Mon - Sat 09:00-18:00
+ (44) 07359267907
info@structuralengineercalcs.com
Logo

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: 6 Checks Every Project Requires

Retaining wall structural calculations are the engineering evidence that a wall retaining soil or a level change is stable against overturning, will not slide along its base, and that the wall material itself will not crack or fail in bending. Every retaining wall in a residential or commercial project — whether masonry, reinforced concrete or timber — requires retaining wall structural calculations before Building Control will issue approval.

This guide covers the three most common types encountered in residential projects: unreinforced masonry retaining walls, reinforced concrete cantilever retaining walls, and blockwork gravity walls. It explains the two load types (active earth pressure and surcharge), the three partial factor regimes used in retaining wall structural calculations, and includes a full worked example for an unreinforced masonry retaining wall with surcharge from a neighbouring driveway.

The three failure modes every set of retaining wall structural calculations must address: (1) Overturning — the soil pressure tips the wall about its toe. (2) Sliding — the lateral force pushes the wall along its base. (3) Spine — the wall material itself cracks or yields in bending or tension. For masonry, no tension is permitted in the wall material at all. For reinforced concrete, the wall and base are designed as structural elements using full ULS partial factors. Retaining wall structural calculations must address all three failure modes — not just the most obvious one.

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: 3 Wall Types and When Each Applies

Wall TypeTypical HeightKey Design FeatureCalculation Route
Unreinforced masonry (brick or dense blockwork) Up to ~1.5m Self-weight resists overturning. No tension permitted in wall. Wall must be thick enough that resultant force stays within middle third. Retaining wall structural calculations to BS EN 1996 — middle third rule governs wall thickness
Reinforced concrete cantilever (RC wall + base slab) 1.5m – 5m+ Monolithic wall + base. Base designed as slab with high bending moment at wall/base junction. Heel beam optional to resist sliding. Retaining wall structural calculations to BS EN 1997 (stability) + BS EN 1992 (element design)
Masonry gravity wall (large mass, wide base) Up to ~2.0m Relies entirely on self-weight. Base width typically 50–70% of retained height. No reinforcement. Retaining wall structural calculations — overturning, sliding and bearing checks only

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: Active Pressure, Passive Pressure and Surcharge

The starting point for all retaining wall structural calculations is establishing the lateral forces that the soil exerts on the wall. These come from three sources, each treated differently in the calculations.

Active pressure coefficient Ka (drained granular soil): Ka = (1 − sin φ) / (1 + sin φ) where φ = angle of internal friction of the retained soil (typically 25°–35° for granular soils) Example: φ = 30° → Ka = (1 − 0.5) / (1 + 0.5) = 0.33 Active pressure at depth z (no water table): σa(z) = Ka × γ × z where γ = unit weight of soil (kN/m³), z = depth below retained surface (m) Lateral force from triangular active pressure diagram: P_soil = Ka × γ × H² / 2 [kN/m], acting at H/3 above base Lateral force from surcharge q (uniform, acts as rectangular pressure diagram): P_surcharge = Ka × q × H [kN/m], acting at H/2 above base Passive pressure coefficient Kp (resists sliding at embedded toe): Kp = (1 + sin φ) / (1 − sin φ) — for φ = 30°, Kp = 3.0

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: 3 Partial Factor Regimes

Retaining wall structural calculations use three separate partial factor combinations, each applied to a different check. Using the wrong factors — particularly applying full ULS factors to the stability check — is one of the most common errors in retaining wall design.

EQU — Stability (Overturning + Sliding) Applied to the equilibrium check only. Soil/permanent loads: 1.1 Gk when destabilising, 0.9 Gk when stabilising. Surcharge: 1.5 Qk when destabilising, 0 Qk when stabilising. These factors reflect the uncertainty in soil load direction — a surcharge that stabilises the wall gets no credit at all.
STR/GEO Set 1 — Element Design Applied when designing the RC wall, base slab and reinforcement. Soil loads: 1.35 Gk (destabilising). Surcharge: 1.5 Qk. These are full ULS partial factors, identical to those used for structural elements above ground. The wall itself is designed as a cantilever slab using these factors.
STR/GEO Set 2 — Bearing Stress Check Applied when checking bearing pressure under the base against the allowable soil bearing capacity. Soil loads: 0.925 × 1.35 Gk = 1.25 Gk (destabilising). Surcharge: 1.5 Qk. The reduced permanent factor reflects that Set 2 targets soil parameter uncertainty rather than load uncertainty.
Unreinforced Masonry — Middle Third Rule For masonry retaining walls, no partial factors govern the wall design directly — instead, the geometry must be sized so the resultant force lies within the middle third of the wall cross-section at every horizontal plane. No tension is permitted anywhere in the wall. The eccentricity check e = M/W must satisfy e ≤ t/6 at all levels, where t is the wall thickness.

