater than 3 metres. In Australian construction during 2026, deep foundations are essential where shallow foundations cannot provide adequate bearing capacity due to weak surface soils, high structural loads, or adverse site conditions including expansive clays, soft compressible soils, or high water tables.

Common deep foundation types include driven piles, bored piles, continuous flight auger (CFA) piles, drilled shafts, caissons, and micro-piles. These systems derive their load-carrying capacity from a combination of end bearing (resistance at the pile toe in strong bearing strata) and shaft friction (skin friction along the pile perimeter). Design follows Australian Standard AS 2159 for piling and AS 3600 for reinforced concrete pile design in residential, commercial, and infrastructure applications.

Deep Foundation Components & Load Transfer

Ground Level
Applied Load
Fill / Topsoil
Soft Clay Layer
Medium Dense Sand
Dense Bearing Stratum
Shaft Friction
End Bearing
Pile Depth

Deep foundation systems transfer structural loads through weak surface soils to competent bearing layers. Load resistance comes from two sources: shaft friction (red arrows) developed along the pile perimeter through soil-pile interface shear, and end bearing (green arrow) at the pile toe in strong bearing strata. The applied load (orange arrow) from the structure is distributed between these two mechanisms based on soil stratification and pile characteristics.

Types of Deep Foundation Systems

Bored Piles (Drilled Shafts)

Constructed by drilling cylindrical holes into the ground and filling with reinforced concrete. Common diameters 450-1200mm in Australia, depths 5-50 metres. Ideal for high-capacity requirements, minimal vibration constraints, and sites with groundwater. Load capacity 500-5000+ kN per pile depending on diameter and soil conditions.

Driven Piles

Precast concrete, steel, or timber piles driven into ground using impact or vibratory hammers. Typical lengths 6-30 metres in Australian projects. Provide high capacity through displacement and densification of surrounding soils. Common in bridge foundations, marine structures, and industrial facilities. Capacity 300-3000 kN typical range.

CFA Piles (Auger Piles)

Continuous flight auger piles installed by drilling with hollow-stem auger, then pumping concrete through auger as withdrawn. Diameters 300-900mm, depths 5-35 metres common in Australia. Low vibration installation suitable for urban sites. Fast installation rates 15-25 linear metres per day. Capacity 200-2000 kN range.

Micro-Piles (Mini-Piles)

Small diameter piles (100-300mm) drilled and grouted, often with central steel reinforcement. Used for underpinning, restricted access sites, and seismic retrofitting. Can achieve depths 10-40 metres in Australian conditions. Capacity 100-500 kN per pile, installed in groups for higher loads. Minimal equipment footprint and vibration.

Deep Foundation Capacity Calculation Methods

📐 Ultimate Pile Capacity Formula

Qu = Qb + Qs
Qb = qb × Ab (End Bearing Capacity)
Qs = Σ(fs × As) (Shaft Friction Capacity)

Where Qu = ultimate pile capacity, Qb = end bearing component, Qs = shaft friction component, qb = unit end bearing pressure, Ab = pile base area, fs = unit shaft friction, As = shaft surface area.

📐 Allowable Pile Capacity

Qallow = Qu / FS

Where Qallow = allowable pile capacity (safe working load), Qu = ultimate pile capacity, FS = factor of safety (typically 2.0 to 3.0 per AS 2159 depending on load testing and site conditions).

Calculating End Bearing Capacity

End bearing capacity depends on soil strength at the pile toe and pile base area. For cohesive soils (clays), unit end bearing is calculated as qb = 9 × Cu where Cu is undrained shear strength in kPa. For cohesionless soils (sands), bearing capacity uses qb = Nq × σ'v where Nq is bearing capacity factor based on soil friction angle and σ'v is effective vertical stress at pile toe level.

In Australian practice for 2026, typical end bearing values range from 1000-3000 kPa for piles bearing in medium to stiff clays, 2000-5000 kPa for dense sands and gravels, and 5000-10000+ kPa for piles socketed into rock. Geotechnical investigation with SPT or CPT testing is essential for accurate bearing capacity determination. Conservative values should be adopted where site investigation is limited or soil variability is high.

Calculating Shaft Friction Capacity

Shaft friction develops along the pile perimeter through soil-pile interface shear. For cohesive soils, unit shaft friction is fs = α × Cu where α is adhesion factor (typically 0.3-1.0, decreasing with increasing clay strength). For cohesionless soils, fs = β × σ'v where β is coefficient of lateral earth pressure (typically 0.25-1.5 depending on pile type and installation method).

