Navigation Menu
Concrete Mix Ratios C8/10 to C40/50 Calculator 2026 | Complete Guide

Concrete Mix Ratios C8/10 to C40/50 Calculator 2026

Complete Guide to Concrete Grade Mix Designs

Professional Material Calculations for All Concrete Strengths

Concrete strength grades from C8/10 to C40/50 cover virtually all construction applications from mass fill to heavily loaded structural elements. Understanding correct mix ratios ensures adequate strength, durability, and compliance with BS 8500-2:2023 standards. Our comprehensive concrete mix calculator determines precise material quantities for each grade following current UK building regulations and Eurocode 2 requirements for 2026.

Each concrete grade designation (C8/10, C20/25, C30/37, etc.) indicates characteristic compressive strength in N/mm² measured on cylinders and cubes respectively. Proper mix design considers aggregate type, cement content, water-cement ratio, and intended application. For specialized requirements, consult The Concrete Centre or chartered structural engineers.

⚙️ Concrete Grade Mix Calculator

Calculate materials for any concrete strength grade

Select Concrete Grade

Mix Specifications

Complete Concrete Grade Guide 2026

Concrete grades are designated using the format C(cylinder strength)/(cube strength) measured in N/mm² (Newtons per square millimeter, equivalent to MPa). The first number represents 28-day characteristic cylinder strength, while the second indicates cube strength. British and European standards use this dual designation system following Building Regulations Approved Document A.

Comprehensive Concrete Grade Table

Grade Cement (kg/m³) Mix Ratio w/c Ratio Typical Applications
C8/10 180-200 kg 1:5:10 0.70-0.75 Mass fill, trench fill, temporary works
C10/12 210-230 kg 1:4:6 0.65-0.70 Blinding, kerb bedding, non-structural
C15/20 260-280 kg 1:3:5 0.60-0.65 Light duty floors, pathways, agriculture
C20/25 320-340 kg 1:2:4 0.50-0.60 Foundations, floor slabs, driveways
C25/30 360-380 kg 1:2:3 0.50-0.55 Domestic foundations, reinforced slabs
C30/37 400-420 kg 1:1.5:3 0.45-0.50 Commercial structures, beams, columns
C32/40 420-440 kg 1:1.5:2.5 0.45-0.48 Heavy duty industrial, precast
C35/45 450-470 kg 1:1:2 0.42-0.45 High-rise structures, bridges
C40/50 480-500 kg 1:1:1.5 0.40-0.43 Specialist structural, marine works

C8/10 - Mass Fill

Cement 180-200 kg/m³
Mix Ratio 1:5:10
w/c Ratio 0.70-0.75

C15/20 - Light Duty

Cement 260-280 kg/m³
Mix Ratio 1:3:5
w/c Ratio 0.60-0.65

C20/25 - General Purpose

Cement 320-340 kg/m³
Mix Ratio 1:2:4
w/c Ratio 0.50-0.60

C25/30 - Domestic

Cement 360-380 kg/m³
Mix Ratio 1:2:3
w/c Ratio 0.50-0.55

C30/37 - Commercial

Cement 400-420 kg/m³
Mix Ratio 1:1.5:3
w/c Ratio 0.45-0.50

C40/50 - High Strength

Cement 480-500 kg/m³
Mix Ratio 1:1:1.5
w/c Ratio 0.40-0.43

Detailed Grade Breakdown

Each concrete grade serves specific construction applications based on strength requirements, exposure conditions, and structural loading. Selecting appropriate grades prevents over-specification costs while ensuring adequate performance and safety.

C8/10 Grade - Mass Concrete

Strength: 8 N/mm² cylinder / 10 N/mm² cube

Cement: 180-200 kg/m³

Applications: Mass fill, trench fill foundations, temporary works, unreinforced bases

Advantages: Very economical, minimal cement content

Limitations: Not suitable for any structural loading

C10/12 Grade - Blinding

Strength: 10 N/mm² cylinder / 12 N/mm² cube

Cement: 210-230 kg/m³

Applications: Blinding layers, kerb bedding, drainage channels, non-structural paving

Advantages: Economical for non-structural work

Limitations: Minimal structural capacity

C15/20 Grade - Light Duty

Strength: 15 N/mm² cylinder / 20 N/mm² cube

Cement: 260-280 kg/m³

Applications: Garden pathways, light duty floors, agricultural buildings, domestic outbuildings