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: Worked Example — Unreinforced Masonry

Scenario: 1.2m high dense concrete blockwork retaining wall (unit density 2100 kg/m³, M12 mortar), retaining garden soil to one side of a new extension. Neighbouring driveway at upper level applies a surcharge of 2.5 kN/m². Retained soil: granular fill, density 1800 kg/m³, φ = 30°. Water table well below base — weep holes provided. Determine the minimum wall thickness in 100mm increments.

1
Active pressure coefficient Ka = (1 − sin 30°) / (1 + sin 30°) = (1 − 0.5) / (1 + 0.5) = 0.33
2
Lateral forces on wall per metre length Active pressure at base: σa = Ka × γ × H = 0.33 × (1800/1000 × 9.81) × 1.2 = 0.33 × 17.66 × 1.2 = 7.0 kN/m²
Triangular soil force: P_soil = 7.0 × 1.2 / 2 = 4.2 kN/m, acting at H/3 = 0.4m above base
Surcharge force: P_surcharge = Ka × q × H = 0.33 × 2.5 × 1.2 = 1.0 kN/m, acting at H/2 = 0.6m above base
Total lateral force P = 4.2 + 1.0 = 5.2 kN/m
3
Resultant moment location above base Combined moment about base = (4.2 × 0.4) + (1.0 × 0.6) = 1.68 + 0.60 = 2.28 kNm/m
Location of resultant above base: x = 2.28 / 5.2 = 0.44m (this is the eccentricity lever arm)
4
Try 800mm thick blockwork wall — middle third check Middle third limit: t/6 = 800/6 = 133mm = 0.133m
Self-weight of wall per metre run: W = 0.8m × 1.2m × (2100/1000 × 9.81) = 0.8 × 1.2 × 20.6 = 19.8 kN/m
Eccentricity at base: e = (P × x) / W = (5.2 × 0.44) / 19.8 = 2.29 / 19.8 = 0.115m
0.115m < 0.133m (middle third limit) → ✓ — 800mm blockwork wall satisfies the no-tension condition
5
Check if 700mm wall would satisfy (to confirm 800mm is the minimum) Middle third: 700/6 = 117mm = 0.117m
Self-weight: W = 0.7 × 1.2 × 20.6 = 17.3 kN/m
e = (5.2 × 0.44) / 17.3 = 2.29 / 17.3 = 0.132m
0.132m > 0.117m → ✗ — 700mm FAILS. Tension would develop in the wall.
Minimum wall thickness = 800mm dense concrete blockwork.
6
Movement joint requirement (unreinforced blockwork) Concrete blockwork with no bed joint reinforcement: vertical movement joints required at 9m centres maximum. For a typical garden retaining wall below 10m length — one central movement joint is recommended. Debonded ties across joint to maintain shear continuity. If clay brick is used instead, maximum joint spacing is 15m.

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: RC Cantilever Wall — Key Design Checks

For taller retaining walls where a masonry gravity solution is impractical, a reinforced concrete cantilever wall is the standard residential solution. The retaining wall structural calculations for this type cover two separate phases.

Phase 1 — Stability (EQU factors) Overturning: resisting moment (wall weight × arm + base weight × arm + soil on heel × arm) must exceed overturning moment (soil pressure × H/3 + surcharge × H/2) when EQU factors are applied. Sliding: friction force (μ × total vertical load, with μ ≈ 0.45 for concrete on soil) must exceed lateral force. Heel beam or key can be added to boost sliding resistance where friction alone is insufficient.
Phase 2 — Element Design (STR factors) The wall is a vertical cantilever: maximum bending moment at the base = σa,STR × H²/6 + q,STR × H²/2. The base is a horizontal slab: "toe" side carries upward bearing pressure minus base self-weight; "heel" side carries upward bearing pressure minus soil weight above. Both wall and base reinforcement are designed to EC2 using STR partial factors. Cover to soil face: 45mm + Δcdev. Minimum vertical steel: 0.002Ac each face; minimum horizontal: 25% of vertical.

