glossary Glossary 3 min read

Chemical soil termite barrier

A chemical soil termite barrier is a termiticide-treated soil zone (bifenthrin, fipronil) forming the chemical route under AS 3660.1 vs a physical barrier.

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A chemical soil termite barrier is a termiticide-treated soil zone around the building perimeter and under slab penetrations, forming the chemical route to AS 3660.1 compliance as opposed to a physical route (stainless mesh, graded stone, treated sheet). The active in the soil is a termiticide, typically fipronil (non-repellent) or bifenthrin (repellent synthetic pyrethroid).

What it is

A licensed pest tech applies a soil-stable termiticide formulation to:

  • The perimeter trench around the slab edge (post-pour) or to the slab-prep blanket (pre-pour).
  • Under slab penetrations (plumbing, conduit, columns) before pour.
  • Around construction joints in multi-pour slabs.

The treated soil forms a chemical-active zone that termites either avoid (repellent) or transit unaware while picking up a lethal dose (non-repellent).

Chemical vs physical barrier families

AS 3660.1 recognises three barrier families. Builders pick one (or pair two for redundancy):

FamilyExamplesHow it works
Chemical soilBifenthrin, fipronil, imidacloprid in soilTermites contact or transit the treated zone
PhysicalTermimesh, Granitgard, reinforced slabMechanical exclusion, no chemistry
Treated-sheetKordon, HomeGuardPhysical sheet + embedded chemical

Chemical is typically cheapest at install. Physical lasts the life of the building with no recharge. Treated-sheet combines both at a price premium.

Service life

ActiveSoil-stable life
Bifenthrin~10 years
Fipronil~8 years
Imidacloprid~5-8 years

After service-life expiry the owner faces three choices:

  1. Recharge via pre-installed reticulation pipework.
  2. Re-trench and re-treat (disruptive, landscaping-blocked).
  3. Switch to physical (major work).

The pre-installed reticulation system is the deciding factor in whether recharge is cheap or expensive at year 8-10.

For a builder

  • Coordinate the pest tech with the slab program. Pre-pour blanket goes in before reinforcement; perimeter trench after pour.
  • Document active + concentration + applicator + date. Required for warranty and recharge scheduling.
  • Pair with reticulation unless the owner is OK paying for re-trench at year 8-10.
  • Brief the owner: the chemical zone is not a barrier they can see. Stick to the inspection cycle; the system has finite life.
  • For non-repellent: explain the transfer effect. Mud tubes may appear during the colony-kill window; that’s the system working.

Category: Termite management.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-29. Verified: 2026-05-29. Quarterly review for currency.