Breaking-surf zone
The breaking-surf zone is the ~1 km strip from breaking waves with the highest salt aerosol load. Triggers Grade 316L wall ties and the strictest corrosion specs.
Ask Chalkline about this →The breaking-surf zone is an exposure classification used for corrosion design: the strip of land within roughly 1 km of breaking surf, where wind-blown salt aerosol from breaking waves drives the highest atmospheric chloride loading on a building site. It carries the strictest fastener, tie, and coating corrosion-protection requirements in residential standards, and is the trigger for the R4 corrosion class under AS 2699 and AS 3700 / AS 4773.
Why it matters
Salt aerosol from breaking waves is far more aggressive than generic coastal air. A site 500 m back from breaking surf sees orders-of-magnitude more chloride deposition than the same site 5 km inland. That chloride attacks:
- Wall ties and masonry fixings: galvanised ties corrode out within years; only stainless (Grade 316L) or engineered polymer last the building’s life.
- Roof sheet and fasteners: standard pre-painted steel pits and stains; products like Colorbond Ultra and stainless fasteners are the breaking-surf-rated specification.
- Window and door hardware: standard galvanising or low-grade stainless rusts; marine-grade (316/316L) hardware is required for service life.
How the rule is set
The standards use a distance-from-breaking-surf ladder rather than a single line:
- Within 1 km of breaking surf: the breaking-surf zone proper. R4 corrosion class under AS 2699 (wall ties) and equivalent in AS 3700 / AS 4773 (masonry). Grade 316L stainless or engineered polymer for masonry ties; marine-grade fixings throughout.
- 1 to 10 km from breaking surf: moderate coastal (R3). HDG470 heavy galvanising or 304L stainless for ties; coating systems uplifted from standard.
- Beyond 10 km: standard galvanising and standard coatings generally sufficient.
The 1 km/10 km bands sit in NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Table 5.6.5d and in the AS 2699.1:2020 corrosion-class table (see wall ties for the verified table).
What counts as breaking surf
The trigger is breaking waves, not just proximity to water. A site on a sheltered estuary or bay 200 m from the shoreline may not be in the breaking-surf zone if there is no surf reaching that shore; a site 800 m from an exposed ocean beach is in it.
For non-surf saltwater (estuaries, harbours, sheltered coasts), the standards use a separate distance band, typically within 100 m, with similar but not identical corrosion implications. Check the relevant standard for the specific component.
Also known as: breaking-surf coastal zone, severe marine zone, R4 exposure.
Category: Compliance / coastal exposure
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Last updated: 2026-05-29. Verified: 2026-05-29. Quarterly review for currency.