Mortar mix (NCC classification)
NCC Housing Provisions Table 5.6.3 sets three mortar mixes: Protected 1:2:9, GP 1:1:6, Exposure 1:0.5:4.5. Over-strong mortar locks in movement, spalls brick.
Ask Chalkline about this →A mortar mix in masonry construction is the volumetric ratio of Portland cement to hydrated lime to sand that defines the working consistency, strength, durability, and movement-accommodation properties of the mortar. The NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Volume Two, Table 5.6.3, sets three standard mixes for residential masonry: Protected, General Purpose, and Exposure. Each mix is matched to an exposure category and load class. Over-specifying the mix (using Exposure where General Purpose would suffice) is a common defect that locks in differential movement and causes brick spalling. Verified per NCC 2022 (2026-05-16).
The three NCC standard mixes:
| Mix name | Cement : Lime : Sand (volume) | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Protected (M1) | 1 : 2 : 9 | Internal walls, lower loaded; high workability, more permeable |
| General Purpose (M2) | 1 : 1 : 6 | Most external residential walls in moderate exposure (most of Australia) |
| Exposure (M3) | 1 : 0.5 : 4.5 | Coastal, marine, severe weather, parapets, retaining walls |
(All current per NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Table 5.6.3 and AS 3700:2018.)
Why mortar strength matters (the “harder is better” myth):
A common builder reflex is “more cement = stronger = better”. For mortar, this is wrong in two important ways:
| Effect | What happens |
|---|---|
| Mortar harder than the brick | The brick is the sacrificial element. As the wall moves (thermal, moisture, foundation), the energy is concentrated in the brick face, causing spalling and frost damage |
| Reduced movement accommodation | Soft mortar absorbs cyclical movement. Hard mortar transmits it; cracks open up |
| Reduced moisture mobility | Lime in soft mortar lets the wall breathe; cement-heavy mortar traps moisture against the brick, causing efflorescence and salt damage |
| Bond to brick | Soft mortar conforms to and bonds with brick surface; hard mortar doesn’t penetrate or bond well |
The rule of thumb: the mortar should be softer than the brick. A soft brick (e.g. heritage hand-made) takes a soft mortar (Protected); a modern engineering brick takes General Purpose. Exposure mix is reserved for severe exposure conditions where the mortar must resist coastal salt and freeze-thaw.
Application of each mix:
Protected (1:2:9):
- Internal partition walls.
- Sheltered south-facing walls in temperate regions.
- Heritage repointing where lime mortar must accommodate movement.
- Walls behind air gaps (the cavity protects them).
General Purpose (1:1:6):
- Most external residential brickwork in temperate Australia (Sydney, Brisbane temperate zones, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide standard).
- Standard cavity brick veneer.
- Internal load-bearing walls.
Exposure (1:0.5:4.5):
- Coastal (within 1 km of breaking surf, AS 3700 exposure category).
- Cyclonic regions (C1-C4).
- Parapets and chimney capping (exposed to weather on multiple faces).
- Retaining walls.
- Industrial chimneys and high-exposure structures.
Common defects:
- Over-strong mortar inappropriate for the brick: spalling brick face within 3-10 years.
- Inconsistent batching: a batched-on-site mix that varies through the day. Use a mortar mixer with measured buckets.
- Adding water beyond initial mix: “knocking-up” adds water but doesn’t replace cement and reduces strength. Use within 1.5 hours of initial mixing.
- Wrong sand: sharp/coarse sand makes harsh mortar; fine plastering sand makes weak mortar. Use bricklayer’s sand (washed, well-graded).
- Mortar bed too thick or too thin: target 10 mm bed joint, 10 mm perp joint.
Lime: why it matters:
| Lime function | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Workability | Mortar slides on the trowel, stays plastic longer |
| Movement accommodation | Lime mortar is self-healing on micro-cracks (autogenous healing) |
| Breathability | Allows water vapour through; reduces moisture trapping |
| Bond | Improves adhesion to brick |
Cement-only mortar (no lime, e.g. 1:5 cement:sand) is common practice on quick jobs but is universally discouraged by AS 3700 and the BCA Housing Provisions. The hydrated lime is the workable mortar’s secret.
Also known as: mortar specification; brickwork mortar; masonry mortar; mortar designation (M1, M2, M3); cement-lime-sand mix.
Category: Materials.
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Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.