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Sub-Base Preparation for Concrete – Complete Guide 2026 | ConcreteMetric
Concrete Construction Guide 2026

Sub-Base Preparation for Concrete

How to build a stable, well-drained sub-base that supports concrete slabs, driveways, pavements, and foundations for decades

A complete guide to sub-base preparation for concrete in 2026. Learn the correct layer sequence, materials, compaction standards, thickness requirements, drainage design, and common mistakes to avoid — for residential driveways through to industrial floor slabs and pavement construction.

Layer Sequence
Compaction Standards
Material Selection
Drainage Design

🏗️ Sub-Base Preparation for Concrete – Complete Guide

Essential knowledge for civil engineers, builders, concreters, and project managers preparing concrete slab and pavement foundations in 2026

✔ What Is a Concrete Sub-Base?

A concrete sub-base is the prepared layer of compacted granular material — typically crushed rock, gravel, or road base — placed directly beneath a concrete slab or pavement. It sits between the finished concrete and the natural subgrade soil below. The sub-base serves four critical functions: it provides a stable, uniform bearing surface for the slab; it improves drainage by breaking capillary rise; it reduces the impact of frost heave and subgrade moisture changes; and it acts as a working platform for concrete placement and finishing operations in 2026.

✔ Why Sub-Base Quality Determines Slab Life

The concrete slab is only as good as the base it sits on. A poorly prepared sub-base — uncompacted fill, soft spots, variable bearing, or inadequate drainage — causes differential settlement, slab cracking, joint faulting, and heaving. These failures are expensive and disruptive to repair and are almost always caused by inadequate sub-base preparation rather than defects in the concrete itself. Research consistently shows that sub-base preparation is the single most important factor in the long-term performance of industrial floor slabs, driveways, and concrete pavements.

✔ Sub-Base vs Subgrade vs Sub-Base Course

These terms are often confused. The subgrade is the in-situ or engineered natural soil at the bottom of the pavement structure — it is prepared but not replaced. The sub-base is a layer of imported granular material placed and compacted above the subgrade to improve bearing capacity and drainage. The base course (or road base) is an additional layer of higher-quality crushed aggregate placed above the sub-base, used in road pavements and heavy-duty industrial slabs. Residential driveways and house slabs typically require only a sub-base layer; heavy pavements require all three.

What Is Sub-Base Preparation for Concrete?

Sub-base preparation for concrete is the process of excavating, grading, compacting, and testing the ground beneath a concrete slab or pavement to create a stable, uniform, and well-drained foundation. It begins with removing topsoil and organic material, continues through the shaping and compaction of the natural subgrade, and concludes with the placement and compaction of imported granular fill to the specified depth and density. Every concrete slab — from a residential driveway to a major airport pavement — depends on a correctly prepared sub-base for its structural performance and long-term serviceability.

The sub-base transfers loads from the concrete slab to the subgrade soil below. Without it, concentrated loads from vehicles, equipment, or stored materials would punch through the soft natural soil and cause the slab to crack and settle unevenly. For guidance on how loads travel through concrete structures above the slab, see our guide on understanding concrete load paths, which explains how forces move from slabs through beams, columns, and foundations to the ground.

📐 Sub-Base Design — Key Parameters & Rules of Thumb

Minimum sub-base thickness (residential slab): 100 mm compacted granular material
Minimum sub-base thickness (commercial/industrial): 150–200 mm compacted crushed rock
Compaction target (sub-base): ≥ 98% Standard Proctor (AASHTO T99)
Compaction target (subgrade): ≥ 95% Standard Proctor
California Bearing Ratio (CBR) — sub-base: CBR ≥ 30% (residential) to ≥ 80% (industrial)
Drainage crossfall (sub-base surface): Min. 1% fall to edge drains or perimeter
Lift thickness per compaction pass: Max. 150 mm loose = approx. 125 mm compacted

