glossary Glossary 2 min read

Load-bearing wall

A load-bearing wall carries structural load from above down to the footing. How it differs from a partition, how to identify one, and why removal needs an engineer.

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A load-bearing wall is a wall that carries vertical structural load from the roof, ceiling, or floors above and transfers it down through the frame to the footing. It contrasts with a non-loadbearing wall (a partition), which only divides space and carries its own weight.

Load-bearing wallNon-loadbearing (partition)
Carries load from aboveYesNo
Typical stud spacingCloser (often 450 mm)Wider (often 600 mm)
Can be removed freelyNo, needs a replacement load pathUsually yes
Sized fromAS 1684 span tables for the loadMinimum framing only

How to spot one: walls running at right angles to the floor joists or rafters, walls sitting under a beam or a wall above, and most external walls are usually load-bearing. This is a guide only; confirm from the structural drawings rather than assume.

Why it matters in a renovation: a load-bearing wall cannot be removed or opened up without providing an alternative load path, typically a lintel or beam carried on posts down to adequate footings, designed by a structural engineer. Knocking one out without that support is a serious structural defect: floors and ceilings sag, and cracking follows.

Common defect: opening or removing a load-bearing wall without an engineered beam and proper support to the footing below.

Also known as: loadbearing wall, structural wall.

See also


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