5 Mistakes That Undermine Retaining Wall Structural Calculations

Ignoring surcharge from an adjacent driveway or vehicle loading

Any surface loading on the retained side of the wall — a driveway, patio, garden furniture or parked vehicle — constitutes a surcharge that must be included in the retaining wall structural calculations. The Ka coefficient is applied to the surcharge, producing an additional rectangular pressure diagram across the full height of the wall. Missing a 2.5 kN/m² driveway surcharge on a 1.5m wall can understate the lateral force by 20–30% and cause the wall to fail the middle third check.

Applying full ULS (STR) factors to the overturning stability check

The overturning and sliding stability check uses EQU partial factors — 1.1 on destabilising soil loads and 0.9 on stabilising self-weight, not 1.35 and 1.0. Applying full STR factors to the stability check overestimates the destabilising force and underestimates the resistance, resulting in a wall that appears to fail stability when it is in fact adequate. Equally, using EQU factors for the element reinforcement design underfactors the loads and produces an under-reinforced wall.

Allowing tension in an unreinforced masonry wall

Unreinforced masonry cannot be relied upon to carry tension. BS EN 1996-1-1 Clause 6.3.4(1) explicitly prohibits tension in unreinforced masonry retaining walls subjected to lateral earth pressure. Retaining wall structural calculations that permit even a small tensile stress in a blockwork or brick wall are fundamentally unsafe — the wall has no capacity to resist it. The middle third rule must be satisfied at every horizontal section through the wall, not just at the base.

Omitting hydrostatic pressure because weep holes are shown on the drawing

Weep holes and land drains are relied upon to relieve hydrostatic pressure behind a masonry retaining wall. If they are specified on the drawing but not installed, or if they become blocked, the full water pressure can develop behind the wall — adding a triangular pressure diagram of up to γw × H = 10 × H kN/m² at the base. Retaining wall structural calculations should clearly state the drainage assumption being made, and the structural engineer should confirm that the drainage detail is achievable and maintainable in the specific site conditions.

Not checking the bearing capacity under the wall base

The retaining wall structural calculations must include a check that the maximum bearing pressure under the base does not exceed the allowable bearing capacity of the founding soil. Because the wall is eccentrically loaded — the soil pushes it forward — the resultant force is not centred on the base, and the toe-side bearing pressure is significantly higher than the heel-side. Where the resultant lies outside the middle third of the base, the effective contact area is reduced and bearing pressure rises sharply. Many residential walls fail at this point, not in overturning or sliding.

Retaining Wall Structural Calculations: Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need retaining wall structural calculations for a low garden wall?

Any wall that retains soil — even a low garden or boundary wall — may require retaining wall structural calculations if it is in a position where failure would risk injury, damage to a building, or loss of support to a neighbouring structure. Walls over approximately 600mm retained height typically need engineering assessment. Building Control will require calculations for any retaining wall that forms part of a planning or building regulations submission.

What soil parameters do I need for retaining wall structural calculations?

The minimum information required is the unit weight of the retained soil (γ, in kN/m³), the angle of internal friction (φ, in degrees) and, where relevant, the soil cohesion (c, in kN/m²). These should come from a ground investigation report or, for simple projects, from published presumptive values for the identified soil type. Any values used in the retaining wall structural calculations should be stated and referenced — Building Control will query assumed values that are not evidenced.

Can I use a proprietary block retaining wall system without calculations?

Some proprietary segmental retaining wall systems (e.g. Tobermore, Marshalls Belgard) come with manufacturer-prepared design tables for standard loading conditions. These can be used without bespoke retaining wall structural calculations if the actual loading matches the table conditions exactly — including surcharge, soil type and retained height. Where site conditions deviate, bespoke retaining wall structural calculations are required. The manufacturer's tables should always be verified by the engineer before relying on them.

How deep should the wall foundation be?

The foundation depth for a retaining wall must reach bearing soil of adequate capacity, and must be below the depth of any frost-susceptible material (typically 450mm minimum in the UK). For RC cantilever retaining wall structural calculations, the base depth also affects the passive resistance available to resist sliding — a deeper toe provides more passive pressure on the front face of the wall base. For unreinforced masonry walls, the footing design follows the same pad foundation principles as any other masonry wall, sized to keep bearing pressure within the allowable limit.

→ Get a Fixed-Fee Retaining Wall Design Quote Concrete Pad Foundation Design → Wall Removal Structural Calculations → Ground Floor Extension Steel Beam → Lintel Design in Masonry Walls →

Logo
Useful Links
Get a quote

©2026 Structural Engineer Calcs Ltd