🏗️ Concrete Pavement Layer Sequence — Cross-Section Diagram

⬇️ Applied Loads — Traffic, Equipment, Storage
🟫 Concrete Slab 100–300 mm thick
🟡 Sand Blinding / Slip Layer 25–50 mm
🟣 Compacted Sub-Base (Crushed Rock / Road Base) 100–300 mm
🟢 Prepared Subgrade (Compacted Natural Soil) Top 150–300 mm
🌍 Natural In-Situ Soil / Bedrock Varies
Concrete Slab
Sand Blinding
Sub-Base
Subgrade
Natural Soil
1️⃣ Strip &
Excavate
2️⃣ Prepare
Subgrade
3️⃣ Place &
Compact Sub-Base
4️⃣ Sand Blind
& Pour Concrete

Each layer must be completed, inspected, and tested before the next layer is placed. Never place sub-base material on uncompacted, wet, or disturbed subgrade — this is the most common cause of long-term slab failure.

Sub-Base Materials — What to Use in 2026

Selecting the right sub-base material is critical to achieving the required bearing capacity, drainage, and long-term stability. The best sub-base materials are granular, well-graded, free-draining, and resistant to breakdown under compaction and load. Avoid materials that are clay-rich, organic, or compressible — these will continue to settle under load and moisture change long after the concrete is placed.

🪨 Crushed Rock / Crushed Stone

Crushed rock (also called crushed aggregate base or road base) is the premium sub-base material for concrete slabs in 2026. It is angular, well-graded from coarse to fine (typically 20 mm nominal maximum size), and compacts to a dense, interlocked matrix with CBR values of 80–100%. It resists deformation under repeated loading and drains freely while still providing a stable working surface. Crushed rock is specified for all commercial, industrial, and heavy-duty residential concrete projects. Typical thickness: 150–200 mm compacted for industrial slabs; 100–150 mm for residential.

🟤 Gravel / Natural Crushed Gravel

Crushed gravel — natural river gravel that has been crushed to create angular faces — is a widely used sub-base material for residential driveways and light commercial slabs. It is less expensive than crushed rock but achieves slightly lower CBR values (typically 40–60%) due to its rounded particle shape. Natural uncrushed gravel (river gravel) is not recommended as a primary sub-base material under concrete slabs because its rounded particles resist interlocking and the sub-base can shift laterally under load. Always specify crushed or partially crushed gravel for concrete sub-base applications.

🏜️ Recycled Crushed Concrete (RCC)

Recycled crushed concrete — produced by crushing and screening demolition concrete — is an increasingly common sub-base material in 2026, particularly for sustainable construction and infrastructure projects. It achieves CBR values of 60–100% when well compacted, performs comparably to natural crushed rock in most applications, and diverts demolition waste from landfill. Recycled concrete sub-base must be free of contaminants (reinforcing steel, plastic, organic material) and may exhibit higher shrinkage due to residual unhydrated cement — allow adequate moisture conditioning before compaction.

⚪ Sand Sub-Base / Blinding Layer

Coarse, clean sand (free of silt and clay fines, passing 5 mm sieve) is used as a blinding layer — a thin 25–50 mm levelling course placed above the compacted granular sub-base, directly beneath the concrete slab. Sand blinding provides a smooth, level surface for placing the concrete, allows the slab to slide freely during thermal movement (reducing restraint cracking), and protects the plastic membrane from puncturing during reinforcement placement. Sand alone is not an acceptable primary sub-base material under structural concrete — it lacks the bearing capacity of crushed rock and is susceptible to erosion by water.

🚫 Materials to Avoid

Never use the following as sub-base material under concrete: topsoil or organic fill (compresses and decomposes), clay or high-plasticity soil (swells when wet, shrinks when dry), silty fill (low CBR, frost-susceptible), demolition fill with fines >35% (poor drainage and drainage), uncontrolled fill of unknown origin (variable bearing, settlement risk), and compressible materials such as peat or soft clay. If these materials are encountered in the excavation, they must be removed and replaced with engineered fill before the sub-base is placed.

🔵 Stabilised Sub-Base

For weak subgrades or where a thinner pavement structure is required, the sub-base material (or the upper subgrade) can be chemically stabilised with cement (1–3%), lime (3–6%), or fly ash. Stabilisation increases the CBR from typical subgrade values of 3–10% up to 30–80%, dramatically improving bearing capacity and reducing required sub-base thickness. Cement stabilisation is the most common method for industrial slab sub-bases in Australia, adding approximately 3% Portland cement by dry mass to the granular material before compaction. Stabilised sub-bases require a minimum 7-day curing period before concrete is placed.

