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Ready-Mix Delivery Docket Explained 2026 | Complete UK Guide
Ready-Mix Concrete Guide 2026

Ready-Mix Delivery Docket Explained

Every field on your concrete delivery docket — what it means and why it matters

Understand your ready-mix delivery docket in full. From batch plant data and mix design fields to on-site checks, legal obligations, dispute protection, and what to do if your docket is wrong — the complete UK guide for 2026.

All Docket Fields
On-Site Checks
Dispute Protection
UK Standards 2026

🧾 Ready-Mix Delivery Docket Explained

The delivery docket is your legal record — know it before the truck arrives on site

✅ What Is a Delivery Docket?

A ready-mix concrete delivery docket (also called a delivery ticket or batch ticket) is the official document that accompanies every load of ready-mixed concrete from the batching plant to your site. Under BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 and BS 8500, suppliers are legally required to provide this document with each delivery. It records the mix specification, volume, batch times, plant data, and on-site readings — forming your primary evidence of what was delivered and when.

✅ Why You Must Read It

Most concrete disputes on UK sites — wrong grade delivered, slump failures, added water at site, delayed discharge — come down to what is or is not recorded on the docket. If you sign it without checking, you legally accept the load as delivered. Checking every field before signing protects you against non-conforming concrete, supplier billing errors, and costly structural remediation work later. A five-minute check on site can save thousands of pounds in 2026.

✅ When Does It Apply?

Every ready-mix delivery to a UK site — whether a domestic slab, commercial foundation, RC frame, or infrastructure pour — must come with a compliant docket. This applies to all concrete supplied to BS EN 206 and BS 8500 designated or designed mixes. Self-compacting concrete, fibre-reinforced mixes, and air-entrained mixes each have additional fields. Retain all dockets for a minimum of 10 years as part of your construction quality records.

🧾 Anatomy of a Ready-Mix Delivery Docket

READY-MIXED CONCRETE DELIVERY DOCKET

BS EN 206 / BS 8500 Compliant  |  Ticket No: 000000  |  Date: DD/MM/2026

  • Customer name
  • Site address
  • Order / contract no.
  • Contact name
  • Plant name & location
  • Truck / mixer no.
  • Time batched
  • Time dispatched
  • Mix design ref / class
  • Strength class (e.g. C25/30)
  • Cement type & content
  • w/c ratio & slump class
  • Volume ordered (m³)
  • Volume delivered (m³)
  • Cumulative volume
  • Load number
  • Arrival time at site
  • Start / finish discharge
  • Slump at site (mm)
  • Concrete temperature (°C)
  • Water added (litres)
  • Admixture added (type/qty)
  • Fibre added (kg/m³)
  • Authorised by (signature)

Figure 1 — Typical ready-mix delivery docket layout showing all six key sections and the three required signature fields

Section 1: Customer & Site Information Fields

The top section of every ready-mix delivery docket identifies the parties and the pour location. It will include the customer or contractor name, the full site address, the purchase order or contract reference number, and the name of the person authorised to receive concrete on site. Always check this section first — if the site address is wrong, there is a risk the load has been diverted from another job, meaning the mix specification may not match your order.

For larger projects with multiple pours on the same day, also verify the order reference number against your delivery schedule. A mismatch here is the most common source of billing disputes between contractors and ready-mix suppliers on UK commercial sites in 2026. Internal links to your project file and the original purchase order should be cross-referenced at this point.

📌 Key Check — Site Information

Confirm the site address and order number match your purchase order before allowing the truck to discharge. Once concrete is poured, accepting a wrong-site load becomes your liability.

Batch Plant Data on the Ready-Mix Delivery Docket

The batch plant section records where and when your concrete was made. It includes the plant name, plant location, truck or mixer registration number, batching time, and dispatch time. Under BS EN 206, the clock starts from the time water first contacts cement — this is your reference point for the maximum permitted time from batching to discharge, which under standard UK conditions is 90 minutes or 300 drum revolutions, whichever comes first.

⏱️ Maximum Discharge Time

Standard BS EN 206 / BS 8500 limit is 90 minutes from time of batching to completion of discharge on site. Some suppliers specify 120 minutes for retarded mixes — check your mix spec and order confirmation. Exceeding this limit voids the strength guarantee.

