The Short Answer
Light rain after the concrete has firmed up is usually fine. Heavy rain before, during or in the first four hours after a pour is a disaster.
Brisbane gets around 1,000mm of rain a year, and most of it falls between November and March in short, intense bursts. A summer pour without a wet weather plan is asking for trouble. The good news is that timing, radar checks, and a quick call to postpone can save your slab from ever being at risk.
This guide walks through the four stages of fresh concrete, what rain does to each, when we'll go ahead with a pour, and when we'll ring you to push the date.
The Four Stages of Fresh Concrete and How Rain Affects Each
Concrete doesn't go from wet to hard in one step. There are four distinct stages over the first 24 hours, and rain behaves very differently at each one.
| Stage | Timing | Effect of Rain |
|---|---|---|
| Plastic stage | 0 to 1 hour after pour | Disaster. Rain washes cement away and ruins the surface. |
| Initial set | 1 to 4 hours | Damaging. Rain still affects the finish and top layer. |
| Final set | 4 to 8 hours | Light rain is OK. Heavy rain still causes scaling. |
| Curing | 24 hours and beyond | Rain actually helps. Keeps the slab moist for proper curing. |
Stage 1: Plastic Stage (Just Poured, Still Wet)
This is the worst possible time for rain. The concrete is still fully wet, with cement paste sitting on the surface waiting to be finished. Rain at this point dilutes the surface paste, washes cement away into puddles, and creates weak spots that will scale and dust off within months. Pock marks from heavy drops can stay visible for the life of the slab.
Stage 2: Initial Set (1 to 4 Hours)
The concrete is starting to stiffen but the surface is still being finished. This is when we float and trowel the top. Rain during this window can still damage the surface finish, create marks, and weaken the wear layer. If it's only a passing drizzle we can usually work through it with a tarp ready, but a heavy burst is bad news.
Stage 3: Final Set (4 to 8 Hours)
By now the concrete has firmed up. You can walk on it carefully without leaving footprints. Light rain at this stage is generally fine. Heavy rain can still cause minor scaling and surface staining, but the structural concrete underneath is safe.
Stage 4: Curing (24 Hours Plus)
Rain is now your friend. Concrete needs moisture to cure properly, and rain keeps the slab damp without you having to spray it down. In Brisbane's hot months this is genuinely useful. For more on this, see our guide on how long concrete takes to cure.
Why Rain Damages Fresh Concrete
It's not the water itself that's the problem. Concrete is mixed with water. The issue is what extra water does to the surface in the first few hours.
- Dilutes surface cement paste: Rain raises the water-to-cement ratio at the surface. More water means weaker concrete.
- Weakens the wear layer: The top few millimetres of a slab is what takes the abuse from cars, tools, foot traffic. A weakened wear layer scales and dusts.
- Causes scaling and dusting: Six months later you sweep the slab and powder comes off. That's the surface failing.
- Washes the finish away: Float marks, broom finish, trowel patterns all get smeared or erased.
- Leaves pock marks: Large drops in a heavy storm can leave permanent dimples in the surface.
What "Too Much Rain" Looks Like
Not all rain is equal. Here's what we're watching for on site:
- Rain pooling on the surface: Standing water on fresh concrete is a clear sign the rain is winning.
- Water running across the slab: Sheet flow tells us the slab can't absorb or shed water fast enough.
- Washing channels through wet concrete: If you can see streaks where water has carried cement away, the surface is compromised.
- Rain bouncing back off the surface: Heavy drops creating splash marks means visible damage.
A light mist that isn't building up anywhere is usually fine to work through. Once we see any of the four signs above, plastic sheeting comes out and we're making decisions.
What We Do If Light Rain Starts During a Pour
Brisbane weather can turn fast. Here's the wet weather playbook:
- Cover with plastic sheeting: If we can get plastic over the slab without touching the surface (using temporary frames or props), we do. This protects the finish from direct drops.
- Work fast to finish: If the rain is going to be brief, we push hard to complete the float and trowel before more water lands.
- Retroweling if needed: A light shower can sometimes be worked back into the surface during finishing, although this is a last resort.
- Stop and protect: If the rain gets heavier, we stop work and cover everything until it passes. Better to add 30 minutes than ruin the slab.
When We Postpone a Pour
We'll ring you to push the date if any of these apply:
- Forecast shows over 5mm of rain in the first 4 hours: That's enough water to do real damage during the plastic and initial set stages.
- Thunderstorms predicted: Storms in Brisbane drop huge volumes in short bursts. No amount of plastic sheeting handles a proper thunderstorm.
- Ground already saturated: If it's been raining for days, the subgrade is soft and the slab will sit on a sponge.
- Severe wind warnings: Wind plus rain means tarps don't stay put.
Rescheduling during storm season is normally a matter of days, not weeks. We keep flexible booking windows for exactly this reason.
Brisbane Storm Season Considerations (November to March)
Brisbane summers are short, sharp and wet. A typical afternoon in January looks clear until 2pm then turns black and dumps 20mm in half an hour. Here's how we work around it:
- Morning pours: We aim to be on site early so the slab has set firm before any afternoon storm arrives.
- Watch the radar: We check the Bureau of Meteorology radar on the morning of the pour and again before we leave the yard.
- Tarps and plastic on the truck: Every storm season pour gets a wet weather kit, no exceptions.
- Tighter pour windows: A 9am start instead of 11am can be the difference between a finished slab and a ruined one.
