The Short Answer
A properly built concrete slab lasts 50 to 100 years. That is not marketing talk, it is what the engineering numbers, the industry standards and decades of real Brisbane slabs all point to. Plenty of slabs poured in the 1960s and 70s are still in service today with nothing more than a few cosmetic cracks and the occasional patch.
The catch is that "properly built" does a lot of work in that sentence. A slab that was poured too thin, on a soft base, with the wrong mesh, or with no expansion joints can start cracking up inside ten years. Lifespan is not random. It tracks the quality of the original pour and how well the slab is looked after.
The Longer Answer
Concrete slab lifespan depends on four things working together: the quality of the original pour, the environment it sits in, how it is used, and how it is maintained. Get all four right and you are at the 80 to 100 year end. Get any one badly wrong and you can shave decades off.
Think of a slab as a long term investment. Spend a little extra at the pour stage on proper thickness, the right mesh, a compacted base and good drainage, and you almost never see that slab again. Cut corners on those same items and you are looking at repairs or replacement within a generation.
What Affects Concrete Slab Lifespan
Quality of the Original Pour
This is the biggest single factor. A 25 to 32 MPa mix, the right thickness for the load, SL72 or SL82 mesh held at mid depth, proper expansion joints, and a clean steel trowel or broom finish all add years to a slab. The opposite, a weak mix poured too thin with mesh sitting on the ground, will be cracking inside a decade.
Site Preparation
What sits underneath the slab matters as much as the concrete itself. A compacted road base or crusher dust layer, a vapour barrier where needed, and clear drainage around the slab give it stable support for the long haul. Skip the prep and the slab settles unevenly, water gets under it, and cracks follow.
Soil Conditions
Reactive clay soil, which covers large parts of Brisbane, Ipswich and Logan, is harder on slabs than sandy or rocky ground. The clay swells in the wet season and shrinks in the dry. A slab built to handle that kind of movement (thicker, better reinforced, with the right joints) lasts as long as any other. A slab built without allowing for reactive soil can crack within a few years.
Climate
Brisbane heat, humidity, heavy summer rainfall and the occasional cyclone all put load on a slab over time. UV breaks down the surface finish slowly. Wet and dry cycles work on every crack and joint. Heavy storms test the drainage. None of this kills a good slab, but it does mean that maintenance matters more here than it does in cooler, drier parts of the country.
How the Slab Is Used
A garden shed slab holding lawn mowers and storage boxes will outlast a garage slab holding a 2 tonne ute that gets parked and reparked daily. A footpath that takes only foot traffic will outlast a driveway that takes vehicles. Use shapes lifespan as much as anything else.
Maintenance
Slabs are low maintenance, not no maintenance. A slab that gets sealed every few years, has its joints checked and re-sealed, has small cracks filled before they grow, and has drainage kept clear, simply lasts longer than one that gets ignored. The maintenance is small, the difference in lifespan is large.
Typical Lifespans by Slab Type
Different slab types live different lives. Here is what to expect in Brisbane conditions:
| Slab Type | Typical Lifespan | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Garden shed slab | 60 to 80 years | Light load, often partly covered, ages slowly |
| Garage slab (vehicle use) | 50 to 70 years | Daily vehicle load, oil and chemical exposure |
| Concrete footpath | 30 to 50 years | Exposed to weather, foot traffic, root pressure |
| Driveway | 30 to 50 years | Vehicle load plus full weather exposure |
| Water tank slab (covered) | 50 to 80 years | Constant heavy load but sheltered from UV |
| Commercial industrial slab | 30 to 50 years | Heavy plant, forklifts, repeated chemical exposure |
Those are typical numbers, not maximums. A well built shed slab in good ground can easily push past 80 years. A poorly built one can struggle to make 15. The range is wide because the inputs vary so much.
Signs Your Slab Is Failing
Most slabs give plenty of warning before they need major work. Keep an eye out for:
- Wide cracks over 5mm. Hairline cracks are normal and cosmetic. Cracks you can fit a 5c coin into are worth a closer look.
- Heaving or sinking sections. If one side of a crack sits visibly higher than the other, the ground underneath is moving.