🔄 Maximum Drum Revolutions

No more than 300 total drum revolutions are permitted from the point of charging to discharge. The docket should record revolutions at batching and at site. High revolution counts at plant (e.g. during long transport) reduce the revolutions available for mixing on site.

🏭 Plant Traceability

The plant reference allows you to trace the batch records, aggregate source, cement certificate, and admixture batch back to the plant's own QC records. This is essential if a cube test fails and you need to investigate the cause. Always retain dockets with cube test records together.

Mix Specification Fields — The Most Critical Section

This is the most technically important section of the ready-mix delivery docket. It defines exactly what concrete you ordered and should have received. Key fields under BS 8500-1:2015+A2:2019 include the designation (e.g. RC32/40), strength class (e.g. C32/40), cement or combination type (e.g. CEM II/A-L or GGBS blend), minimum cement content (kg/m³), maximum water-cement ratio, target slump or flow class, and maximum aggregate size (mm). Each of these must match your specification exactly.

Docket Field What to Check BS 8500 Reference Status
Strength Class Matches spec (e.g. C25/30, C32/40) BS EN 206 Cl. 4.3 MUST CHECK
Designation / Mix Ref Matches your purchase order exactly BS 8500-1 Table A.1 MUST CHECK
Cement Type CEM type and any additions (GGBS, PFA %) BS 8500-1 Cl. 4.3 MUST CHECK
Cement Content (kg/m³) At or above specified minimum BS 8500-1 Table A.5 MUST CHECK
Max w/c Ratio At or below specified maximum BS 8500-1 Table A.5 MUST CHECK
Target Slump / Flow Class Matches ordered consistency class BS EN 206 Table 3 CHECK ON SITE
Max Aggregate Size (mm) Suitable for element dimensions and cover BS EN 206 Cl. 5.4.2 CHECK ON SITE
Admixture Type / Dosage Matches order — retarder, plasticiser, air-entraining agent BS EN 934-2 RECORD
Air Entrainment (%) Required for freeze-thaw exposed elements BS 8500-1 Table A.5 RECORD

Strength Class & Designation

What to CheckMatches spec exactly
ReferenceBS EN 206 Cl. 4.3
StatusMUST CHECK

Cement Type & Content

What to CheckCEM type, GGBS/PFA %, ≥ min kg/m³
ReferenceBS 8500-1 Cl. 4.3 & Table A.5
StatusMUST CHECK

Max w/c Ratio

What to CheckAt or below specified maximum
ReferenceBS 8500-1 Table A.5
StatusMUST CHECK

Slump / Flow Class

What to CheckMatches ordered consistency class
ReferenceBS EN 206 Table 3
StatusCHECK ON SITE

Admixtures & Air Content

What to CheckType, dosage, air % match order
ReferenceBS EN 934-2 / BS 8500-1
StatusRECORD

Volume and Load Number Fields on the Docket

The volume fields show the volume ordered (m³), volume loaded on this truck (m³), and cumulative volume delivered to date for the pour. These are critical for billing accuracy and pour continuity. For multi-truck pours, each docket carries a load number (e.g. Load 3 of 7) so you can track the pour sequence and identify if a truck has been delayed or rerouted.

Always record the start and finish discharge time on site against each docket. If a truck arrives late and the cumulative pour time is being extended, this is your evidence for any cold joint risk assessment. A useful internal reference is your concrete structure assessment guide if pour delays raise questions about in-situ quality after placement.

⚠️ Short Loads and Volume Disputes

If the delivered volume appears less than the docket states, do not sign until the discrepancy is noted in writing on the docket itself. Add "volume in dispute — see site records" and have both parties initial. This preserves your right to contest the invoice and request a return load or credit.

On-Site Readings — What Must Be Measured at Discharge

The on-site readings section is completed at the point of discharge by the site receiver or designated quality person. It records arrival time, discharge start and finish times, slump test result (mm), concrete temperature (°C), and ambient temperature (°C). Under BS EN 206, concrete temperature at discharge should be between 5°C and 35°C. In cold weather pours below 5°C or hot weather above 30°C, additional precautions and records are required by your specification.

1

Record Arrival Time

Note the exact time the truck arrives at site. This starts the discharge clock against the 90-minute batching limit shown on the docket.

2

Check Mix Spec Fields

Before discharge begins, confirm strength class, designation, cement type, and slump class match your order confirmation exactly.