Typical shaft friction values in Australian conditions range from 20-60 kPa for soft to medium clays, 40-100 kPa for stiff to hard clays, 30-80 kPa for loose to medium dense sands, and 60-150 kPa for dense sands. Driven piles generally develop higher shaft friction than bored piles due to soil compaction during installation. CFA piles typically achieve 70-85% of bored pile shaft friction values.

When Deep Foundations are Required

  • Weak Surface Soils: When shallow foundations cannot achieve adequate bearing capacity, such as sites with thick soft clay layers, loose fills, or organic soils requiring support from deeper competent strata
  • High Structural Loads: Multi-storey buildings, bridges, industrial facilities, and infrastructure requiring individual column loads exceeding 500-1000 kN that shallow footings cannot economically support
  • Expansive Clay Sites: Reactive clay soils common in Australian regions requiring piles to penetrate below active zone (typically 2-4 metres) to stable founding material
  • High Water Table: Sites with shallow groundwater where deep foundations can extend below water table to achieve bearing in dense submerged soils or bedrock
  • Uplift Resistance: Structures requiring tension capacity such as transmission towers, tall buildings with wind uplift, or structures on expansive soils needing hold-down capacity
  • Lateral Load Resistance: Foundations for retaining structures, waterfront facilities, and buildings in seismic zones requiring significant lateral load capacity through pile bending resistance
  • Settlement Control: Projects with strict settlement limits where deep foundations in strong bearing strata provide minimal settlement compared to shallow foundations in compressible soils
  • Scour Protection: Bridge piers, waterfront structures, and marine facilities where deep foundations extend below potential scour depth to maintain stability

Typical Pile Capacities by Soil Type (2026)

Soil Type 600mm Bored Pile 350mm CFA Pile 250mm Square Driven Typical Depth
Soft Clay (Cu 25-50 kPa) 400-600 kN 150-250 kN 200-350 kN 12-18 m
Medium Clay (Cu 50-100 kPa) 800-1200 kN 300-500 kN 400-600 kN 10-15 m
Stiff Clay (Cu 100-200 kPa) 1500-2000 kN 600-900 kN 700-1000 kN 8-12 m
Loose Sand (N = 4-10) 500-800 kN 200-350 kN 300-500 kN 10-16 m
Medium Sand (N = 10-30) 1200-1800 kN 500-800 kN 600-900 kN 8-14 m
Dense Sand (N = 30-50) 2000-3000 kN 900-1400 kN 1000-1500 kN 6-10 m
Weathered Rock 2500-4000 kN 1200-2000 kN 1500-2500 kN 6-12 m
Sound Rock (socketed) 4000-8000+ kN 2000-4000 kN 2500-5000 kN 4-8 m socket

Soft Clay (Cu 25-50 kPa)

600mm Bored Pile: 400-600 kN
350mm CFA Pile: 150-250 kN
250mm Square Driven: 200-350 kN
Typical Depth: 12-18 m

Medium Clay (Cu 50-100 kPa)

600mm Bored Pile: 800-1200 kN
350mm CFA Pile: 300-500 kN
250mm Square Driven: 400-600 kN
Typical Depth: 10-15 m

Dense Sand (N = 30-50)

600mm Bored Pile: 2000-3000 kN
350mm CFA Pile: 900-1400 kN
250mm Square Driven: 1000-1500 kN
Typical Depth: 6-10 m

Sound Rock (socketed)

600mm Bored Pile: 4000-8000+ kN
350mm CFA Pile: 2000-4000 kN
250mm Square Driven: 2500-5000 kN
Typical Depth: 4-8 m socket

⚠️ Important Considerations for Deep Foundation Design

  • Geotechnical Investigation: Adequate subsurface investigation with boring logs, SPT testing, and laboratory testing is essential for reliable capacity calculations and foundation design
  • Load Testing: Static or dynamic load testing on preliminary piles verifies design assumptions and may allow reduced factors of safety per AS 2159 recommendations
  • Negative Skin Friction: Downdrag forces from settling soils can significantly reduce net pile capacity in sites with recent fills or compressible layers
  • Group Effects: Pile groups experience capacity reduction due to stress overlap - efficiency factors of 0.6-0.9 commonly applied depending on spacing
  • Installation Effects: Driven piles may cause heave, vibration, and noise; bored piles risk sidewall collapse in poor soils; CFA piles require quality control on concrete placement

Factors Affecting Deep Foundation Capacity

Soil Properties and Stratification

Soil strength parameters including undrained shear strength for clays and SPT N-values for sands directly determine pile capacity. Variable soil stratification with alternating strong and weak layers requires careful analysis of each stratum's contribution to shaft friction. The presence of weak intermediate layers can reduce capacity despite strong bearing at pile toe. Soil compressibility affects load distribution along the pile shaft, with stiffer upper layers attracting more load in compression piles.