Sub-Base Preparation — Step by Step

Sub-base preparation must be completed methodically, with each step inspected and tested before the next begins. Rushing or skipping steps — particularly compaction testing and subgrade inspection — is the leading cause of concrete slab failure in practice. Follow these steps for every concrete project in 2026, from residential house slabs to heavy industrial pavements.

  • Step 1 — Site Investigation: Before any excavation, review available geotechnical information: soil type, bearing capacity, groundwater level, and any fill or disturbed ground. For commercial and industrial projects, commission a geotechnical investigation (borehole or dynamic cone penetrometer testing) to determine subgrade CBR and soil classification. This data determines the required sub-base thickness and material specification. For residential projects, probe and visually inspect the subgrade after stripping to identify soft spots, tree roots, and fill areas.
  • Step 2 — Excavate and Strip: Remove all topsoil, vegetation, roots, and organic material from the slab area plus a minimum 300 mm beyond the slab edge. Topsoil depth varies but is typically 150–300 mm. Organic material must be completely removed — even small amounts left in place will decompose and cause settlement. Excavate to the formation level required by the design sub-base thickness plus any allowance for soft spot replacement.
  • Step 3 — Prepare and Proof-Roll the Subgrade: Shape the subgrade to the correct crossfall (minimum 1% for drainage) and proof-roll with a heavy smooth-drum or rubber-tyred roller. Soft spots — areas that deflect, rut, or pump under the roller — must be excavated and replaced with compacted granular fill. The subgrade must be compacted to a minimum of 95% of Standard Proctor density (AASHTO T99) for the top 150 mm before any sub-base material is placed.
  • Step 4 — Install Edge Restraints and Drainage: Before placing the sub-base, install perimeter edge boards or formwork, edge drains (slotted agricultural pipe or strip drains) where the design requires them, and any subgrade drainage blankets or geotextile separation layers. A geotextile fabric (non-woven, 150 g/m²) placed between the subgrade and sub-base prevents the fines from pumping up into the sub-base aggregate under cyclic loading — particularly important on clay subgrades.
  • Step 5 — Place Sub-Base in Layers: Spread the sub-base material in uniform loose lifts not exceeding 150 mm (loose thickness). Thicker lifts cannot be adequately compacted through their full depth regardless of the compaction equipment used. If the design sub-base thickness is 200 mm, place two 100 mm loose lifts and compact each separately. Use a grader or bobcat to achieve uniform layer thickness before compaction.
  • Step 6 — Compact Each Layer: Compact each lift with a vibratory plate compactor (for areas under 50 m²), vibratory roller (smooth drum, 1–3 tonne for residential; 5–10 tonne for commercial), or pad foot roller (for clay-rich materials). Make overlapping passes — minimum 4 passes for vibratory rollers, 6–8 passes for plate compactors. Compact from the edges toward the centre of the slab to prevent edge rollover. Moisture content is critical — material that is too dry or too wet will not compact to the required density.
  • Step 7 — Test Compaction: Conduct compaction testing on every layer before placing the next. The standard tests are the nuclear density gauge test (ASTM D6938) or sand replacement test (AS 1289.5.3.1) for density, and the dynamic cone penetrometer (DCP) for rapid CBR assessment. Sub-base must achieve ≥ 98% Modified Proctor (AASHTO T180) for heavy commercial or industrial slabs, or ≥ 95% Standard Proctor for residential applications. Do not proceed until testing confirms compliance.

💡 Worked Example — Industrial Slab Sub-Base Design

Project: 200 mm thick reinforced concrete industrial floor slab, forklift loads up to 5 tonnes.
Subgrade: Silty clay, CBR = 4% (tested after stripping).
Design CBR target at slab soffit: CBR ≥ 30%.
Solution:
— Remove top 150 mm of subgrade, compact remaining subgrade to 95% Standard Proctor.
— Place geotextile separation layer (200 g/m² non-woven).
— Place 200 mm compacted crushed rock sub-base (20 mm nominal) in two 100 mm lifts, each compacted to 98% Modified Proctor — achieved CBR ≈ 80%.
— Place 40 mm sand blinding, compact lightly, then lay 0.2 mm polyethylene moisture barrier.
— Place reinforcement and pour 200 mm N32 concrete.
Result: Sub-base CBR 80% far exceeds 30% requirement — slab adequately supported for forklift operations.

