Complete Concrete Specification Standard Guide
BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 & BS 8500 Reference
BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 is the European standard for concrete specification, performance, production and conformity used throughout the UK and Europe. This comprehensive standard defines requirements for constituent materials, properties of fresh and hardened concrete, composition limitations, specification methods, delivery requirements, production control and conformity assessment. Our BS EN 206 summary PDF provides essential reference information for specifiers, contractors, and concrete producers working to British Standards in 2026.
In the UK, BS EN 206 works alongside BS 8500 which provides complementary national guidance adapted for British conditions. Together, these standards replaced BS 5328 in 2003 and continue to evolve with amendments addressing sustainability, new materials, and updated durability requirements for modern construction.
Comprehensive reference guide for concrete specification
Document Type: PDF Summary & Quick Reference
Standard Version: BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021
Includes: Exposure classes, strength grades, composition limits
Complementary Standards: BS 8500 Parts 1 & 2
Updated: January 2026
Free resource for construction professionals and concrete specifiers
BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 titled "Concrete – Specification, performance, production and conformity" is the primary European standard governing concrete used in construction. It applies to concrete for structures cast in-situ, precast structures, and structural precast products for buildings and civil engineering works. The standard covers normal-weight, heavyweight, and lightweight concrete that is site-mixed, ready-mixed, or produced in plants for precast products.
Full Title: BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021
European Designation: EN 206:2013+A2:2021
Replaces: BS EN 206-1:2000 and BS 8500-1:2006
Publication Date: August 2021 (A2 amendment)
Status: Current standard in 2026
Constituent Materials: Cement, aggregates, water, admixtures, additions
Fresh Properties: Consistence, air content, density
Hardened Properties: Compressive strength, durability
Production Control: Quality procedures and testing
Conformity: Assessment criteria and compliance
Complementary Standard: BS 8500 Parts 1 and 2
Part 1: Method of specifying and guidance
Part 2: Specification for constituent materials
Adaptation: UK-specific exposure classes and materials
Integration: Works with Eurocode 2 (BS EN 1992)
Concrete strength is designated using the format C XX/YY where C indicates concrete, XX represents the characteristic cylinder strength at 28 days, and YY represents the characteristic cube strength. The standard defines strength classes from C8/10 (lowest) to C100/115 (highest) for normal-weight concrete.
| Strength Class | Cylinder Strength (N/mm²) | Cube Strength (N/mm²) | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| C8/10 | 8 N/mm² | 10 N/mm² | Mass concrete fill, temporary works |
| C12/15 | 12 N/mm² | 15 N/mm² | Kerb backing, drainage works |
| C16/20 | 16 N/mm² | 20 N/mm² | Domestic foundations, mass concrete |
| C20/25 | 20 N/mm² | 25 N/mm² | Domestic floors, light foundations |
| C25/30 | 25 N/mm² | 30 N/mm² | Reinforced concrete, structural foundations |
| C28/35 | 28 N/mm² | 35 N/mm² | Commercial buildings, structural elements |
| C32/40 | 32 N/mm² | 40 N/mm² | Structural beams, columns, road construction |
| C40/50 | 40 N/mm² | 50 N/mm² | Heavy-duty industrial floors, bridges |
| C50/60 | 50 N/mm² | 60 N/mm² | High-rise construction, prestressed concrete |
| C60/75 | 60 N/mm² | 75 N/mm² | Specialist high-strength applications |
Exposure classes define environmental conditions that affect concrete durability. BS EN 206 establishes six main exposure class categories based on deterioration mechanisms including carbonation, chloride attack, freeze-thaw, and chemical attack. Correct exposure class selection ensures appropriate concrete specification for the intended service life.
✅ Main Exposure Class Categories:
XC1: Dry or permanently wet conditions
XC2: Wet, rarely dry (foundations, water tanks)
XC3: Moderate humidity (sheltered external concrete)
XC4: Cyclic wet and dry (exposed facades)
Risk: Carbonation reduces pH, causing rebar corrosion
XD1: Moderate humidity (splash zones, car parks)
XD2: Wet, rarely dry (swimming pools, exposed to de-icing)
XD3: Cyclic wet and dry (bridge elements, de-icing salts)
Source: De-icing salts, industrial processes
Protection: Low permeability, adequate cover
XS1: Airborne salt (coastal structures 1km from sea)
XS2: Permanently submerged (underwater structures)
XS3: Tidal, splash and spray zones (aggressive exposure)
Environment: Marine and coastal locations
Requirements: High-quality concrete, specialized mixes
XF1: Moderate water saturation, no de-icing
XF2: Moderate water saturation, with de-icing
XF3: High water saturation, no de-icing
XF4: High water saturation, with de-icing/seawater
Protection: Air entrainment required for XF2-4
XA1: Slightly aggressive chemical environment
XA2: Moderately aggressive chemical environment
XA3: Highly aggressive chemical environment
Sources: Sulfates in soil/groundwater
Specification: Sulfate-resisting cement often required
Definition: No risk of corrosion or attack
Conditions: Very dry internal environments only
Examples: Internal non-structural elements
Requirements: Minimal durability specifications
Note: Rarely applicable in UK construction
BS EN 206 provides two primary methods for specifying concrete: designed concrete and prescribed concrete. The choice depends on the responsibility allocation between specifier and producer, project requirements, and the level of performance assurance needed.
