Complete engineering guide to base width, toe, heel, stability checks, and bearing capacity for retaining wall footings
Master footing design for retaining walls in 2026 — covering foundation width rules, toe and heel proportions, overturning and sliding stability, bearing pressure checks, drainage requirements, and step-by-step design procedures for cantilever and gravity walls.
Essential guidance for structural engineers, geotechnical engineers, and construction professionals designing retaining wall foundations in 2026
The footing is the most structurally critical component of any retaining wall. It must resist the full horizontal earth pressure and surcharge loading transferred from the wall stem, prevent overturning about the toe, resist forward sliding, and distribute vertical loads within the allowable bearing capacity of the founding soil. An undersized or improperly proportioned footing is the leading cause of retaining wall failure worldwide.
For a cantilever retaining wall, the base width is typically 50–70% of the retained wall height (H). The heel — the portion extending behind the wall stem into the retained soil — is usually two-thirds of the base width, while the toe — projecting forward — accounts for the remaining one-third. These proportions ensure that the resultant vertical reaction falls within the middle third of the base, preventing tension and foundation rocking.
Every retaining wall footing design must satisfy three independent stability checks: (1) Overturning stability — the stabilising moments must exceed the overturning moments by a factor of safety of at least 1.5–2.0; (2) Sliding resistance — the base friction and passive resistance must exceed the horizontal driving force (FOS ≥ 1.5); and (3) Bearing capacity — the maximum soil pressure under the footing must not exceed the allowable bearing capacity of the founding stratum.
Understanding the geometry of a retaining wall footing is the starting point for any footing design for retaining walls. The base slab connects directly to the wall stem and extends in both directions — the heel projects back beneath the retained soil mass, and the toe projects forward on the exposed face side. Together, the heel, stem base, and toe form the complete base footing width (B).
The depth of the footing below finished ground level (D) must be sufficient to reach soil of adequate bearing capacity, to provide frost protection (minimum 450–600 mm in temperate climates), and to develop passive resistance in front of the toe. For most cantilever walls, a minimum footing depth of 500–1000 mm below the lowest adjacent finished grade is standard practice under AS 4678, BS 8002, and ACI 318.
Figure 1 – Typical cantilever retaining wall footing cross-section. The heel extends beneath the retained soil (≈ 2/3 of B) and the toe projects forward (≈ 1/3 of B). Total base width B = 50–70% of retained height H.
The base width (B) is the most fundamental dimension in footing design for retaining walls. It is initially estimated as a proportion of the retained height (H) and then verified through formal stability checks. For preliminary sizing, the following rules of thumb — widely accepted in structural engineering practice — provide a reliable starting point before detailed analysis is performed.
These proportions ensure that the resultant of all vertical forces (wall self-weight + soil on heel + footing self-weight) falls within the middle third of the base (i.e., eccentricity e ≤ B/6). This middle-third rule is fundamental to eliminating tensile stress at the footing–soil interface, which would cause uplift, rocking, and progressive settlement. Where the resultant falls outside the middle third, the footing width must be increased or the heel lengthened.
Formal stability verification is mandatory for all retaining wall footing designs. The three checks — overturning, sliding, and bearing capacity — must each be satisfied independently. Satisfying one check does not imply the others are met; all three must be computed explicitly for every design scenario, including with surcharge loading and with the water table at its most adverse position.
The factor of safety against overturning (FOSOT) is the ratio of stabilising moments (Mstab) to overturning moments (MOT) taken about the toe of the footing. Stabilising moments are generated by the vertical weight of the wall, footing, and soil on the heel. Overturning moments are generated by the active earth pressure acting horizontally on the back of the wall stem. A minimum FOSOT of 2.0 is required under most codes for retained heights above 1.2 m.
The factor of safety against sliding (FOSSL) is the ratio of total horizontal resistance to total horizontal driving force. Resistance comes from base friction (N × tan δ, where δ is the base friction angle, typically 0.67φ' to 0.75φ') plus passive pressure on the toe face. The driving force is the total active earth pressure and any water pressure. A minimum FOSSL of 1.5 is standard. Where sliding is marginal, a shear key cast into the base of the footing significantly increases passive resistance.
The maximum soil pressure (qmax) beneath the footing must not exceed the allowable bearing capacity (qallow) of the founding soil. Due to the eccentric and inclined nature of the resultant load on a retaining wall footing, the Meyerhof bearing capacity equation with eccentricity and inclination factors is used. The effective footing width B' = B − 2e is used in bearing capacity calculations to account for load eccentricity, where e is the eccentricity of the resultant vertical force from the footing centreline.
The resultant of all vertical forces must fall within the middle third of the base (eccentricity e ≤ B/6) to ensure compressive bearing pressure across the full footing width. If e > B/6, the pressure distribution becomes triangular with zero contact over part of the base, leading to concentration of stress at the toe, rocking behaviour, and risk of overturning. For retaining walls on cohesive soils, e ≤ B/4 may be acceptable with careful analysis, but e ≤ B/6 remains best practice.
