AS 1428, DDA compliance, gradient limits, drainage design, and best practice for accessible footpaths
A comprehensive 2026 guide to footpath crossfall requirements — covering maximum and minimum crossfall gradients, Australian Standards AS 1428.1 and AS 1428.2, DDA obligations, measurement methods, drainage design, kerb ramps, and common non-compliance issues for engineers, surveyors, and councils.
Crossfall is one of the most critical — and most frequently non-compliant — geometric elements of footpath design. Getting it right is essential for accessibility, drainage, safety, and legal compliance in 2026.
Crossfall (also called cross-slope) is the transverse gradient of a footpath — the slope measured perpendicular to the direction of travel. It is expressed as a ratio (1:X) or percentage (%). A crossfall of 1:50 (2%) means the path drops 1 mm vertically for every 50 mm measured horizontally across the path width. Crossfall serves two critical functions: draining rainwater off the walking surface and maintaining a safe, accessible level surface for pedestrians — particularly wheelchair users and people with mobility aids.
Too little crossfall causes ponding water on the path surface, creating slip hazards and accelerating pavement deterioration. Too much crossfall makes it difficult — and in some cases impossible — for wheelchair users, pram users, and elderly pedestrians to maintain a straight course without drifting toward the kerb. Under the Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (DDA) and AS 1428.1, excessive crossfall constitutes a barrier to access and can expose councils, developers, and road authorities to legal liability.
Footpath crossfall requirements are essential knowledge for civil engineers, road designers, land surveyors, council asset managers, urban planners, accessibility consultants, and construction contractors. Non-compliance is one of the most common defects identified in footpath audits across Australian local government areas, often caused by poor survey control, inadequate formwork, or failure to account for adjacent driveway crossings. See also our guide on backfilling around concrete foundations for related earthworks guidance.
In Australia, footpath crossfall requirements are primarily governed by AS 1428.1 – Design for Access and Mobility and AS 1428.2 – Enhanced and Additional Requirements. These standards specify the maximum permissible crossfall for accessible pedestrian paths as part of the broader accessible path of travel (APoT) framework. The key crossfall requirement under AS 1428.1:2021 is that the cross-slope of an accessible path must not exceed 1:50 (2.0%).
This 2% maximum is a hard limit for DDA-compliant design — not a target. In practice, designers should aim for a crossfall of 1:67 to 1:80 (1.25–1.5%) to provide adequate drainage while maintaining a comfortable margin below the 2% DDA threshold. Crossfall below approximately 1:100 (1.0%) risks inadequate drainage on smooth surfaces, particularly concrete, where ponding can occur and create ice or slip hazards in cooler climates.
AS 1428.1 maximum crossfall: 1:50 (2.0%). Ideal design target: 1:67–1:80 (1.25%–1.5%). Values refer to accessible paths of travel (APoT).
Always measure crossfall perpendicular to the direction of pedestrian travel, not along the path centreline. Use a digital level or surveyor's level rod across the full carriageway width to determine the worst-case transverse gradient.
Footpath crossfall in Australia sits at the intersection of engineering standards, accessibility legislation, and local government design guidelines. Understanding which documents apply — and how they interact — is essential for compliant design and construction in 2026.
Design for Access and Mobility – General Requirements for Access. The primary Australian Standard for accessible path design. Specifies a maximum crossfall of 1:50 (2.0%) on accessible paths of travel. Sets out minimum path widths (1,000 mm clear), surface texture requirements, and gradient limits for ramps. Referenced in the NCC (National Construction Code) as a mandatory compliance document for new works.
Enhanced and Additional Requirements. Provides supplementary guidance for complex access situations. Includes requirements for tactile ground surface indicators (TGSIs), kerb ramp geometry, and pathway transitions. While older than AS 1428.1:2021, it remains referenced by many state road authorities and councils in their design standards and asset acceptance criteria.
The federal DDA prohibits discrimination in access to public premises and infrastructure. Footpaths that fail to meet accessible crossfall requirements may constitute unlawful discrimination under the DDA. The Disability (Access to Premises – Buildings) Standards 2010 and the Draft Disability Standards for Accessible Public Transport both reference crossfall compliance as a core accessibility requirement.
The Austroads Guide to Road Design – Part 6A: Pedestrian and Cyclist Paths provides engineering guidance on footpath geometry, crossfall design, drainage, and kerb transitions. It recommends a crossfall of 2–3% for drainage in non-accessible contexts but defers to AS 1428.1 for accessible path requirements. State road authority supplements (e.g., VicRoads, TfNSW, Main Roads WA) may impose additional or stricter requirements.
The NCC Volume 1 (Class 2–9 buildings) references AS 1428.1 as the deemed-to-satisfy (DTS) solution for accessible path design on and around buildings. Crossfall requirements apply to all paths connecting accessible car parks, building entries, and public pedestrian networks. The 2022 NCC updates aligned DTS pathways with the 2021 revision of AS 1428.1.
Individual state road authorities and local councils maintain their own design standards that typically adopt AS 1428.1 but may add further requirements. Examples include TfNSW Pedestrian Infrastructure Design Guide, VicRoads Supplement to Austroads, and various council engineering construction specifications. Always check the applicable local standard as the first step in any footpath design in 2026.
