glossary Glossary 4 min read

Bearing strata

Bearing strata is the soil layer with adequate capacity to support footing loads. Identified by geotech; drives pier depth, pad sizing, and footing design under AS 2870.

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Bearing strata is the soil or rock layer with adequate bearing capacity to support the loads imposed by a structure’s footings. The geotech identifies the bearing strata through site investigation (boreholes, test pits, penetrometer probes); the engineer designs footings to transfer loads into the bearing strata at the required depth. Bearing strata is the central concept behind pier depth, pad sizing, and footing-down-to-bearing design under AS 2870 and AS 1726.

Why builders care:

Identifying the bearing strata depth is what drives the cost of the foundation system. Cost-relevant cases:

Bearing strata depthTypical foundation systemCost band (3-bed residential, 2026 AUD)
Surface (0-300 mm)Strip footing or waffle slab on standard fill$25-$40k
0.3-1.5 mStiffened raft slab with edge beams$35-$55k
1.5-3.0 mBored piers to bearing strata + ground beam$45-$80k
3.0-6.0 mDeep bored piers (cased) + ground beam$70-$130k
> 6.0 mDriven piles or screw piers$100k+

How bearing strata is identified:

  1. Geotech investigation under AS 1726:
    • Boreholes with split-spoon sampling and SPT (Standard Penetration Test) blow counts.
    • Test pits (excavator-dug pits to 2-3 m).
    • DCP (Dynamic Cone Penetrometer) for shallow surface bearing.
  2. Bearing capacity criterion depends on the structure:
    • Residential strip footing: allowable bearing typically 100 kPa minimum.
    • Residential pad footing: 150-200 kPa allowable.
    • Pier: socket the pier 1-2 diameters into competent rock, OR base of pier on stiff clay / dense sand at allowable 200+ kPa.
  3. Verification at construction: the engineer or geotech may inspect during pier-hole drilling to confirm the strata as drilled is the strata as designed.

Distinguishing related terms:

  • Bearing strata: the layer that actually supports the load.
  • Founding strata: the specific stratum the footing or pier base sits on; effectively a subset of bearing strata for the actual footing location.
  • Competent material: a broader term for soil or rock with adequate strength for the application; not necessarily the bearing layer (e.g. fill can be competent for pavement but not residential footing).
  • Active zone (AS 2870): the depth to which seasonal moisture cycling penetrates; usually above bearing strata.

Common builder issues:

  • Bearing strata deeper than expected at construction: pier hole keeps drilling; cost blows out. Insist on per-pier sign-off by geotech.
  • Bearing strata sloping or variable: one pier hits at 2 m, the adjacent pier needs 4 m. Common on rocky sites.
  • Fill misidentified as bearing: an old uncontrolled fill can look firm but compress under load. Always verify with proper soil investigation, not just visual inspection.
  • Water table at bearing strata depth: piers below water table need casing or different installation method; cost penalty.

For builders:

  1. Spec a proper geotech report for any non-trivial foundation system (any pier, any sloping site, any sandy or filled site). $1,500-$3,000 for the report saves orders of magnitude on the foundation.
  2. Brief the geotech on the proposed footing system so they investigate to the relevant depth. A surface DCP isn’t enough for piered design.
  3. Allow contingency in the foundation budget on sites where bearing depth is variable. 15-25% contingency is typical for piered sites.
  4. Sign off every pier with the engineer or geotech during installation. Don’t accept “looks ok” from the piling contractor alone.

Also known as: founding strata, competent material, load-bearing layer.

Category: Geotechnical / footings / foundation design.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-15. Verified: 2026-05-15.