- Spalling. Surface concrete flaking off in patches, exposing aggregate or the layer beneath. Usually points to water getting in.
- Exposed reinforcement. Rust stains bleeding through the surface mean the mesh is corroding. That is a slow path to bigger problems.
- Standing water. Puddles that never drain mean either the fall has changed or drainage around the slab has failed.
- Movement at joints. If joints are widening, lifting, or the two sides no longer line up, the slab is shifting.
One or two of these on a 40 year old slab is normal. Several of them together, or any of them on a young slab, is worth a closer look. See our guide on why concrete cracks for help reading what you are looking at.
Why Some Slabs Fail Early
When a slab fails inside 20 years, the cause is almost always something at the original pour stage. The usual suspects are:
- Poor base preparation. No compacted base, organic matter left in the ground, soft spots not filled. The slab settles unevenly and cracks under the strain.
- Wrong mesh or no mesh. A slab without mesh can crack widely the first time the ground moves. Mesh sitting on the ground instead of at mid depth does almost nothing.
- Slab too thin for the load. A 75mm slab is fine for a footpath but will crack if you park a ute on it.
- Wrong concrete mix. A weak mix saves a few dollars at the pour and costs years off the lifespan.
- No expansion joints. Without joints, the slab decides for itself where to crack, and it never picks a tidy spot.
- Drainage problems. Water sitting against the edge of a slab or saturating the subgrade slowly undermines the support.
- Loads it was never designed for. A shed slab loaded with heavy plant, or a footpath used as a driveway, lives a much shorter life than it should.
The common thread is that none of these failures are random. They are choices that were made (or skipped) on the day the slab was poured. See our common mistakes with small concrete jobs article for the full rundown.
How to Extend the Life of Your Concrete Slab
Even an average slab can outlast a great slab if it is looked after. The maintenance is straightforward:
Keep Drainage Clear
Make sure water moves away from the slab, not toward it or under it. Clear leaves and silt from any drains, channels, or strip drains around the slab once or twice a year. Standing water is the slow killer of concrete.
Seal the Surface Every Few Years
Penetrating concrete sealer reduces water uptake, slows surface wear, and keeps stains out. Exposed slabs (footpaths, driveways, open garage floors) benefit most. A reseal every three to five years is a small job for a long payoff.
Repair Small Cracks Before They Grow
A 1mm hairline crack filled with polymer sealer stays a 1mm hairline crack. Left alone, it can wick water down to the reinforcement, rust the mesh, and grow into a real problem. Small crack repair is a hardware store job and is worth doing as soon as you see one.
Stick to the Design Load
Do not park a 3 tonne ute on a footpath. Do not run a forklift across a shed slab. Slabs are designed for a particular load, and asking them to carry more is the fastest way to crack one.
Address Tree Roots Early
Eucalypts, poincianas and jacarandas all send roots looking for water and can lift a slab edge over time. If you can see roots approaching, deal with them before they reach the slab, not after.
Check Joints Annually
Walk the slab once a year and look at the joints. Re-seal anything cracked, gapped, or pulled away. Joint sealant is cheap, and a tight joint keeps water out of the most vulnerable part of the slab.
Repair vs Replace
The big call with an aging slab is whether to patch and seal it or rip it out and start again. The rough decision tree:
Repair Makes Sense When
- Cracks are hairline or under 3mm
- Surface spalling is patchy, not widespread
- Joints have lost their seal but the slab is still level
- The slab is under 40 years old and the rest of it is sound
- You are happy with the slab's size, position and finish
Replace Makes Sense When
- Cracks are structural, wide, and growing
- Sections of the slab are heaving or sinking
- Water comes up through the slab itself
- The slab is over 50 years old and in heavy use
- The slab is the wrong size or wrong place for what you need now
If you are unsure, a quick site visit from an experienced concreter usually answers the question in 10 minutes. A repair on the wrong slab is money wasted. A replacement on a slab that just needed patching is a much bigger spend than required.
What Brisbane Conditions Do to Slabs Over Time
South East Queensland is harder on concrete than it looks. Over a 50 year life, a Brisbane slab takes a fair beating from:
- Heat and UV. Surface finish slowly breaks down. Sealed slabs hold up much better than untreated ones.