Advantages: Adequate for pedestrian traffic

Limitations: Not suitable for vehicle traffic or structural work

C20/25 Grade - General Purpose

Strength: 20 N/mm² cylinder / 25 N/mm² cube

Cement: 320-340 kg/m³

Applications: Strip foundations, ground floor slabs, driveways, garage floors, domestic work

Advantages: Most versatile grade, economical for general construction

Standard: Default specification for most domestic projects

C25/30 Grade - Reinforced Concrete

Strength: 25 N/mm² cylinder / 30 N/mm² cube

Cement: 360-380 kg/m³

Applications: Reinforced foundations, suspended slabs, lightly loaded beams and columns

Advantages: Good strength for domestic structural work

Standard: Common for house foundations and reinforced elements

C30/37 Grade - Commercial Structural

Strength: 30 N/mm² cylinder / 37 N/mm² cube

Cement: 400-420 kg/m³

Applications: Commercial buildings, structural beams/columns, precast elements, car park slabs

Advantages: High strength for commercial loading

Standard: Typical for commercial structural concrete

C32/40 Grade - Heavy Duty

Strength: 32 N/mm² cylinder / 40 N/mm² cube

Cement: 420-440 kg/m³

Applications: Industrial floors, heavily loaded structures, prestressed work, precast beams

Advantages: Excellent for heavy industrial applications

Note: Higher cement content increases cost

C35/45 Grade - High Strength Structural

Strength: 35 N/mm² cylinder / 45 N/mm² cube

Cement: 450-470 kg/m³

Applications: Multi-storey buildings, bridge beams, transfer structures, critical structural elements

Advantages: High strength for demanding applications

Requirements: Requires careful mix design and quality control

C40/50 Grade - Specialist Structural

Strength: 40 N/mm² cylinder / 50 N/mm² cube

Cement: 480-500 kg/m³

Applications: High-rise buildings, major bridge structures, marine works, specialist engineering

Advantages: Maximum strength for critical structures

Requirements: Specialist mix design, admixtures, strict quality control

Material Quantities by Concrete Grade

Understanding precise material requirements for each grade ensures accurate ordering and cost estimation. Standard quantities assume normal-weight concrete with 20mm maximum aggregate size and controlled water-cement ratios.

Material Breakdown per 1m³

Grade Cement (kg) Sand (kg) Aggregate (kg) Water (litres) Total Weight
C8/10 190 kg 760 kg 1,140 kg 140 L ~2,230 kg
C10/12 220 kg 720 kg 1,100 kg 150 L ~2,190 kg
C15/20 270 kg 690 kg 1,050 kg 165 L ~2,175 kg
C20/25 330 kg 650 kg 1,000 kg 180 L ~2,160 kg
C25/30 370 kg 620 kg 960 kg 195 L ~2,145 kg
C30/37 410 kg 590 kg 920 kg 200 L ~2,120 kg
C32/40 430 kg 575 kg 900 kg 205 L ~2,110 kg
C35/45 460 kg 550 kg 870 kg 205 L ~2,085 kg
C40/50 490 kg 530 kg 840 kg 210 L ~2,070 kg

C8/10 per 1m³

Cement 190 kg
Sand 760 kg
Aggregate 1,140 kg
Water 140 L

C20/25 per 1m³

Cement 330 kg
Sand 650 kg
Aggregate 1,000 kg
Water 180 L

C30/37 per 1m³

Cement 410 kg
Sand 590 kg
Aggregate 920 kg
Water 200 L

C40/50 per 1m³

Cement 490 kg
Sand 530 kg
Aggregate 840 kg
Water 210 L

BS 8500-2:2023 Compliance

British Standard BS 8500-2:2023 "Concrete - Complementary British Standard to BS EN 206" specifies requirements for concrete composition, properties, production, and conformity. This standard ensures concrete durability in UK environmental conditions and building applications.

