process Practical and on-site 6 min read

Concrete slab pour: residential sequence from pre-pour to curing

Step-by-step concrete slab pour process for residential: pre-pour inspection, supply ordering, placement, screeding, finishing, curing. Common defects covered.

Ask Chalkline about this →

TL;DR

A residential slab pour is a one-day high-stakes event that builds on weeks of prep. The sequence: pre-pour inspection passed, supply ordered to the right spec, on-site placement and screeding immediately after delivery, bull-floating and finishing, then 7+ days of curing. Defects from this day cost months later. The builder’s job during the pour is choreography: enough labour at the right times, correct equipment ready, and a continuous pour path that doesn’t leave cold joints.

When you do this

  • Slab pre-pour inspection has been passed and signed off by the certifier or council inspector.
  • All trades are off the slab area; the formwork, reo, vapour barrier, and penetrations are in final position.
  • Weather forecast is acceptable: above 5°C, below 35°C, no rain expected during pour and initial set.
  • Concrete supply is booked with a confirmed delivery window.

What you need before you start

  • Pre-pour inspection sign-off in the build pack.
  • Concrete supply ordered: grade (typically N20 or N25 for residential slabs), slump (typically 80-100 mm), volume calculated with 5-10% waste allowance, additives (where specified).
  • Labour booked: minimum 2-3 concretors plus the truck driver. Larger slabs need 4+.
  • Equipment ready: screed bar(s), bull float, hand floats, edging tools, jointing tools, magnesium float and steel trowel for final finishing, vibrator or vibrating screed for compaction.
  • Curing materials: curing compound (sprayed) or hessian + water (membrane curing). Plastic sheeting for cool nights.
  • Site access: truck path clear, sufficient turning circle, no overhead obstacles for a boom pump if used.
  • Safety: SWMS in place; concrete is HRCW (involving plant operation, manual handling), PPE for caustic concrete contact.

Step-by-step

1. Final pre-pour walk (30 minutes before truck arrives)

  • Walk the form perimeter; confirm levels and squareness one last time.
  • Check vapour barrier for tears; patch any.
  • Check reo position and chair heights.
  • Confirm every penetration is sleeved and in the right location.
  • Confirm hold-down bolts (where used) are at correct height with thread protected.

2. Truck arrives, slump test, sample

  • The driver presents the delivery docket: confirm grade, slump, volume against your order.
  • Take a sample (concretor’s responsibility under the engineer’s spec) for compressive-strength testing. Industry-standard: 4 cylinders per pour, cured separately, tested at 7 and 28 days.
  • Visual slump test (or formal slump test if engineer-required). If outside spec, reject the load.

3. Placement

  • Discharge via chute, barrow, line pump, or boom pump depending on site access.
  • Place concrete in layers, not one big dump in the centre and push outward.
  • Place systematically from one end to the other; don’t skip around. Cold joints form when one area starts curing before the next is poured against it.
  • Use a vibrator or vibrating screed to consolidate around reo, in beam pockets, and at edge thickenings. Insufficient vibration causes voids.

4. Screeding

  • Pull a screed bar across the formwork to bring the concrete to the design level.
  • Two passes typical: rough screed to level, fine screed to flatten.
  • For long slabs, place intermediate wet screed strips at intervals as reference levels.

5. Bull-floating

  • After screeding, before water sheen disappears, run a bull float across the surface to:
    • Press down high spots and pull up low spots (further levelling).
    • Push aggregate down and bring fines (paste) to the surface.
    • Eliminate screed lines.

6. Wait for water sheen to leave

  • After bull-floating, the surface holds bleed water for 30-60 minutes (faster in warm/windy weather).
  • Don’t trowel into bleed water; you’ll trap it under the finish and cause blistering and dusting.

7. Edging, jointing, and floating

  • Once the water sheen leaves and the surface can support a finisher’s weight without sinking more than 3-5 mm:
    • Run the edger along all formwork edges to create a rounded edge.
    • Cut control joints at the design locations (typically max 4 m spacing in slabs without joint reinforcement).
    • Hand-float the whole surface for the next pass.

8. Final finishing (steel trowel)

  • Once the surface is firm (typically 2-4 hours after pour in normal conditions):
    • First steel-trowel pass: smooth out hand-float marks.
    • Second steel-trowel pass (15-30 minutes later): tight finish, slight burnishing.
    • For broom finish (driveways, paths): drag a stiff broom across the surface at the right firmness, perpendicular to the direction of travel.

9. Curing

  • Apply curing compound (sprayed on) immediately after final finishing, OR
  • Cover with plastic sheeting weighted at edges, OR
  • Membrane curing with wet hessian for the first 7 days.
  • Curing prevents rapid moisture loss; rapid drying causes surface cracking and reduced strength.
  • Keep traffic off for at least 24 hours; heavy traffic for at least 7 days.

What can go wrong

  • Wrong grade delivered: reject the load if grade or slump is outside spec. Truck won’t be happy; insist.
  • Cold joints from interrupted placement: lower-strength interface between two pours.
  • Crusting before finishing complete: the surface skins over while still wet underneath. Trowel passes leave marks.
  • Bleed water entrapment: troweling into bleed water causes blistering and powdery surface within weeks.
  • Slump too high (wet): low strength, shrinkage cracking.
  • Slump too low (dry): difficult to place, voids around reo, low cover.
  • Rapid drying from inadequate curing: surface cracking within 1-3 days.
  • Wrong reo cover discovered post-pour: rectification options are limited; engineer assessment required.

References

  • AS 2870:2011, Residential slabs and footings (verified 2026-05-14).

  • AS 3600:2018, Concrete structures (verified 2026-05-14).

  • AS 1379:2007, Specification and supply of concrete (verified 2026-05-14).

  • Standards Australia

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-14. Verified: 2026-05-14.