Sub-Base Thickness Requirements — 2026

Sub-base thickness depends on the applied loads, the subgrade strength (CBR), the concrete slab thickness, and the design standard being used. The table below provides guidance on typical sub-base thicknesses for common concrete applications. Thicker sub-bases are required on weaker subgrades and for heavier loads. Always verify against the project geotechnical report and applicable pavement design standard (Austroads, AASHTO, or project-specific specification).

Application Subgrade CBR Sub-Base Material Sub-Base Thickness Concrete Slab Thickness Compaction Target
Residential driveway ≥ 5% Crushed rock / road base 100 mm compacted 100 mm ≥ 95% Standard Proctor
House floor slab ≥ 5% Crushed rock / road base 100–150 mm compacted 85–100 mm ≥ 95% Standard Proctor
Commercial car park ≥ 8% Crushed rock 20 mm 150 mm compacted 125–150 mm ≥ 98% Modified Proctor
Light industrial floor ≥ 10% Crushed rock 20 mm 150–200 mm compacted 150–175 mm ≥ 98% Modified Proctor
Heavy industrial floor ≥ 15% Crushed rock 20 mm 200–300 mm compacted 200–250 mm ≥ 98% Modified Proctor
Low CBR subgrade (clay) < 5% Stabilised sub-base or imported fill 250–400 mm compacted Slab design to suit ≥ 98% Modified Proctor
Concrete road pavement ≥ 8% Crushed rock base course 150–200 mm base + sub-base 200–350 mm ≥ 98% Modified Proctor
Footpath / path slab ≥ 5% Sand or crusher dust 50–75 mm compacted 75–100 mm ≥ 95% Standard Proctor

Residential Applications

Driveway100 mm sub-base
House slab100–150 mm
Footpath50–75 mm
Compaction≥ 95% Standard Proctor

Commercial & Industrial

Car park150 mm
Light industrial150–200 mm
Heavy industrial200–300 mm
Compaction≥ 98% Modified Proctor

Weak Subgrade & Roads

Clay subgrade (CBR <5%)250–400 mm
Concrete road150–200 mm base
Stabilised sub-baseCement / lime treated

Drainage in Sub-Base Design

Drainage is the most critical and most frequently neglected aspect of sub-base design. Water trapped beneath a concrete slab softens the subgrade, promotes frost heave, causes loss of sub-base bearing capacity through fines migration, and accelerates joint deterioration through pumping. A well-designed drainage system extends concrete slab life by decades.

Surface Drainage

The sub-base surface must be graded to shed water before the concrete is placed. A minimum crossfall of 1% (1 in 100) — ideally 1.5–2% — must be maintained across the entire sub-base surface toward perimeter drains or outlets. Standing water on the sub-base immediately before concrete placement is a major quality defect — it raises the water-cement ratio at the slab base, reduces concrete strength at the most critical interface, and can cause delamination and dusting of the finished surface.

Sub-Surface Drainage

On sites with high groundwater, clay subgrades, or sloped terrain, subsurface drainage must be incorporated below or at the edges of the sub-base. Slotted agricultural pipe (100 mm diameter, wrapped in geotextile sock) placed at the sub-base/subgrade interface and connected to an outfall provides effective drainage of percolating water. Edge drains alongside the slab perimeter intercept water tracking in from surrounding ground surfaces. For large industrial floor slabs, a continuous drainage blanket — a 50–75 mm layer of single-size clean aggregate (20 mm) below the main sub-base — provides an unobstructed drainage path to perimeter outlets.

