glossary Glossary 2 min read

Separating wall

A separating wall divides two attached Class 1 dwellings and must meet NCC FRL requirements. Key rule: runs from footings to roof, not just ceiling height.

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A separating wall (also called a party wall or common wall) is the shared wall dividing two attached Class 1 dwellings, such as a duplex, townhouse, or semi-detached house. Under NCC 2022, it is a fire-rated element required to stop fire spreading between dwellings.

Under the ABCB Housing Provisions Standard 2022 (Part 9.3), a separating wall must achieve an FRL of 60/60/60 or be masonry at least 90 mm thick. Critically, it must start at the footings or ground slab and extend either to the underside of a non-combustible roof covering or at least 450 mm above a combustible roof: stopping at ceiling height is a common compliance miss (verified 2026-05-07).

Service penetrations through a separating wall require construction rated at FRL -/60/60, and openings for electrical cables are limited in area.

Also known as: party wall, common wall.

Category: Compliance & approvals.

  • NCC fire separation, the Part H3 requirements that govern separating walls
  • FRL, Fire Resistance Level notation used to specify separating wall performance

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-07. Verified: 2026-05-07. Quarterly review for currency.