The definitive guide to concrete edge thickening — design rules, dimensions, load conditions, and when it is required
Understand exactly when and why concrete edge thickening is needed for slabs, driveways, paths, and pavements in 2026. Covers standard dimensions, soil conditions, reinforcement, step-by-step construction, and common mistakes to avoid.
Professional design and construction guidance for thickened edge concrete slabs in 2026
Concrete edge thickening — also called a thickened edge or haunch — is where the perimeter of a concrete slab is made deeper than the main body of the slab. Instead of a uniform thickness throughout, the slab increases in depth at its edges, forming an integral downstand beam that distributes concentrated loads into the subgrade and resists edge curling, cracking, and undermining.
The edges and corners of a concrete slab are its most vulnerable points. They carry the highest bending stresses, are most exposed to erosion, vehicle overrun, and moisture infiltration, and are most prone to cracking if unsupported. A thickened edge provides additional mass and depth exactly where it is needed most — without the cost of thickening the entire slab uniformly across its full area.
In 2026, thickened edge design is standard practice for all residential driveways, ground-bearing floor slabs, outdoor pavements, and any slab where vehicle wheels, fork-lift tyres, or heavy foot traffic loads approach or cross the slab perimeter. The thickened edge depth is typically 1.5× to 2× the main slab thickness, tapering back to standard depth over a distance of 300–600 mm from the edge.
Figure 1: Typical thickened edge concrete slab cross-section — edge depth 1.5×–2× main slab thickness, tapering over 300–600 mm (2026 standard)
Concrete edge thickening is the deliberate increase in depth of a concrete slab at its perimeter and at any free edges. The thickened portion acts as an integral downstand beam, stiffening the slab edge, distributing point loads over a greater area of subgrade, and preventing the edge from cracking, deflecting, or being undermined. It is one of the most cost-effective structural enhancements available in concrete slab design.
Edge thickening is distinct from a full perimeter strip footing or ground beam, which are separate structural elements cast before the slab. A thickened edge is monolithic — cast as a single pour with the slab itself — which makes it simpler, faster, and more economical to construct while still delivering significant structural improvement at the slab perimeter.
The edge of a slab is always the weakest point. Any load applied near or at the edge produces bending moments twice as high as the same load applied at the centre of the same slab. Edge thickening directly counteracts this by increasing the section modulus (resistance to bending) exactly where bending stresses are highest.
Edge thickening is not always mandatory, but it is strongly recommended — and in many cases required by design standards — in the following situations. Understanding the trigger conditions helps you decide whether edge thickening is needed on your specific project before work begins.
Any slab where vehicle wheels — including cars, vans, delivery trucks, or forklifts — will drive over or approach the slab perimeter requires edge thickening. Wheel loads at a free edge generate the highest possible bending stresses in a slab. Without a thickened edge, thin slabs will crack and break at this point within months of trafficking.
All residential concrete driveways should have a thickened edge at the road kerb, at any change in level, and at the garage threshold. A standard driveway slab of 100 mm should be thickened to 150–200 mm at all free edges. This is the most common application of edge thickening in domestic construction.
Ground-bearing industrial floor slabs are required to have thickened edges by TR34 (Concrete Society) and equivalent standards wherever fork-lift trucks, pallet trucks, or heavy racking loads operate near slab edges or construction joints. Edge thickening depth for industrial floors is typically 1.5×–2× main slab thickness with steel reinforcement.
On sites with variable subgrade — soft clay, made ground, filled areas, or zones where the subgrade CBR is below 3% — edge thickening is essential. The thickened edge spreads loads over a greater area of weak subgrade, reducing bearing pressures and preventing differential settlement that would crack a uniform-thickness slab.
Where concrete is laid near mature trees, root activity can undermine the subgrade beneath slab edges. A thickened edge with bottom steel reinforcement allows the slab edge to cantilever over small voids created by root movement without cracking — bridging the gap until the void is infilled or roots are managed.
In areas subject to ground frost, slab edges are most vulnerable to frost heave because edge subgrade is less insulated than central subgrade. A thickened edge places more concrete mass at the perimeter, provides greater thermal mass, and reduces the risk of frost-induced edge cracking and uplift in cold weather conditions.