- Tropical rainfall. 100mm storms test the drainage every wet season. Slabs with good fall and clear drainage shrug it off. Slabs without either soak up water at the edges.
- Cyclone wind. Shed and carport slabs take stress at the anchor points where the frame ties down. Over decades, those anchor points can loosen and crack the surrounding concrete.
- Reactive clay soil. The big one. Decades of swell and shrink cycles slowly work on any slab that was not built to handle the movement.
None of these conditions kill a well built slab. They just mean that, in Brisbane, the difference between a slab built right and a slab built cheaply shows up sooner than it would in milder climates.
Why We Build Slabs to Last
When we quote a shed slab, garage slab, or footpath, we are quoting on the assumption that you would rather not see us back in 15 years. That means:
- Proper compacted base under every pour
- SL72 mesh as a minimum, SL82 for anything carrying vehicles
- Mesh held at mid depth on bar chairs, not sitting on the ground
- 100mm minimum for shed slabs, 125mm for garage slabs and heavy use
- Expansion joints at the right spacing for the slab thickness
- 25 to 32 MPa concrete mix as standard
- Proper fall built in for drainage
- Steel trowel or broom finish that wears well
- Wet curing through the first week to control shrinkage
Get those right and the slab is boring for decades. That is the goal. A slab you do not have to think about is a slab that is doing its job.
Important Note
We specialise in small concrete jobs only, shed slabs, garage slabs, concrete footpaths, water tank slabs and small pads across Brisbane and South East Queensland. For assessment of a significantly cracked or heaving slab, particularly under any building structure, always consult an appropriately qualified engineer.
All prices mentioned on this site are indicative starting-from guides only. Final pricing depends on site conditions, access, soil type, and specific requirements.
Final Thoughts
A concrete slab is one of the longest lived things on a property. Done properly, it outlasts the shed sitting on top of it, often by decades. Done poorly, it can be cracking before you have finished paying it off.
If you want a slab that quietly does its job for 50 to 100 years, the recipe is not a secret. Good base prep, the right thickness, proper mesh at mid depth, expansion joints, decent drainage and a reasonable maintenance habit. None of those add a lot to the cost. All of them add decades to the life.
Planning a new slab and want it built to last? Get in touch for a quote or run the numbers first with the shed slab calculator and the pricing guide. If you are still in the planning stage, our guides on how to prepare for a new shed slab and the best time to pour concrete in Brisbane are worth a read.
Frequently Asked Questions
A properly built residential concrete slab typically lasts 50 to 100 years. Shed and garage slabs in good conditions sit at the higher end of that range. Driveways and footpaths exposed to weather and traffic usually land between 30 and 50 years before they need major attention. The exact lifespan depends on the quality of the pour, the soil it sits on, how heavily it is used, and whether it gets basic maintenance over time.
Many concrete slabs never need full replacement. They get patched, sealed and resurfaced as small problems appear, and keep working for decades. Full replacement is only needed when there is structural cracking, major heaving, subgrade failure, or when the slab has reached the end of its useful life under heavy use. Most homeowners get one shed slab, one garage slab and one driveway over their lifetime, not several.
The average lifespan of a domestic concrete slab is around 50 to 80 years. Garden shed slabs in stable ground can last 60 to 80 years. Garage slabs supporting vehicles tend to last 50 to 70 years. Exposed slabs like footpaths and driveways average 30 to 50 years because they take the full brunt of weather and traffic. Commercial slabs with heavy daily use tend to land at 30 to 50 years.
Early slab failure almost always traces back to the original pour. Common causes include a poorly compacted base, no mesh or the wrong size mesh, a slab that is too thin for the load, missing expansion joints, poor drainage around the slab, and the wrong concrete mix for the application. Get those right and the slab lasts decades. Get any one wrong and you can see cracking or heaving within a few years.
Most old slabs can be repaired rather than replaced. Hairline cracks fill with polymer crack sealer. Surface damage can be resurfaced with a thin overlay. Joint problems are re-cut and re-sealed. Full replacement is only needed when the slab is structurally cracked, heaving, or the subgrade underneath has failed. A good rule of thumb is that repair is worth trying first unless the slab has lost its shape or level.