Complete Guide to Screeds, Bases and In-Situ Floorings
UK Building Standards for Floor Construction & Specification
BS 8204 is the British Standard code of practice for screeds, bases, and in-situ floorings used in UK construction. Published by BSI (British Standards Institution), this comprehensive standard provides detailed guidance on the specification, design, installation, and testing of concrete floor bases and cementitious levelling screeds. BS 8204 ensures floors meet structural, durability, and serviceability requirements for residential, commercial, and industrial applications in 2026.
The standard consists of seven parts covering different flooring types, from traditional concrete bases to modern self-levelling screeds and resin floors. Compliance with BS 8204 is essential for achieving quality floor construction, preventing common failures like cracking, delamination, and unacceptable surface regularity. This guide explains BS 8204 requirements, part-by-part breakdowns, specification details, and practical application for UK construction projects.
BS 8204 is a multi-part British Standard that establishes requirements and recommendations for screeds, bases, and in-situ floorings to receive various floor coverings and finishes. The standard addresses constituent materials, mix design, surface preparation, installation procedures, curing, testing methods, and acceptance criteria. BS 8204 applies to ground-supported and suspended concrete floor bases in buildings and civil engineering structures.
The standard works in conjunction with BS EN 206 (Concrete Specification), BS 8500 (Complementary Standard), and Building Regulations Approved Document C (Site Preparation and Resistance to Moisture). Designers, specifiers, contractors, and building control officers use BS 8204 to ensure floor construction meets required performance standards for 2026 projects.
BS 8204 is divided into seven parts, each addressing specific flooring types and applications. Understanding which part applies to your project is essential for correct specification and compliance.
Scope: Ground and suspended concrete bases, sand/cement screeds
Applications: Residential, commercial, industrial floors
Key Topics: Mix design, thickness, bonding, curing, surface regularity
Most Commonly Used: Yes - fundamental part for standard construction
Scope: Screeds with polymer additives for enhanced performance
Applications: Fast-track projects, thin sections, flexible bonding
Key Topics: Polymer types, modified properties, bonding agents
Advantages: Faster drying, improved adhesion, reduced thickness
Scope: Cast in-situ terrazzo flooring with marble aggregates
Applications: Decorative floors in commercial, public buildings
Key Topics: Mix design, divider strips, grinding, polishing, sealing
Finish: High-quality decorative flooring with marble chips
Scope: Hot-applied mastic asphalt for industrial floors
Applications: Chemical plants, heavy-duty industrial facilities
Key Topics: Asphalt grades, application temperature, thickness
Properties: Chemical resistance, seamless, waterproof
Scope: Anhydrite/gypsum-based flowing screeds
Applications: Underfloor heating, large areas, fast installation
Key Topics: Flow characteristics, drying times, moisture testing
Benefits: Self-levelling, crack-resistant, thermal efficiency
Scope: Epoxy, polyurethane, PMMA resin flooring systems
Applications: Cleanrooms, food processing, laboratories, warehouses
Key Topics: Surface preparation, resin types, application, testing
Performance: Chemical resistance, hygiene, durability
Scope: Flowable cement-based self-levelling screeds
Applications: Large commercial projects, rapid floor preparation
Key Topics: Pumping, flow properties, thickness, curing
Speed: Fast application covering 1000m²+ per day
BS 8204-1 is the most widely used part, covering traditional concrete floor bases and sand/cement levelling screeds. This section provides detailed requirements for the most common UK floor construction method used in 2026.
✅ Concrete Grade Specification:
| Screed Type | Minimum Thickness | Typical Thickness | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bonded Screed (monolithic) | 25mm | 40-50mm | Applied directly to concrete base while green |
| Bonded Screed (separate) | 40mm | 50-65mm | Bonded with bonding agent on hardened concrete |
| Unbonded Screed | 50mm | 65-75mm | Laid on DPM or separating membrane |
| Floating Screed (insulation) | 65mm | 75-100mm | Laid on rigid insulation boards |
| Floating Screed (UFH) | 65mm | 75-100mm | Covering underfloor heating pipes with 25mm minimum cover |
BS 8204-1 specifies screed mix proportions to achieve required strength, workability, and durability. Traditional sand/cement screeds remain the most common specification for UK projects in 2026.
📊 Standard Screed Mix Ratios:
BS 8204-1 defines surface regularity (levelness/flatness) classes for floor bases and screeds. The required class depends on the final floor covering type and specification.
| SR Class | Maximum Deviation | Application/Floor Covering | Testing Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| SR1 | ±15mm under 2m straightedge | Thick resilient coverings, external paving | 2m straightedge at 1m spacing |
| SR2 | ±10mm under 2m straightedge | Carpet, textile, thick vinyl, wood flooring | 2m straightedge at 1m spacing |
| SR3 | ±5mm under 2m straightedge | Thin sheet vinyl, linoleum, ceramic tiles | 2m straightedge at 1m spacing |
| SR4 | ±3mm under 2m straightedge | High-quality vinyl, thin tiles, laminate flooring | 2m straightedge at 300mm centers |
BS 8204 provides guidance on maximum bay sizes (panel dimensions between joints) to control cracking from shrinkage and curling. Proper joint planning is essential for long-term floor performance and preventing random cracking.