Installation Method Effects

Pile installation method significantly influences capacity. Driven piles compact surrounding granular soils, increasing lateral stress and shaft friction by 20-50% compared to design values. Bored piles in clay may experience strength reduction due to disturbance, with shaft friction 50-70% of theoretical values. CFA piles achieve intermediate capacity between driven and bored piles. Drilling fluid contamination in bored piles reduces shaft friction in upper soil layers if not properly cleaned before concreting.

Time Effects and Soil Setup

Pile capacity changes with time after installation. Driven piles in clay experience "setup" as excess pore pressures dissipate, with capacity increasing 50-200% over days to months. This allows higher working loads if verified by restrike testing. Conversely, driven piles in sand may experience relaxation with minor capacity reduction. Bored piles develop full capacity immediately upon concrete curing, typically 7-28 days depending on concrete strength requirements.

Deep Foundation Design Process

✓ Step-by-Step Foundation Design Procedure

  • Step 1 - Site Investigation: Conduct geotechnical investigation with borehole drilling, SPT testing, soil sampling, and laboratory testing to characterize subsurface conditions and determine soil strength parameters
  • Step 2 - Load Determination: Calculate structural loads including dead load, live load, wind load, and seismic loads. Determine column loads and required foundation capacity including factors of safety
  • Step 3 - Preliminary Design: Select appropriate foundation type based on loads, soil conditions, site constraints, and project economics. Estimate preliminary pile dimensions and depths
  • Step 4 - Capacity Calculation: Calculate ultimate pile capacity using static analysis methods based on soil parameters. Determine allowable capacity with appropriate factors of safety (2.0-3.0)
  • Step 5 - Settlement Analysis: Estimate pile settlement under working loads using load-transfer analysis or elastic methods. Verify settlement within acceptable limits (typically 25mm maximum)
  • Step 6 - Structural Design: Design pile reinforcement per AS 3600 for bending moments, shear forces, and axial loads. Consider installation stresses and handling requirements
  • Step 7 - Load Testing: Specify static load testing or dynamic testing on working piles to verify design capacity and installation quality control procedures
  • Step 8 - Construction Specification: Prepare detailed specifications for pile installation including tolerances, quality control testing, and acceptance criteria based on AS 2159 requirements

Australian Standards for Deep Foundations

Deep foundation design in Australia follows AS 2159: Piling - Design and Installation, which provides comprehensive requirements for pile design, installation methods, quality control, and load testing procedures. This standard covers driven piles, bored piles, CFA piles, and other deep foundation systems. It specifies minimum factors of safety, load testing protocols, and installation tolerances applicable to Australian construction practice in 2026.

AS 3600: Concrete Structures governs structural design of reinforced concrete piles including reinforcement detailing, concrete strength requirements, durability provisions, and design for bending and shear. For steel piles, AS 4100: Steel Structures provides design requirements. Geotechnical aspects reference AS 1726: Geotechnical Site Investigations for site investigation standards. Projects should also consider state-specific building codes and local authority requirements for foundation design and construction documentation.

Cost Considerations for Deep Foundations (2026)

🔍 Typical Deep Foundation Costs in Australia

Bored Piles: $180-$350 per linear metre depending on diameter (450-900mm range), soil conditions, and access. Total installed cost $2,500-$8,000 per pile for typical 10-15 metre depths. Includes mobilization, drilling, reinforcement, and concrete placement.

CFA Piles: $150-$280 per linear metre for 350-600mm diameters. Generally 15-25% cheaper than equivalent bored piles due to faster installation rates. Total cost $2,000-$5,500 per pile for typical applications in Australian conditions.

Driven Piles: $200-$400 per linear metre including pile supply and installation. Precast concrete piles $250-$450 per metre, steel H-piles $280-$500 per metre. Additional costs for mobilization of pile driving equipment $8,000-$25,000 depending on rig size.

Micro-Piles: $350-$650 per linear metre for 150-250mm diameter grouted piles. Higher unit cost offset by smaller diameters and specialized applications. Suitable for restricted access sites where larger equipment cannot operate efficiently.

Frequently Asked Questions - Deep Foundations

What is the difference between end bearing and friction piles?