✅ BS 8500-2:2023 Key Requirements:

  • Designated concrete: Specified by designation (e.g., RC30/37) covering strength, consistence, aggregate size, and chloride class
  • Designed concrete: Producer designs mix to meet specified strength and durability requirements
  • Prescribed concrete: Client specifies exact mix proportions (rare for structural work)
  • Exposure classes: XC1-XC4 (carbonation), XD1-XD3 (chlorides), XF1-XF4 (freeze-thaw), XA1-XA3 (chemical)
  • Minimum cement content: Specified for each exposure class ensuring adequate durability
  • Maximum w/c ratio: Limited based on exposure to control permeability and durability

Exposure Classes and Minimum Grades

Exposure Class Environment Minimum Grade Max w/c Ratio
XC1 Dry or permanently wet (internal) C20/25 0.65
XC2 Wet, rarely dry (foundations) C25/30 0.60
XC3/4 Moderate/high humidity, wet/dry cycles C30/37 0.55
XD1 Moderate chloride (salts in soil) C30/37 0.55
XD2/3 High chloride (marine, de-icing salts) C32/40 0.45-0.50
XF1/2 Moderate freeze-thaw, with/without salts C28/35 0.55
XF3/4 Severe freeze-thaw with salts C32/40 0.45
XA1/2/3 Weak/moderate/strong chemical attack C30/37 to C35/45 0.45-0.55

XC1 - Dry/Internal

Minimum Grade C20/25
Max w/c 0.65

XC3/4 - Wet/Dry Cycles

Minimum Grade C30/37
Max w/c 0.55

XD2/3 - High Chloride

Minimum Grade C32/40
Max w/c 0.45-0.50

Selecting the Right Concrete Grade

Choosing appropriate concrete grades balances structural adequacy, durability requirements, and project economics. Over-specification wastes money while under-specification risks structural inadequacy or premature failure.

🎯 Grade Selection Criteria:

  • Structural loading: Consult structural calculations or engineer recommendations
  • Exposure conditions: Consider moisture, freeze-thaw, chemical attack, and chlorides
  • Building regulations: Verify minimum grades specified in Approved Documents
  • Element type: Foundations, slabs, beams, columns each have typical grade requirements
  • Reinforcement: Reinforced concrete typically requires C25/30 minimum
  • Design life: Longer design lives demand higher grades and lower w/c ratios
  • Quality assurance: Higher grades require stricter quality control and testing

Common Applications by Grade

  • C8/10: Use only for mass fill, trench fill, temporary works where strength is non-critical
  • C10/12: Blinding layers under foundations, kerb bedding, paving sub-bases
  • C15/20: Light duty pathways, domestic outbuildings, agricultural structures
  • C20/25: Most domestic work - foundations, floor slabs, driveways, unreinforced elements
  • C25/30: Domestic foundations in aggressive soil, lightly reinforced slabs and beams
  • C30/37: Commercial buildings, structural frames, suspended slabs, precast elements
  • C32/40: Industrial floors, heavily loaded slabs, prestressed work, aggressive environments
  • C35/45: Multi-storey construction, transfer structures, bridge beams, critical elements
  • C40/50: Specialist high-rise, major infrastructure, marine works, exceptional loading

Water-Cement Ratio and Strength Relationship

The water-cement (w/c) ratio fundamentally controls concrete strength and durability. Lower ratios produce stronger, more durable concrete with reduced permeability. However, very low w/c ratios reduce workability, potentially requiring plasticizing admixtures.

⚠️ Critical w/c Ratio Facts:

  • Strength impact: Each 0.05 increase in w/c ratio reduces 28-day strength by approximately 15%
  • Durability: High w/c ratios (above 0.60) significantly increase permeability and reduce durability
  • BS 8500 limits: Maximum w/c ratios range from 0.45 (severe exposure) to 0.70 (sheltered conditions)
  • Hydration requirement: Minimum w/c of 0.40 needed for complete cement hydration
  • Practical minimum: w/c below 0.35 extremely difficult to mix and place without admixtures
  • Free water: Excess water beyond hydration needs creates voids, reducing strength
  • Never add water: Adding water on site to improve workability severely compromises strength

Typical w/c Ratios by Grade

  • C8/10 to C15/20: 0.60-0.70 (higher ratios acceptable for low-strength applications)
  • C20/25: 0.50-0.60 (standard range for general purpose concrete)
  • C25/30: 0.50-0.55 (controlled for reinforced concrete durability)
  • C30/37: 0.45-0.50 (lower ratios for commercial structural work)
  • C35/45 to C40/50: 0.40-0.45 (very low ratios requiring plasticizers for workability)

Cost Comparison by Concrete Grade 2026

Concrete costs increase with strength grade due to higher cement content. Ready-mix pricing typically ranges from £80-£150 per m³ depending on grade, location, and delivery conditions. Understanding cost implications helps optimize specifications.