⚠️ Maximum Bay Sizes BS 8204-1:
Purpose: Separate independent bays to control movement
Detail: Full depth joint with compressible filler
Seal: Surface sealed with flexible sealant after floor covering
Purpose: Create weakened plane for controlled cracking
Detail: Cut or trowelled groove 1/3 to 1/2 depth
Timing: Within 24 hours of laying while still green
Purpose: Accommodate structural movement in base slab
Detail: Full depth joint matching base slab joint location
Treatment: Do not bridge structural movement joints
BS 8204-1 provides detailed guidance on site procedures to ensure quality installation. Proper preparation, mixing, laying, compaction, finishing, and curing are critical for achieving specified performance.
✅ Surface Preparation Requirements:
📋 On-Site Procedures:
Proper curing is essential for strength development and preventing surface defects. BS 8204-1 specifies curing periods and moisture testing requirements before applying floor coverings in 2026 projects.
| Screed Type | Curing Period | Drying Time (Ambient) | Moisture Test Before Covering |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sand/Cement Screed (bonded) | 7 days covered with polythene | 1 day per mm thickness (minimum 3 weeks) | 75% RH max (hygrometer test) |
| Sand/Cement Screed (unbonded) | 7 days covered with polythene | 1.5 days per mm (minimum 4-6 weeks) | 75% RH max for impermeable coverings |
| Sand/Cement Screed (floating) | 7 days covered with polythene | 2 days per mm (6-8 weeks typical) | 75% RH max (slower drying) |
| Force-dried screed (heated) | 7 days natural curing first | 14-21 days with heating (40°C max) | Test after heating period completed |
⚠️ Moisture Testing Importance:
Applying impermeable floor coverings (vinyl, rubber, epoxy, resin) over damp screeds traps moisture causing adhesive failure, blistering, discoloration, and mold growth. BS 8204-1 requires hygrometer testing (relative humidity measurement at depth) to confirm screed is sufficiently dry. The "1 day per mm" rule is a guide only - actual drying depends on ambient temperature, humidity, ventilation, and screed thickness. Always test before covering.
BS 8204-1 specifies testing methods to verify screed performance meets specification. Regular testing ensures quality compliance and provides evidence for Building Control approval.
✅ In-Situ Crushing Strength (Soundness Test):
Method: 2m straightedge at specified centers per SR class
Equipment: Straightedge with thickness feeler gauges
Report: Record maximum deviation across floor area
Method: Hygrometer (Tramex or similar) at 40% depth
Standard: BS 8203 moisture testing requirements
Criteria: ≤75% RH for impermeable coverings
Method: Pull-off test using adhesion tester
Minimum: >0.5 N/mm² tensile adhesion strength
Frequency: Representative locations across floor
BS 8204-1 identifies common screed failures and provides guidance to prevent defects. Understanding failure mechanisms helps contractors achieve first-time quality in 2026 floor construction.
| Defect | Cause | Prevention/Remedy |
|---|---|---|
| Cracking | Excessive bay size, rapid drying, restraint, insufficient thickness | Follow maximum bay sizes, proper curing, perimeter isolation, adequate thickness |
| Curling/Dishing | Differential moisture content top vs bottom, excessive water | Drier mixes, proper curing, don't overtrowel surface |
| Delamination | Poor bonding, contaminated base, insufficient bonding agent, too wet | Thorough surface preparation, correct bonding treatment, adequate thickness |
| Dusting Surface | Overtroweling, excess water, premature trafficking, rapid drying | Limit troweling, water control, proper curing, protect during cure |
| Low Strength | Excess water, poor curing, incorrect mix proportions, contamination | Correct w/c ratio, 7-day polythene curing, accurate batching, clean materials |
BS 8204-compliant floor construction costs vary by type, thickness, surface regularity class, and project scale. Understanding cost factors helps with accurate project budgeting and specification selection.
| Floor Type (BS 8204) | Material Cost per m² | Labour Cost per m² | Total Cost per m² |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Sand/Cement Screed (50mm SR2) | £4-6 | £12-18 | £16-24 |
| Traditional Sand/Cement Screed (75mm SR3) | £6-9 | £15-22 | £21-31 |
| Polymer Modified Screed (40mm SR3) | £12-18 | £18-25 | £30-43 |
| Liquid Screed / Self-Levelling (65mm) | £15-22 | £8-12 | £23-34 |
| Power Floated Concrete Base (SR2-SR3) | £8-12 | £22-35 | £30-47 |
| Epoxy Resin Floor System (2-3mm) | £25-40 | £30-50 | £55-90 |
BS 8204 works alongside other UK standards and Building Regulations to ensure comprehensive floor performance. Key complementary documents for 2026 construction projects include:
Specifies concrete materials, properties, production, and conformity requirements for structural concrete bases and slabs
UK complement to BS EN 206 providing concrete specification method and guidance for British conditions
Structural design of reinforced concrete suspended floor slabs with load calculations and reinforcement
Building Regulations requirements for DPM, moisture resistance, ground preparation, and floor construction
Structural requirements for floor loadings, spans, and load-bearing capacity compliance
Code of practice for installing vinyl, linoleum, rubber floor coverings over screeds - moisture testing requirements
Calculate concrete volume needed
🏛️Calculate screed material quantities
📏Design floor slab thickness
💰Estimate flooring project costs
📋Concrete specification standard
🔬Concrete production standard
⚡Concrete structure design
💧Moisture resistance regulations