A shear key is a downstand projection cast monolithically into the underside of the footing, typically positioned beneath or just behind the wall stem. It increases sliding resistance by mobilising passive pressure over a greater depth of soil in front of the key. The key depth is typically 200–400 mm below the footing soffit and the key width equals the stem thickness. Shear keys are particularly effective on granular soils where base friction alone is insufficient to achieve FOSSL ≥ 1.5.
Hydrostatic water pressure behind a retaining wall dramatically increases both overturning and sliding forces. A 3 m high wall retaining saturated soil can experience lateral pressures up to twice those for drained conditions. Proper drainage — granular drainage blankets, correctly specified backfill, and weep holes or filter drains at 1.5–2.5 m centres — is not optional but a fundamental design requirement that directly controls footing size and reinforcement demands.
The following formulae form the core of the footing design for retaining walls calculation process. They are drawn from Rankine earth pressure theory (active pressure), classical bearing capacity analysis, and moment equilibrium principles. All calculations should be performed using factored loads (ultimate limit state) per AS 4678, Eurocode 7 (EC7), or ACI 318 as appropriate to the project jurisdiction in 2026.
The table below provides reference design parameters for common footing design scenarios in retaining wall engineering. Values are indicative based on standard soil types and typical retained heights. All final designs must be verified by a qualified geotechnical or structural engineer using site-specific soil investigation data.
| Retained Height (H) | Base Width B (min) | Heel Width | Toe Width | Footing Thickness | Min. Footing Depth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 m | 0.5 – 0.7 m | 0.33 – 0.46 m | 0.17 – 0.23 m | 300 mm (min) | 500 mm |
| 1.5 m | 0.75 – 1.05 m | 0.50 – 0.70 m | 0.25 – 0.35 m | 300 mm | 500 mm |
| 2.0 m | 1.0 – 1.4 m | 0.67 – 0.93 m | 0.33 – 0.47 m | 300 – 350 mm | 600 mm |
| 3.0 m | 1.5 – 2.1 m | 1.0 – 1.4 m | 0.5 – 0.7 m | 380 – 450 mm | 700 mm |
| 4.0 m | 2.0 – 2.8 m | 1.33 – 1.87 m | 0.67 – 0.93 m | 450 – 550 mm | 800 mm |
| 5.0 m | 2.5 – 3.5 m | 1.67 – 2.33 m | 0.83 – 1.17 m | 550 – 650 mm | 900 mm |
| 6.0 m | 3.0 – 4.2 m | 2.0 – 2.8 m | 1.0 – 1.4 m | 650 – 750 mm | 1000 mm |
The following step-by-step procedure covers the complete process for footing design for retaining walls from initial sizing through to final verification. This procedure is applicable to cantilever reinforced concrete retaining walls up to 6 m retained height and aligns with Eurocode 7 (EC7), AS 4678, and ACI 318 design frameworks.
Once all three stability checks are satisfied (FOSOT ≥ 2.0, FOSSL ≥ 1.5, qmax ≤ qallow, e ≤ B/6), proceed to structural design of the footing slab for bending and shear. The critical bending section in the heel is at the back face of the stem; in the toe it is at the front face of the stem. Design reinforcement in accordance with AS 3600, EC2, or ACI 318. Minimum reinforcement ratio ρmin = 0.0018bh (ACI) or 0.13% (EC2) applies throughout.
Errors in footing design for retaining walls are responsible for the majority of retaining wall failures. Most errors are avoidable with careful attention to the interaction between geotechnical and structural design requirements. The following warning covers the most frequently encountered mistakes observed in practice and in failure investigations.
The choice of backfill material directly affects footing size. Well-graded granular backfill (φ' ≈ 35°) produces Ka ≈ 0.27, while poorly drained clay backfill (φ' ≈ 20°) produces Ka ≈ 0.49 — nearly double the lateral pressure. Using the correct backfill material specification is therefore one of the most effective ways to reduce footing width, reinforcement quantities, and overall construction cost. See the backfill materials for retaining walls guide for full material specifications and compaction requirements. For guidance on the broader context of foundation construction, the FHWA Geotechnical Engineering resource provides extensive reference material on retaining structure foundations.
Complete guide to selecting and specifying backfill materials that reduce lateral pressure and footing size.
🏛️Best practice for compaction, drainage, and material selection when backfilling around concrete foundations.
🔍Inspection and NDT methods for evaluating the condition of existing retaining walls and foundations.
🫧How air entrainment improves durability of retaining wall footings in freeze-thaw exposed environments.
EN 1997 (Eurocode 7) provides the governing European framework for retaining wall and footing design, covering earth pressure calculation, stability verification, bearing capacity, and the geotechnical design approach (DA1, DA2, DA3) applicable to retaining structures in 2026.
FHWA Geotech Resource →Selecting the correct backfill material is fundamental to reducing lateral pressures and therefore the required footing width. Read the full ConcreteMetric guide on backfill material types, compaction specifications, drainage design, and their direct impact on retaining wall footing design.
Backfill Materials Guide →Proper backfilling procedures around concrete foundations protect the footing from hydrostatic pressure, differential settlement, and chemical attack. The ConcreteMetric backfilling guide covers step-by-step compaction methods, lift heights, and material standards relevant to retaining wall foundation construction.
Foundation Backfilling Guide →