⚠️ Sub-Base Preparation — Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Placing sub-base on wet or frozen subgrade: If the subgrade is saturated or frozen, compaction is impossible and the material will rut under the roller. Wait for the subgrade to dry to near-optimum moisture content before placing sub-base material.
  • Compacting lifts that are too thick: A 300 mm loose lift compacted in one pass will have a dense top 100 mm but loose, under-compacted material below. Always compact in maximum 150 mm loose lifts.
  • Skipping compaction testing: Visual assessment of compaction is unreliable. Always confirm density with a nuclear gauge or sand replacement test before placing concrete — especially on commercial and industrial projects where settlement claims are costly.
  • Using recycled material without testing: Recycled concrete, brick rubble, and demolition fill are only suitable if tested for CBR, particle size distribution, and contaminant content. Unknown fill materials must never be used as sub-base without testing.
  • Allowing heavy equipment traffic on finished sub-base: Construction vehicles should be kept off the finished sub-base. If trafficking is unavoidable, protect the surface with a sacrificial 50 mm sand layer and proof-roll again before concrete placement.
  • Forgetting the geotextile separation layer: On clay or silty subgrades, omitting the geotextile allows fines to migrate up into the sub-base under load and moisture cycling, degrading the bearing capacity of the sub-base over time. For more on soil-concrete interaction and backfill materials, see our guide on backfill materials for retaining walls.

✅ Sub-Base Preparation Checklist — 2026

  • Site investigation complete: Subgrade CBR confirmed by testing, not assumed
  • Topsoil and organics removed: All topsoil, vegetation, roots, and organic fill stripped from the full slab area
  • Subgrade proofrolled: Soft spots identified, excavated, and replaced with compacted granular fill
  • Subgrade compaction tested: ≥ 95% Standard Proctor confirmed for top 150 mm of subgrade
  • Geotextile placed: Separation geotextile installed on clay or silty subgrades before sub-base placement
  • Sub-base placed in lifts: Maximum 150 mm loose lifts — each compacted and tested before the next is placed
  • Sub-base compaction tested: ≥ 98% Modified Proctor (commercial/industrial) or ≥ 95% Standard Proctor (residential) confirmed
  • Crossfall correct: Minimum 1% fall to drainage outlets confirmed across entire sub-base surface
  • Edge drains installed: Perimeter and subsurface drainage in place and connected to outfall
  • Sand blinding placed: 25–50 mm clean sand blinding placed and lightly tamped — level and smooth
  • Moisture barrier installed: 0.2 mm polyethylene sheet (or thicker as specified) placed with 300 mm laps — no punctures
  • Sub-base surface protected: No heavy equipment trafficking on finished sub-base before concrete pour