For more on timing your project around the weather, see our post on the best time to pour concrete in Brisbane.
The Subgrade Problem (Rain Before the Pour)
Rain on a fresh slab is bad. Rain in the days before a pour can be just as bad in a different way.
If it has been raining for two or three days before your scheduled pour, the ground underneath the slab gets saturated. A soft, soggy subgrade can't support the slab properly. The concrete might sink slightly in patches, or develop hairline cracks as it cures unevenly. Even worse, water trapped under the slab can cause long-term moisture problems.
This is why we check the days leading up to your pour, not just the day itself. If the base is too wet, we'll either wait for it to dry out or do extra prep work to restore a solid subgrade. For more on why slabs crack, see why does concrete crack.
The Flip Side: Hot Dry Weather is Just as Bad
Rain isn't the only weather risk. A bright 35 degree day with low humidity and a stiff breeze can ruin a slab nearly as fast as a thunderstorm. The water in the concrete evaporates too quickly, the surface dries before the rest of the slab has caught up, and you get plastic shrinkage cracks within hours.
That's why we pay attention to both ends of the weather spectrum. Timing matters in both directions, which is part of why mild, overcast days are actually some of our favourite pouring conditions.
What You Should NOT Do If It Rains On Your Fresh Slab
If a shower starts after we've left site, resist the urge to "help". Here's what to avoid:
- Don't try to squeegee water off: You'll drag cement paste with it and create streaks. The water will sit on top until the slab is firm enough to handle.
- Don't walk on it: Footprints in fresh concrete are permanent. Even checking on it can do damage.
- Don't cover with plastic that touches the surface: Plastic resting directly on wet concrete leaves marks and patterns. Use props if you must cover it.
- Don't add dry cement to soak up water: A common myth that creates weak patches on the surface.
- Don't panic: Light rain on a slab that has firmed up is normally fine. Ring us if you're worried.
Rain During the Curing Period Actually Helps
Here's the part that catches people out. After about 24 hours, rain stops being the enemy and becomes the friend. Concrete needs moisture to cure properly. The chemical reaction that turns wet concrete into hard concrete is called hydration, and hydration needs water.
In hot Brisbane summers, slabs often need to be sprayed with water or covered with damp hessian to stop them drying out too fast. A gentle overnight shower three days after the pour does exactly the same job for free. Rain during the curing period is one of the reasons winter pours in Brisbane can actually produce cleaner, stronger slabs than summer pours.
How We Plan Around the Weather
Our wet weather approach has a few simple steps:
- 7 day forecasts: We watch the outlook for the week leading up to your pour and check both rain totals and storm probability.
- Radar checks on the morning: Brisbane storms can pop up in 90 minutes. We look at the radar before we leave the yard.
- Flexible booking windows: If we have to postpone, we aim to rebook within a few days.
- Honest calls: If the weather looks marginal, we'll talk to you about whether to push the date. We'd rather rebook than rebuild a damaged slab.
Want to talk through timing for your project? Get in touch and we'll work out a date that gives your slab the best chance.
Common Questions About Rain and Fresh Concrete
If heavy rain hits within the first 4 hours of a pour, it can wash cement out of the surface, leave pock marks, and weaken the wear layer. The slab may set with a dusty, scaling top that flakes off later. Light rain after the concrete has firmed up (typically 4 to 8 hours in) is far less damaging and can usually be worked around with covers and finishing adjustments.
Ideally you want at least 4 to 8 hours of dry weather after the pour. By that point the concrete has reached initial set and rain will roll off rather than mix into the surface. After 24 hours, rain is actually beneficial because it keeps the slab moist and helps proper curing.
Heavy rain during or just after the pour can ruin the surface finish and weaken the top few millimetres, leading to scaling and dusting. The structural strength of the slab usually survives, but the appearance and durability of the top surface can be permanently affected. Light rain on a slab that has already set firm is generally fine.
Yes, light drizzle during a pour is usually manageable if the forecast is clearing. We work fast to get the slab finished, keep plastic sheeting ready, and adjust the finishing timing. The risk is the rain getting heavier mid-pour, so we always check the radar before starting.
Yes, if the forecast shows over 5mm of rain in the first 4 hours after the pour, or if thunderstorms are predicted, we'll postpone. We also postpone if the subgrade is already saturated from days of rain, because a soft base ruins the slab regardless of weather on the day. Rebooking is normally within a few days during storm season.
Important Disclaimer
This guide covers general principles for pouring concrete in wet weather. Specific decisions about whether to pour on a given day depend on site conditions, forecast accuracy, and project requirements. Always follow your concreter's advice for your specific slab.
We specialise in small concrete jobs only, including shed slabs, garage slabs, concrete footpaths, and small pads. All pricing on our site is indicative starting-from guides only. Final pricing depends on site conditions, access, soil type, and specific requirements.
Final Thoughts
Brisbane weather is part of the job. Storm season runs November to March, the radar can change in 90 minutes, and the right call on the morning of a pour can save you from a ruined slab. The good news is that with morning starts, radar checks, and a willingness to postpone marginal days, the vast majority of pours go down clean.
If you're planning a shed slab, garage slab, or footpath and want to talk through timing around the weather, give us a call. You can also work out rough sizing first with our shed slab calculator, see indicative costs on the pricing guide, or read about common mistakes with small concrete jobs.
Ready to book? Contact us today and we'll work out a pour date that suits both your schedule and the forecast.