3

Perform Slump Test

Carry out a slump test to BS EN 12350-2. Record the result on the docket. Reject the load if the slump is outside the specified consistency class tolerance.

4

Take Cube Samples

Take test cubes to BS EN 12390-2 where required by spec. Record the cube reference numbers on the docket for traceability back to the batch.

5

Check Temperature

Measure concrete temperature at discharge using a calibrated probe. Record on docket. Flag any reading outside 5°C–35°C before signing off.

6

Sign and Retain

Sign only after all checks are complete and any discrepancies are noted on the docket. Retain your copy — never let the driver take the only copy.

Water and Admixture Additions at Site

One of the most critical — and most abused — sections of the ready-mix delivery docket is the additions at site field. BS EN 206 and BS 8500 are explicit: water must not be added to the mix on site without the supplier's authorisation and must be recorded on the docket. The docket will show the maximum water allowable at site (calculated to remain within the specified w/c ratio), and any water added beyond this immediately invalidates the supplier's strength guarantee.

📐 Permissible Water at Site

Max water at site (L) = (Max w/c ratio × Cement content kg/m³ × Volume m³) − Water batched at plant (L)
e.g.: (0.55 × 350 kg/m³ × 6 m³) − 1,050 L batched = 1,155 − 1,050 = 105 litres maximum

Any water added above this figure increases the effective w/c ratio, reduces strength, and increases permeability. The docket must record the exact volume added, who authorised it, and at what time.

Admixture additions at site (e.g. re-dosing with superplasticiser) must similarly be recorded with the product name, batch number, dosage in ml/kg cement, and the name of the person authorising the addition. For air-entrained concrete used in freeze-thaw exposed elements — see our air-entrained concrete guide — the air content must be re-checked after any admixture addition at site as dosing affects entrained air levels.

Signatures and Legal Status of the Docket

A fully completed ready-mix delivery docket carries three signatures: the batching plant operator (confirming the mix was batched to specification), the truck driver (confirming safe transport and delivery of that load), and the site receiver or contractor's authorised representative (confirming receipt of the stated volume in acceptable condition). By signing, the site receiver confirms acceptance of the concrete as delivered.

✅ Before You Sign — Final Checklist

  • Mix designation and strength class match your specification and purchase order
  • Cement type, content, and w/c ratio match your spec (especially for aggressive exposure classes)
  • Volume delivered matches what was ordered for this load
  • Batching time is within the 90-minute discharge limit
  • Slump test result is within the specified consistency class tolerance
  • Concrete temperature is between 5°C and 35°C (or within hot/cold weather protocol limits)
  • Any water or admixture additions at site have been recorded and authorised
  • Cube sample reference numbers are recorded on the docket (if cubes taken)
  • Any discrepancies or observations are written on the docket before signing

What to Do When the Docket Shows a Problem

If any field on the ready-mix delivery docket does not match your order or falls outside acceptable limits, you have three options: reject the load, accept with a written qualification noted on the docket, or hold the load pending a decision. For strength class or cement type errors, rejection is usually the correct response — especially for structural pours. For minor slump variations within the same consistency class, a noted acceptance may be appropriate if the concrete is workable and the pour can proceed safely.

Always photograph the docket before the truck leaves site. Document any verbal communications with the batch plant or supplier in writing immediately. For foundations and structural elements, consider the guidance in our existing concrete structures assessment guide if there is any doubt about the quality of concrete that has already been placed. Backfilling operations around foundations should only proceed once docket records confirm the correct concrete was placed — see the backfilling around concrete foundations guide for related sequencing advice.

Record Keeping and Retention of Delivery Dockets

Delivery dockets are primary quality records under the Construction Products Regulation and form part of the conformity evidence required by BS EN 206 and BS 8500. For UK projects subject to Building Regulations, dockets must be retained for a minimum of 10 years from the date of practical completion. For infrastructure, highways, and civil engineering projects, retention periods may extend to 25 years depending on the contract specification.

🗂️ What to File With Each Docket

Store each delivery docket together with the corresponding cube test result sheet, pour record (location, element, pour date), slump test record, and any site addition authorisation forms. Cross-reference by load number and pour date so records can be retrieved quickly if a cube failure occurs weeks later.