Frequently Asked Questions — Sub-Base Preparation for Concrete

How thick should the sub-base be under a concrete slab?
Sub-base thickness depends on the application, the subgrade CBR, and the applied loads. As a general guide: residential house slabs and driveways require a minimum of 100 mm of compacted crushed rock or road base on a subgrade with CBR ≥ 5%. Commercial slabs (car parks, warehouses) require 150 mm on CBR ≥ 8% subgrade. Heavy industrial slabs with forklift or racking loads require 200–300 mm on CBR ≥ 15% subgrade. On weak clay subgrades (CBR < 5%), the sub-base thickness must be increased to 250–400 mm, or the subgrade must be stabilised with cement or lime before sub-base placement. Always confirm sub-base thickness from a geotechnical report and pavement design calculation.
What is the best material for a concrete sub-base?
The best material for a concrete sub-base is well-graded crushed rock or crushed stone, with a nominal maximum aggregate size of 20 mm. Crushed rock compacts to a dense, interlocked matrix with CBR values of 80–100%, provides excellent bearing capacity, and drains freely while resisting erosion. Recycled crushed concrete is a good sustainable alternative with comparable performance when properly processed and free of contaminants. Avoid rounded river gravel (poor interlock), fine sand (insufficient bearing), clay-rich fill (swells and shrinks), and any organic material. For the sand blinding layer directly under the slab, use clean coarse sand that is free of silt and clay fines.
What compaction standard is required for a concrete sub-base?
The required compaction standard depends on the application. For residential driveways and house slabs, the sub-base must achieve a minimum of 95% of Standard Proctor Maximum Dry Density (MDD) per AASHTO T99 or AS 1289. For commercial and industrial applications — car parks, warehouses, logistics centres — the sub-base must achieve a minimum of 98% of Modified Proctor MDD (AASHTO T180). The subgrade below the sub-base must be compacted to a minimum of 95% Standard Proctor in all cases. Compaction must be verified by testing — nuclear density gauge (ASTM D6938) or sand replacement test (AS 1289.5.3.1) — not by visual inspection alone.
Do I need a moisture barrier under a concrete slab?
Yes — a moisture barrier (vapour barrier or damp-proof membrane) is required under all interior concrete slabs and is strongly recommended under exterior slabs in contact with soil. The moisture barrier prevents ground moisture from migrating upward through the concrete slab, protecting floor coverings, adhesives, and any below-slab insulation from moisture damage. The Australian Standard AS 2870 and ACI 302.1R both require a minimum 0.2 mm (200 micron) polyethylene sheet placed with 300 mm overlapping laps, taped at joints, and turned up at the perimeter. The barrier is placed above the sand blinding layer, directly beneath the concrete. Take care to avoid puncturing the membrane during reinforcement placement.
What is the difference between sub-base and subgrade?
The subgrade is the in-situ natural soil or engineered fill that forms the foundation of the pavement structure. It exists in place — it is prepared and compacted but not replaced (unless it is unsuitable). The sub-base is a layer of imported, engineered granular material — typically crushed rock or road base — placed and compacted above the subgrade to improve bearing capacity, provide uniform support, and aid drainage. The sub-base bridges the gap between the weak natural subgrade and the structural concrete slab above it. In road pavement terminology, a base course (higher-quality aggregate) is sometimes placed above the sub-base, creating a three-layer granular structure: subgrade → sub-base → base course → concrete surface.
Can I pour concrete directly on compacted soil without a sub-base?
It is technically possible in limited circumstances — specifically where the in-situ soil has been confirmed by testing to have a CBR ≥ 15% after compaction, is free of organic content, is not frost-susceptible, and the slab is lightly loaded (residential use only). However, even in these favourable conditions, a 100 mm sub-base is strongly recommended for the additional protection it provides against moisture variation, frost heave, and the practical difficulty of finishing concrete directly on a natural soil surface. For all commercial, industrial, and public infrastructure concrete, a properly designed and tested sub-base is mandatory. Omitting the sub-base to save cost almost always results in far higher expenditure on crack repairs and slab rehabilitation within 5–10 years.
How do I deal with soft spots found during sub-base preparation?
Soft spots — areas of the subgrade that deflect, rut, or pump when proof-rolled — must be excavated and replaced before any sub-base material is placed. The typical process is: excavate the soft material to firm ground (minimum 300 mm or to the full depth of the weak zone), inspect the excavation base, and compact the bottom of the excavation. Then backfill in 150 mm loose lifts with compacted crushed rock or select fill (compacted to 98% Modified Proctor), building up to the formation level of the surrounding subgrade. Do not simply cover soft spots with additional sub-base thickness — the weak material will continue to compress under load and cause the slab above to crack and settle regardless of the sub-base thickness placed over it.

Sub-Base Preparation Resources

📘 ACI 302.1R — Guide for Concrete Floor Construction

ACI 302.1R is the primary US reference for concrete floor slab construction, covering sub-base preparation, moisture barriers, reinforcement, concrete mix design, placement, and finishing. It provides detailed guidance on sub-base thickness, compaction requirements, and moisture management for concrete slabs-on-ground in residential, commercial, and industrial applications. Essential reading for anyone designing or constructing concrete floor slabs in 2026.

ACI International →

🏗️ Concrete Load Paths — Slab to Foundation

Understanding how loads travel from the concrete slab surface through the sub-base and subgrade to the bearing stratum below helps engineers correctly size both the slab and its supporting layers. A well-designed load path — from applied loads at the top of the slab all the way down to the soil — depends on every layer in the pavement structure performing as designed, starting with the sub-base. Our load path guide explains this complete force transfer system in detail.

Read the Guide →

🌍 Backfilling Around Concrete Foundations

Sub-base preparation and backfill placement around foundations are closely related operations — both involve compacting granular material against or beneath concrete structural elements, and both require careful moisture control, lift thickness management, and compaction testing. Excessive compaction energy adjacent to freshly placed concrete foundations can cause lateral movement and cracking. Our backfilling guide covers compatible compaction methods and equipment selection for work close to concrete structures.

Read the Guide →