BuildMetricLab

Time & Labour

Concrete Curing Time Calculator

Estimates curing and setting time by mix and temperature

Updated 26 June 2026 · Live

What this tool does

Estimates curing and setting time by mix and temperature.

Inputs
°C
Result

Time to 70% Strength

9.9 days

Ambient Temperature
15°C
Cement Type
OPC
28-day Strength Reached
39.6 days
Formwork Strike
Typically after 24–48 hrs
Formula Used
Days to 70% strength
Base curing days
Ambient temperature

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How the concrete curing time calculator works

This calculator estimates how long concrete takes to reach 70% of its 28-day strength, and the equivalent point near full strength, from the ambient temperature and the cement type. It applies the maturity principle: hydration speeds up in the warm and slows in the cold, roughly doubling for every 10°C rise and halving for every 10°C drop. The cement type sets the base curing time, and the temperature factor scales it. Every figure is an estimate — the mix, moisture and the real temperature on site all move the result.

How temperature changes curing time

Concrete gains strength through hydration, a chemical reaction that runs faster when it is warm. As a rule of thumb the rate roughly doubles for every 10°C rise and halves for every 10°C drop, so a mix that reaches 70% strength in about a week at 20°C takes roughly two weeks at 10°C. Below about 5°C hydration nearly stops and fresh concrete can be damaged by frost, so the estimate assumes the pour is kept above freezing — the tool flags temperatures below 5°C.

How cement type changes the base time

The cement type sets the starting point the temperature factor scales. Rapid-hardening cement reaches the 70% milestone fastest, ordinary Portland cement (OPC) sits in the middle, and slow-curing or pozzolanic blends (with fly ash or GGBS) take longest, though they often reach higher long-term strength. Changing the dropdown changes the base days the calculation uses.

What this tool does not do

It estimates timing only. It does not design the mix, confirm the strength actually achieved, or decide when formwork can be struck — striking is governed by the strength reached and confirmed on site, not by a calendar. It does not replace a professional quote or a structural engineer’s direction.

Curing in practice

Concrete needs to stay moist and protected while it gains strength: keeping it damp under sheeting or a curing membrane stops the surface drying too fast, which would weaken it. The 70% figure is a common working milestone — many specifications allow loading or backfilling around there — while the 28-day point is the conventional reference for full design strength. Formwork is usually struck once the concrete has reached the required strength, often after 24–48 hours in mild weather but longer when it is cold.

Standards behind the estimate

The temperature relationship used here is the maturity principle behind the Nurse–Saul method (ASTM C1074), while execution and curing of concrete on site are covered by AS 3600, with mix specification in AS 1379. These describe how strength development depends on temperature and time; the calculator turns that into a quick planning figure rather than a site-verified strength.

Adjusting the inputs

Both inputs are editable. Set the ambient temperature you expect during curing and choose the cement type, and the days recalculate instantly. The defaults — 15°C and ordinary Portland cement — suit a typical Australian pour, but your own figures always take precedence.

Using this concrete curing time calculator alongside other BuildMetricLab tools

This calculator works best as part of a wider plan. Pair the curing estimate with our paint and plaster drying-time and project-scheduling calculators to sequence the job realistically. All BuildMetricLab tools run entirely in your browser — no sign-up, no data sent anywhere, and every formula is shown on-page so you can audit the maths.

Sources & methodology

Estimates the time for concrete to reach 70% of its 28-day strength, and the near-full-strength point, from the ambient temperature and cement type. The base curing days come from the cement type and are scaled by a temperature factor that roughly halves the rate for every 10°C drop (the maturity principle). Results are planning estimates, not a site-verified strength.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use this to schedule the job?

Yes, as a planning guide. The days to 70% strength help you judge when concrete is likely ready for loading, backfilling or striking formwork, and the 28-day figure marks the conventional full-strength reference. Treat them as estimates — the strength actually reached depends on the mix, moisture and the real temperature on site, so confirm critical milestones rather than working to the calendar alone.

Does the cement type change the result?

Yes. The cement type sets the base curing time the temperature factor then scales: rapid-hardening cement is quickest, ordinary Portland cement (OPC) is the middle case, and slow-curing or pozzolanic blends take longest. Selecting a different type changes the days shown.

Does this replace professional advice?

No. This tool is a planning estimator. For works that affect structure, the National Construction Code (NCC), boundary or dividing-fence, gas, electrics, drainage to a sewer, or similar, consult a suitably qualified professional.

Why does cold weather matter so much?

Hydration slows sharply as the temperature falls and nearly stops below about 5°C, so curing takes far longer in the cold — and fresh concrete can be permanently damaged if it freezes before it has gained enough strength. The estimate assumes the pour is kept above freezing; cold-weather work needs heating, insulation or a winter mix, and the tool flags temperatures below 5°C.

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