glossary Glossary 2 min read

Borehole

A borehole is a drilled hole that samples and logs soil at depth for the geotech, reaching deeper than a test pit. It feeds the bore log and AS 2870 site class.

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A borehole is a drilled hole made during site investigation to recover and log the soil and rock layers at depth before footings are designed. A drilling rig or auger bores down, samples are taken at intervals, and the findings are recorded as a bore log.

Borehole vs test pit: a borehole reaches deeper than a test pit and lets the geotechnical engineer sample soils a pit cannot reach. Test pits are quick and cheap for near-surface soils on a standard block; boreholes suit deeper investigation, multi-storey buildings, piled footings, or sites where the founding layer sits well below the surface.

What it feeds:

Common limitation: like a test pit, a borehole only samples one point. The number and spread of boreholes across a site determines how well the investigation captures variation in the ground.

Also known as: bore, drill hole.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-24. Verified: 2026-05-24. Quarterly review for currency.