End bearing piles derive most of their capacity (70-90%) from strong bearing strata at the pile toe, with minimal contribution from shaft friction. They penetrate through weak upper soils to bear on rock or dense soil layers. Friction piles (floating piles) obtain capacity primarily from shaft friction along the pile length, with minimal end bearing contribution. They're used where competent bearing layers are too deep to reach economically. Most piles in Australian practice are combination piles utilizing both end bearing and shaft friction for optimal capacity.

How deep should pile foundations be in Australia?

Pile depth in Australia depends on soil conditions, structural loads, and foundation type. Typical depths range from 6-15 metres for residential and light commercial projects, 10-25 metres for multi-storey buildings and heavy industrial structures, and 15-40+ metres for bridges and major infrastructure. In reactive clay sites common across Australia, piles must penetrate below the zone of seasonal moisture variation (typically 2-4 metres minimum). Final depth is determined by geotechnical investigation and capacity calculations rather than arbitrary minimums.

What is an appropriate factor of safety for pile design?

AS 2159 recommends minimum factors of safety of 2.0 for piles with verified capacity through load testing, 2.5 for piles designed using static analysis with good site investigation, and 3.0 or higher for preliminary designs with limited geotechnical data. Higher factors (3.0-3.5) are appropriate for important structures, poor soil conditions, or where consequences of failure are severe. Load tested piles may use reduced factors as low as 1.5-2.0 if testing confirms design assumptions and demonstrates adequate safety margins for working loads.

Should I use bored piles or driven piles?

Bored piles are preferable for urban sites with vibration sensitivity, sites requiring large diameter high-capacity piles (600-1200mm), and projects where noise restrictions apply. They're ideal for variable soil conditions where pile length can be adjusted during installation. Driven piles suit open sites without vibration constraints, projects requiring many identical piles for efficiency, and marine or waterfront construction. CFA piles offer a compromise with moderate capacity, low vibration, and cost-effective installation for commercial projects. Selection depends on site constraints, soil conditions, project economics, and structural requirements.

How is pile capacity verified on site?

Pile capacity is verified through static load testing (applying incremental loads using hydraulic jacks and measuring settlement) or dynamic load testing using pile driving analyzer (PDA) during installation. Static testing is most reliable but expensive ($8,000-$20,000 per test in 2026), typically performed on 1-2% of production piles. Dynamic testing is faster and cheaper ($2,000-$5,000 per test) but less accurate. Integrity testing using sonic or thermal methods verifies pile continuity and quality. AS 2159 specifies testing frequencies based on project size and geotechnical conditions encountered.

What causes pile installation problems?

Common pile installation issues include borehole collapse in bored piles through soft saturated soils or below water table (requiring temporary casing or drilling mud); obstructions such as boulders, old foundations, or underground services blocking pile penetration; inadequate concrete workability causing segregation or incomplete filling; reinforcement cage displacement during concrete placement; and excessive pile deviation exceeding tolerance (typically 1:75 vertical to 1:150 depending on pile type). Proper site investigation, appropriate installation methods, quality control procedures, and experienced contractors minimize these risks.

How many piles do I need for my building?

Number of piles depends on total building loads and individual pile capacity. Calculate total structural loads (typically 80-150 kPa for residential, 150-300 kPa for commercial), multiply by building footprint area to get total load, then divide by allowable pile capacity to determine pile quantity. Add 10-15% extra for load distribution and pile group effects. Typical residential house on reactive clay requires 15-30 piles; two-storey townhouse 25-40 piles; commercial office building 50-200+ piles depending on size and structural system. Final design by structural engineer considers load distribution, pile spacing, and foundation configuration.

Can deep foundations be used for renovations?

Yes, deep foundations are commonly used for renovations, additions, and underpinning existing structures in Australia. Micro-piles are ideal for restricted access sites with low headroom or tight spaces where conventional piling equipment cannot operate. They can be installed through existing floor slabs or from basements. CFA piles or small diameter bored piles work for external additions. Underpinning with piles stabilizes structures affected by foundation movement, subsidence, or inadequate original foundations. Costs are higher than new construction due to access constraints, existing structure protection, and specialized installation procedures required in renovation environments.

📚 Professional Resources & Standards

Standards Australia

Official source for AS 2159 Piling standards, AS 3600 Concrete Structures, and AS 1726 Geotechnical Site Investigations used in Australian deep foundation design and construction.

Access Standards →

Australian Geomechanics Society

Professional organization providing geotechnical engineering resources, guidelines, and research publications on foundation design, soil mechanics, and ground engineering practice.

Visit AGS →

Engineers Australia

National engineering body offering technical resources, professional development, and structural engineering standards for deep foundation design and geotechnical engineering applications.

Explore Resources →