🔢 Two Specification Approaches:
BS 8500 introduced designated concrete mixes that combine strength class and exposure class requirements into simple designations. These standardized mixes ensure compliance with durability requirements while simplifying the specification process for common applications.
| Designated Mix | Strength Class | Exposure Class | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| GEN 0 | C8/10 | X0 | Blinding, non-structural fill |
| GEN 1 | C10/12 | XC1 | General use in dry conditions |
| GEN 3 | C16/20 | XC2 | General foundations, mass concrete |
| FND 2 | C25/30 | XC2 | Foundations in non-aggressive soils |
| FND 3 | C28/35 | XC2 + XA1 | Foundations in aggressive (AC-1) soils |
| RC 25/30 | C25/30 | XC3/4 | Reinforced concrete in moderate exposure |
| RC 32/40 | C32/40 | XC3/4 | Reinforced concrete in severe exposure |
| PAV 1 | C32/40 | XF2 + XD2 | Road pavements with de-icing salts |
| PAV 2 | C40/50 | XF4 + XD3 | Heavy-duty pavements, airfield slabs |
BS EN 206 specifies composition requirements including minimum cement content, maximum water/cement ratio, and chloride content limits. These parameters ensure concrete durability and performance throughout its intended design life, typically 50 years for structural applications.
⚠️ Key Composition Limits (BS EN 206 + BS 8500):
BS EN 206 works with the cement standards (BS EN 197-1) allowing various cement types. BS 8500 provides UK guidance on suitable combinations including use of supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) like Ground Granulated Blast-furnace Slag (GGBS) and Pulverised Fuel Ash (PFA/fly ash) for enhanced durability and sustainability.
Composition: 95-100% clinker
Type: Pure Portland cement
Applications: General purpose, baseline performance
Strengths: Rapid strength gain, wide availability
UK Use: Common for standard applications
Composition: 65-94% clinker + additions
Types: CEM II/A, CEM II/B with various additions
Additions: Limestone, slag, pozzolana, fly ash
Benefits: Reduced CO₂, improved workability
Applications: General construction, sustainability focus
Composition: 5-64% clinker + 36-95% GGBS
Types: CEM III/A (higher clinker), CEM III/B, CEM III/C
Benefits: Sulfate resistance, lower permeability
Applications: Marine environments, aggressive soils
Note: Slower early strength, excellent long-term
Designation: CIIA + 30-70% GGBS or CIIB-V
Benefits: Low heat, chemical resistance
Marine Use: Preferred for XS exposure classes
Sulfate Resistance: Excellent for XA environments
Sustainability: Significant CO₂ reduction
Designation: CEM II/A-V or CIIA + 15-35% PFA
Benefits: Improved workability, reduced bleeding
Applications: Mass concrete, long pours
Durability: Enhanced chemical resistance
Note: Slower strength development initially
Standard: BS 4027 SRPC
Use: Aggressive ground (XA2, XA3)
Composition: Low C₃A content Portland cement
Alternative: CEM I + GGBS combinations
Specification: Required for Design Sulfate Class DC-4
Consistence (workability) describes the ease with which fresh concrete can be mixed, placed, compacted and finished. BS EN 206 defines several consistence classes measured by different test methods including slump, flow spread, and compacting factor.
| Consistence Class | Slump (mm) | Description | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | 10-40 mm | Very stiff | Precast products, vibrated paving |
| S2 | 50-90 mm | Stiff | Foundations, mass concrete |
| S3 | 100-150 mm | Medium workability | Normal reinforced concrete work |
| S4 | 160-210 mm | High workability | Heavily reinforced sections, pumping |
| S5 | ≥220 mm | Very high workability | Complex formwork, difficult access |
| F1-F6 | N/A (Flow table) | Flow classes | Self-compacting concrete alternatives |
| SF1-SF3 | 550-850 mm | Slump-flow (SCC) | Self-compacting concrete |
BS EN 206 requires rigorous production control systems including factory production control (FPC), conformity testing, and quality management procedures. Concrete producers must demonstrate continuous compliance with specified requirements through systematic testing and documentation.
✅ Quality Control Requirements:
BS EN 206 forms part of an integrated system of European and British standards for concrete construction. Understanding these relationships ensures comprehensive specification and compliance across all aspects of concrete design and construction.
Relationship: Complementary UK national standard
Part 1: Specifying methods and guidance
Part 2: Constituent materials specification
Function: Adapts EN 206 for UK conditions
Status: Used alongside EN 206 in UK
Title: Design of concrete structures
Relationship: Structural design requirements
Link: References EN 206 for material specification
Coverage: Design calculations, reinforcement detailing
UK NA: National Annex provides UK-specific parameters
Title: Cement composition and specifications
Relationship: Defines cement types for EN 206
Coverage: CEM I through CEM V cement types
Requirements: Chemical and physical properties
Link: Referenced for cement selection in EN 206
Title: Testing fresh concrete
Tests: Slump, flow, air content, density
Relationship: Test methods referenced in EN 206
Standards: Multiple parts for different properties
Application: On-site quality control testing
Title: Testing hardened concrete
Tests: Compressive strength, flexural strength, density
Parts: 12390-1 through 12390-7
Key Test: BS EN 12390-3 (compressive strength)
Application: Conformity assessment and quality control
Title: Screeds, bases and in-situ floorings
Relationship: Floor construction specifications
Link: References EN 206 for concrete floors
Coverage: Concrete, bonded screeds, coatings
Application: Industrial and commercial flooring
BS EN 206:2013+A2:2021 includes Amendment A2 published in August 2021, which introduced updates addressing sustainability, new test methods, and clarifications based on implementation experience. Staying current with amendments ensures compliance with the latest requirements in 2026.
🔄 Key Changes in A2:2021 Amendment: