glossary Glossary 4 min read

Scratch coat (cement render)

Scratch coat is the first 5-8 mm cement render coat, mechanically scratched horizontally before set so the float coat keys to it. Cures 24-48 hours.

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A scratch coat is the first of three coats in a traditional cement-render system on masonry walls. It is applied 5-8 mm thick directly to the prepared substrate (brick, block, or concrete) and is mechanically scratched horizontally with a comb or scratching tool before it has fully set. The scratching forms a mechanical key that the next coat (float coat) bonds into. Together with the end coat on top, the scratch coat is the foundation of the three-coat render system used historically and still common on heritage or premium work in Australia.

Mix specification (typical):

ComponentRatio (volume)Function
Portland cement1Binder, sets the matrix
Hydrated lime1Workability, breathability, reduces shrinkage cracking
Sharp sand (washed plastering sand)6Bulk, aggregate skeleton
WaterTo workable consistencyHydration

The 1:1:6 mix is the most common scratch coat specification. Some renderers omit the lime for cheaper or faster work (1:5 or 1:6 cement:sand), but the lime-free mix is more prone to shrinkage cracking and is less forgiving over the float coat.

Application sequence:

  1. Substrate prep: brush dust off the wall, dampen with a fine spray (suction control, not soaked).
  2. Apply scratch coat at 5-8 mm thickness with a hawk and trowel. Maintain consistent thickness; ridges and hollows become problems for the float coat above.
  3. Strike off with a long straight edge to remove high spots.
  4. Allow initial set (typically 30-60 minutes depending on weather): coat firms enough to take a horizontal scratch without smearing.
  5. Scratch horizontally with a wire comb or special scratching tool at 25-50 mm spacing. Lines should be 2-3 mm deep into the coat.
  6. Cure under damp cover for 24-48 hours minimum before the float coat is applied. In hot weather, cure 48 hours and mist-dampen periodically.

Why scratch horizontally? The float coat is applied as a flat plane. Vertical scratches would create vertical drainage paths for any moisture migration; horizontal scratches break that vertical path and discourage water tracking down the joint between coats.

Common defects:

  • Scratched too late: if the coat has set hard, scratching smears the surface or pulls away material. The float coat then has no key and risks debonding.
  • Scratched too early: the wet coat smears when scratched, the lines don’t hold, no effective key forms.
  • Inconsistent thickness: too thin in places and the substrate suction overcomes the coat; too thick and shrinkage cracks open up.
  • Skipped cure period: applying float coat the same day risks shrinkage cracks transferring through both coats as the scratch coat continues to shrink underneath.
  • Substrate too dry or too wet: dry substrate sucks moisture out and starves the scratch coat; soaked substrate prevents bond.

Two-coat vs three-coat render. Most modern Australian residential render is two-coat (a thicker base + finish) rather than three-coat. The scratch coat is largely reserved for:

  • Heritage repair where matching historical detailing matters.
  • Very irregular substrates (rubble masonry, old patchwork brickwork) where the scratch coat fairs out the surface before any plane-true work.
  • Premium full-render specifications.

Also known as: SC; render base coat; key coat; first coat render.

Category: Materials.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.