The exact dimensions of the thickened edge depend on the main slab thickness, the expected loading, and the subgrade strength. The following standard dimensions represent accepted practice for common slab types in 2026. Always confirm dimensions with a structural engineer for industrial, commercial, or heavily loaded applications.
| Slab Application | Main Slab Thickness | Edge Thickness | Taper Length | Reinforcement |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Residential driveway (car/van) | 100 mm | 150–200 mm | 300–400 mm | A142 mesh or none |
| Residential driveway (heavy vehicle) | 125–150 mm | 200–250 mm | 400–500 mm | A193 mesh minimum |
| External paving / footpath | 75–100 mm | 125–150 mm | 300 mm | Not typically required |
| Ground-bearing floor slab (domestic) | 100 mm | 150–200 mm | 400 mm | A142 mesh |
| Industrial floor slab (light fork-lift) | 150 mm | 225–300 mm | 500–600 mm | A393 mesh + bottom bar |
| Industrial floor slab (heavy fork-lift) | 200 mm | 300–400 mm | 600 mm | Designer specified |
Several core design rules govern the geometry and reinforcement of thickened edges. These rules ensure the thickened zone performs as intended — transferring loads into the ground, resisting bending, and providing a stable, crack-free edge for the slab's full design life.
Example: 100 mm slab → thickened edge = 200 mm deep, taper over minimum 300 mm, base width ≥ 200 mm.
For lightly loaded applications (footpaths, domestic paving), the thickened edge often requires no additional reinforcement beyond the main slab mesh, provided the geometry is correct. However, for driveways with regular vehicle overrun and all industrial applications, bottom longitudinal bars should be placed in the thickened zone to resist hogging (upward bending) stresses that develop when the edge is loaded. A typical bottom bar specification for a residential driveway thickened edge is 2 × T12 bars at 40 mm cover from the bottom of the thickened section. For a more detailed look at how backfill and surcharge loads affect edge zones, see our guide on backfill materials for retaining walls.
The thickened edge is cast monolithically with the slab — it uses the same concrete mix throughout. For residential driveways the minimum concrete specification is C25/30 (ST4) with a maximum water/cement ratio of 0.55 and a minimum cement content of 300 kg/m³. A higher freeze-thaw resistant mix of C28/35 with air entrainment (4–6%) is recommended in exposed or frost-affected locations. Do not use a weaker mix in the thickened edge zone — the extra depth provides structural benefit only if the concrete strength is maintained.
Constructing a thickened edge correctly requires careful excavation, formwork setting, and pour sequencing. The following steps apply to a standard residential driveway or external slab with a thickened perimeter edge:
Edge thickening is not always necessary. You may omit it in the following situations, provided the slab is correctly designed for the loading and ground conditions:
A common question is whether it is better to simply increase the thickness of the entire slab rather than use a thickened edge. In most cases, edge thickening is the more economical and structurally efficient solution. Increasing the full slab thickness from 100 mm to 150 mm increases concrete volume by 50% across the entire slab area. Thickening only the edge zone by the same amount uses a fraction of the extra concrete — typically 15–25% more total volume — while concentrating the additional material exactly where structural need is greatest.
Concentrates extra material at the highest-stress zone. Reduces total concrete volume compared to full-depth increase. Cast monolithically — no additional pours or construction joints. Provides integral downstand beam action at perimeter. Cost-effective for large slab areas.
Better for very small slabs where the edge zone represents most of the total area. Simpler formwork on sites with difficult access for edge trenching. Preferable where loads are uniformly distributed across the full slab with no concentration at edges. Required where slab acts as a raft over very poor subgrade.
A 5 m × 5 m driveway slab at 100 mm = 2.5 m³ concrete. Thickened edge adds approx. 0.4–0.6 m³ (+16–24%). Full uniform increase to 150 mm = 3.75 m³ (+50%). Edge thickening typically saves £150–£350 in concrete cost on a standard residential driveway project.
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BS 8500-1:2023 (Concrete Specification), BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 (Concrete Performance), Concrete Society TR34 (Ground-Bearing Slabs), Approved Document C (Site Preparation). These standards set out mix requirements, slab design, and edge detailing for concrete slabs in the UK.
BSI Standards →Technical Report 34 (Concrete Ground Floors and Pavements) is the primary UK design reference for ground-bearing concrete slabs, including edge thickening requirements, joint design, reinforcement specifications, and construction tolerances for all slab types from domestic to heavy industrial.
TR34 Reference →Use ConcreteMetric's free calculators to estimate concrete volumes for thickened edge slabs, check mix specifications, and plan your driveway or floor slab project. All tools are updated for 2026 standards and fully mobile-friendly.
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