The following table summarises crossfall requirements and recommended values across different footpath contexts and surface types. These values apply to accessible paths of travel (APoT) in Australia and should be read alongside the relevant state road authority supplement for the project location.
| Path Context | Minimum Crossfall | Recommended Target | Maximum (AS 1428.1) | DDA Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard concrete footpath | 1:100 (1.0%) | 1:67–1:80 (1.25–1.5%) | 1:50 (2.0%) | ✅ Compliant |
| Asphalt / bitumen footpath | 1:67 (1.5%) | 1:67–1:50 (1.5–2.0%) | 1:50 (2.0%) | ✅ Compliant |
| Brick / paver footpath | 1:80 (1.25%) | 1:67–1:50 (1.5–2.0%) | 1:50 (2.0%) | ✅ Compliant |
| Footpath at driveway crossing | 1:100 (1.0%) | 1:80–1:50 (1.25–2.0%) | 1:50 (2.0%) | ⚠️ High Risk Area |
| Kerb ramp (flare/wing) | — | 1:8 (12.5%) | 1:8 (12.5%) max flare | ✅ AS 1428.1 §7 |
| Landing at top of kerb ramp | — | 1:67–1:80 (1.25–1.5%) | 1:50 (2.0%) | ✅ Compliant |
| Path with crossfall >1:33 (3%) | — | — | Exceeds AS 1428.1 limit | ❌ Non-Compliant |
| Shared path (pedestrian + cyclist) | 1:100 (1.0%) | 1:80–1:67 (1.25–1.5%) | 1:50 (2.0%) | ✅ Compliant |
The most frequently identified footpath crossfall non-compliance in Australian local government audits occurs at residential and commercial driveway crossings. Where a driveway crosses the footpath, the pavement must be ramped to accommodate vehicles — but the pedestrian footpath surface must maintain a maximum 1:50 (2%) crossfall through the crossing zone. This is geometrically challenging on steep residential streets and requires careful vertical alignment design during the subdivision and development approval process, not after construction.
Accurate crossfall measurement is essential for both design verification and defect identification during construction and maintenance inspections. Several methods are used in practice in 2026, ranging from simple hand tools to sophisticated digital survey equipment. The method selected should match the required accuracy and the scale of the survey being undertaken.
On a 1,200 mm straight edge placed across the path width perpendicular to the direction of travel: a 12 mm gap = 1.0%, an 18 mm gap = 1.5%, a 24 mm gap = 2.0% (AS 1428.1 maximum), and a 36 mm gap = 3.0% (non-compliant). This is the simplest compliance check a site supervisor or building inspector can perform during concrete placement and finishing — before the concrete sets and remediation becomes expensive.
There is an inherent tension in footpath crossfall design between accessibility requirements (crossfall as low as possible) and drainage requirements (crossfall high enough to remove surface water quickly and prevent ponding). Resolving this tension requires careful attention to surface texture, longitudinal gradient, catchment area, and the provision of adequate kerb inlets and drainage structures.
On smooth concrete or asphalt surfaces, a crossfall of 1.0–1.5% is generally sufficient to drain rainfall under most conditions if the longitudinal grade also provides some drainage slope. On textured or rough surfaces, a higher crossfall of 1.5–2.0% may be needed to overcome surface roughness effects and ensure water sheets off the path rather than ponding. In areas of heavy rainfall intensity or where paths are in low points, additional drainage structures (kerb inlets, slot drains) should supplement crossfall drainage rather than increasing crossfall beyond the DDA limit.
Understanding why footpath crossfall failures occur is as important as knowing the requirements themselves. Most non-compliance is preventable through better design coordination and construction supervision — not a fundamental conflict between drainage and accessibility.
| Cause of Non-Compliance | Typical Location | Measured Crossfall Outcome | Prevention Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Driveway ramp encroaches into footpath zone | Residential driveway crossings | Often 3–8% crossfall through crossing | Design driveway ramp to finish at back of footpath; check in design not construction |
| Footpath follows natural topography without adjustment | Steep transverse slopes, hillside streets | Crossfall mirrors natural ground — can exceed 5%+ | Introduce retaining elements or cut/fill to flatten cross-section to ≤2% |
| Poor formwork setting and concrete finishing | All footpath types during construction | Crossfall varies 0.5–4% along path length | Set screed rails to design crossfall; check with straight edge before concrete sets |
| Utility pit lid or valve box protruding above surface | Locations of underground services | Local cross-slope distortion up to 10%+ | Set pit lids flush with finished path surface; re-survey after lid installation |
| Tree root uplift of existing footpath | Established urban streets with street trees | Localised crossfall reversal and irregularity | Root barrier installation; path reconstruction with root management |
| Settlement of subgrade beneath footpath | Filled or unstable subgrade areas | Progressive crossfall increase as one side settles | Improve subgrade preparation and compaction; consider appropriate backfill materials |
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The primary Australian Standard for accessible path design — including crossfall, width, surface texture, and gradient requirements. Essential reference for all footpath designers and accessibility consultants working in 2026.
Visit Standards Australia →The Austroads Guide to Road Design Part 6A provides engineering design guidance for pedestrian paths, crossfall, kerb ramps, and shared paths across Australia and New Zealand, complementing AS 1428.1.
Visit Austroads →Browse the complete library of concrete and civil engineering guides on ConcreteMetric — covering pavement design, structural assessment, sustainability, and construction best practice for professionals in 2026.
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