📱 Digital Dockets in 2026

Many UK ready-mix suppliers now issue electronic delivery dockets via SMS, email, or supplier portal. These carry the same legal status as paper dockets provided they include all required BS EN 206 fields and a verifiable digital signature. Download and archive digital dockets immediately — do not rely on supplier portals for long-term retention.

⚖️ Dockets in Dispute Resolution

In the event of a structural defect, cube failure, or billing dispute, the delivery docket is the first document requested by structural engineers, solicitors, and insurers. Dockets with site-recorded slump, temperature, and addition data substantially strengthen your position. Missing dockets leave you unable to prove what was actually delivered.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions — Ready-Mix Delivery Docket

What standard governs ready-mix delivery docket requirements in the UK?
In the UK, ready-mix concrete delivery dockets must comply with BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 (Concrete — Specification, performance, production and conformity) and BS 8500-1:2015+A2:2019 (Complementary British Standard to BS EN 206). These standards define the mandatory information that must appear on every delivery document. Your supplier's QA system and third-party certification (e.g. QSRMC or BBA) will also specify docket content requirements.
Can I add water to ready-mix concrete on site?
Water may only be added on site if the docket shows remaining water allowance within the specified maximum w/c ratio, and only with the written authorisation of the concrete supplier. The exact volume added, the time of addition, and the authorising person's name must be recorded on the docket. Any unauthorised water addition voids the supplier's compressive strength guarantee and may constitute a breach of your mix specification under contract.
What is the maximum time allowed from batching to discharge?
The standard limit under BS EN 206 is 90 minutes from the time of batching (when water first contacts cement) to the completion of discharge on site, or 300 total drum revolutions — whichever occurs first. Some suppliers offer extended times for retarded mixes (up to 120 minutes) but this must be agreed and stated in the mix specification before delivery. The batching time on the docket is your reference point — check it against your site arrival time immediately.
What should I write on the docket if I reject a load?
Write clearly on the docket: "LOAD REJECTED — [state the reason, e.g. wrong strength class / slump outside spec / exceeded discharge time]", add the time of rejection, and sign it. Ask the driver to countersign acknowledging the rejection. Photograph the docket before the truck leaves. Notify your supplier immediately by phone and follow up in writing. Do not allow the truck to discharge if you are rejecting the load — once concrete is placed it is extremely difficult to remove.
How long should I keep ready-mix delivery dockets?
For building projects subject to UK Building Regulations, retain dockets for a minimum of 10 years from practical completion. For infrastructure and civil engineering projects, retention may be specified at 25 years. Store dockets with associated quality records (cube results, pour records, test reports). Digital copies are acceptable for long-term storage provided they are backed up and retrievable — do not rely solely on your supplier's portal.
What is the difference between a designated mix and a designed mix on the docket?
A designated mix (e.g. RC32/40XF1) is a pre-defined mix from BS 8500-2 Table A.1 where the supplier is responsible for meeting the full specification. A designed mix requires the purchaser to specify the full performance requirements (strength class, cement type, additions, exposure class, w/c ratio, cement content). Both must appear clearly on the docket. Designated mixes offer simpler ordering for standard applications; designed mixes offer more control for bespoke structural specifications.
Does an electronic delivery docket have the same legal status as a paper one?
Yes — in the UK, an electronic delivery docket carries the same legal status as a paper docket provided it contains all the mandatory fields required by BS EN 206 and is accompanied by a verifiable digital signature or confirmation of acceptance. The Electronic Communications Act 2000 and the Electronic Signatures Regulations 2002 underpin this in UK law. However, you must ensure you download and archive electronic dockets yourself — supplier portal access is not a substitute for your own records.

📖 Standards & Resources

BS EN 206 & BS 8500

The primary UK standards governing concrete specification, production, and conformity. BS 8500 is the complementary British Standard that adds UK-specific designated mixes, exposure class guidance, and docket content requirements for 2026.

View BSI Standards →

QSRMC Scheme

The Quality Scheme for Ready Mixed Concrete (QSRMC) is the UK's leading third-party certification scheme for ready-mix producers. QSRMC-certified suppliers are audited against BS EN 206 requirements including docket content, batch records, and QC processes.

QSRMC Website →

The Concrete Society

The Concrete Society publishes technical guidance reports, good practice guides, and training materials covering ready-mix specification, docket interpretation, cube testing, and conformity assessment — highly recommended for UK concrete practitioners in 2026.

Concrete Society →