Grade Price per m³ Cement Cost Impact Relative Cost
C8/10 £80-£95 Lowest cement content Baseline -20%
C10/12 £85-£100 Very low cement Baseline -15%
C15/20 £90-£105 Low cement Baseline -10%
C20/25 £95-£115 Standard cement content Baseline (100%)
C25/30 £105-£125 Moderate cement increase +10%
C30/37 £115-£135 Higher cement content +20%
C32/40 £120-£140 High cement content +25%
C35/45 £130-£150 Very high cement + admixtures +35%
C40/50 £140-£165 Maximum cement + admixtures +45%

C8/10 - Economy

Price per m³ £80-£95
Relative Cost -20%

C20/25 - Standard

Price per m³ £95-£115
Relative Cost Baseline

C30/37 - Commercial

Price per m³ £115-£135
Relative Cost +20%

C40/50 - Premium

Price per m³ £140-£165
Relative Cost +45%

Concrete Grade FAQs

What does C20/25 concrete grade mean?
C20/25 indicates characteristic compressive strength: 20 N/mm² (MPa) cylinder strength and 25 N/mm² cube strength after 28 days. The cylinder value (first number) represents strength of 150mm diameter × 300mm high cylinders, while cube strength (second number) uses 150mm cubes. UK and European standards use this dual designation system.
Can I use C20/25 for house foundations?
Yes, C20/25 is suitable for most domestic strip and trench fill foundations in normal ground conditions. However, C25/30 is recommended for foundations in aggressive soils (sulfates, high clay content) or for reinforced foundations. Always follow structural engineer recommendations and verify exposure class requirements per BS 8500.
What's the difference between C25/30 and C30/37?
C30/37 is approximately 20% stronger than C25/30 (30 vs 25 N/mm² cylinder strength). C25/30 suits domestic reinforced work, while C30/37 is standard for commercial structures, structural frames, and heavily loaded elements. C30/37 requires higher cement content (400-420 kg/m³ vs 360-380 kg/m³) and costs approximately 10-15% more.
How long does concrete take to reach full strength?
Concrete typically reaches approximately 70% of design strength after 7 days, 90% after 14 days, and 95-100% after 28 days under proper curing at 20°C. The 28-day period is standard for strength classification. Strength development continues beyond 28 days at decreasing rates. Cold weather slows strength gain while heat accelerates it.
When should I use C40/50 instead of C30/37?
Use C40/50 for heavily loaded structural elements, high-rise construction, long-span beams, transfer structures, or where reduced element sizes are critical. Also required for severe exposure conditions (marine, aggressive chemicals, freeze-thaw with de-icing salts). C40/50 costs 20-25% more than C30/37 and requires stricter quality control, so only specify when structurally necessary.
Is C10/12 strong enough for shed bases?
C10/12 is adequate for small wooden sheds and light garden buildings as a blinding layer or base slab, but C15/20 or C20/25 is recommended for anything storing heavy equipment or subject to frequent foot traffic. For vehicle access or heavier buildings, use minimum C20/25 with proper sub-base preparation and reinforcement.
Can I site-mix high-strength concrete like C35/45?
Site-mixing concrete above C30/37 is not recommended due to strict quality control requirements, precise batching needs, and typical requirement for plasticizing admixtures. High-strength grades require factory batching with certified materials, controlled water content, and regular testing. Always use ready-mix concrete from certified suppliers for C32/40 and above.
What happens if I use the wrong concrete grade?
Using lower grade than specified risks structural inadequacy, potential failure, and building regulation non-compliance. Over-specifying wastes money but ensures adequate strength. For structural work, always follow engineer specifications. Using wrong grade may void warranties, fail building inspections, and potentially require costly remedial work or demolition and reconstruction.
Why does higher grade concrete cost more?
Higher grades require more cement (major cost component), stricter quality control, potential admixtures (plasticizers, accelerators), and more rigorous testing. For example, C40/50 uses 490 kg cement per m³ versus 330 kg for C20/25 - a 48% increase in cement. Cement typically costs £100-£120 per tonne, making it the primary cost driver.
Do I need admixtures for different concrete grades?
Lower grades (C8/10 to C25/30) typically don't require admixtures for standard applications. Higher grades (C30/37+) often benefit from plasticizers to maintain workability with low water-cement ratios. Admixtures may also address specific needs: accelerators for cold weather, retarders for hot conditions, air-entrainers for freeze-thaw resistance, or waterproofers for tanking applications.