Part E Sound Insulation: Separating Floors and Walls, Pre-Completion Testing and Performance Standards

Quick Answer: Building Regulations Approved Document E (Part E) requires separating walls and floors between dwellings to achieve minimum airborne and impact sound insulation standards. For new dwellings, pre-completion sound testing (PCT) is mandatory unless a Robust Details scheme is used. Minimum standards: 45 dB DnTw+Ctr for airborne sound through separating walls; 45 dB DnTw+Ctr for separating floors; maximum 62 dB L'nTw for impact sound through separating floors.

Summary

Noise between neighbouring dwellings is one of the most common sources of disputes in the UK housing stock. Part E of the Building Regulations addresses this by requiring minimum sound insulation performance in separating elements — the walls, floors and stairs that lie between two different dwellings (whether in separate buildings or in flats above/below each other).

The standard applies to new construction, conversions of existing buildings to flats (material change of use), and rooms for residential purposes (e.g. student accommodation, hotel rooms). It does not apply to existing construction where no building work is being done — but when renovation or extension work affects a separating element, Part E may be triggered.

For builders and developers, the practical challenge is achieving Part E during construction. Common failure modes include flanking transmission (sound bypassing the primary barrier through joist hangers, continuous screed, or gaps at the perimeter), and impact sound in separating floors. Understanding how to avoid these failures, and what to do if pre-completion testing reveals a failure, is essential knowledge.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Element Airborne Minimum (dB DnTw+Ctr) Impact Maximum (dB L'nTw) Applies To
Separating wall (new build) 45 N/A Between dwellings
Separating floor (new build) 45 62 Between dwellings (floor/ceiling)
Separating wall (conversion) 43 N/A Existing building converted to flats
Separating floor (conversion) 43 64 Existing building converted to flats
Hotel/student room wall 45 N/A Rooms for residential purposes
Hotel/student room floor 45 62 Rooms for residential purposes

Detailed Guidance

Understanding Sound Transmission Paths

Before designing or testing, understand how sound travels between dwellings:

Direct transmission: Through the primary separating element (wall or floor). This is what Part E is designed to limit.

Flanking transmission: Sound bypasses the main barrier and travels through connected elements:

Flanking is the most common cause of pre-completion test failures. A perfectly constructed separating wall can fail its test because of a continuous screed or steel joist hanger.

Approved Construction Details for Separating Elements

AD E Appendix A gives approved constructions for new build. The main types:

Separating walls:

Type 1 — Solid masonry:

Type 2 — Cavity masonry:

Type 3 — Timber frame with absorbent material:

Type 4 — Steel frame:

Separating floors:

Type 1 — Concrete base with soft covering:

Type 2 — Concrete base with floating floor:

Type 3 — Timber, combined structure:

Pre-Completion Sound Testing

When PCT is required:

Sampling regime (AD E Section 1.5):

Who conducts PCT:

Test method:

If the test fails: Investigate cause. Common remedies:

Robust Details Scheme

The Robust Details scheme provides an alternative to pre-completion testing. Instead of testing, the developer registers individual plots and constructs to the approved Robust Details specification.

How it works:

  1. Developer registers each plot with Robust Details Ltd (robustdetails.com)
  2. Per-plot fee applies (currently approx. £68 per dwelling)
  3. Developer constructs to the specific Robust Detail specification for the chosen wall/floor type (e.g., E-WM-1 for external masonry wall)
  4. RDSQ (Robust Details Specialist Quality) system: checks during construction; inspector may visit
  5. No PCT required unless RD inspector or building control has reason to believe non-compliance

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Conversions: Material Change of Use

When an existing building (house, office, barn) is converted to flats (material change of use), Part E applies:

Treatment of existing timber floor for conversion: Options include:

  1. Overlay with acoustic floor screed or floating floor deck
  2. Add resilient ceiling below (on resilient bars with mineral wool quilt)
  3. Combined: floating deck above + resilient ceiling below (best result)
  4. Note: flanking through perimeter masonry is very difficult to address in existing buildings — often the limiting factor

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Part E apply to loft conversions within a single dwelling?

No. Part E applies to separating elements between different dwellings. A loft conversion within a single-family house creates a floor between floors of the same dwelling — Part E does not apply (though good practice acoustic treatment is still beneficial). Part E would apply if the loft conversion created a separate flat (separate tenure from the lower floors).

Our separating floor test failed impact sound — what are the cheapest fixes?

The cheapest fix depends on the cause. If the floating floor is correctly installed but there are perimeter contact points (floor touching the separating wall or skirting board through the resilient strip), addressing this can add 3–5 dB at low cost. Adding a soft floor covering (carpet, rubber-backed floor) is often the cheapest route to pass impact tests. A high-quality carpet with good underlay can improve L'nTw by 15–20 dB. If the ceiling below has no resilient mounting, adding resilient bars and an extra layer of plasterboard adds impact performance but at higher cost.

Can I use acoustic plasterboard to comply with Part E?

Acoustic plasterboard (denser, heavier than standard) adds to the mass and therefore improves airborne sound performance. However, it will not by itself achieve Part E performance. Part E compliance requires the whole separating construction to be designed correctly — including flanking control, resilient mounts, and mineral wool — not just a single higher-performance board. Use acoustic plasterboard as one element of a complete Part E solution.

What is the difference between Part E and Part F (ventilation)?

They are entirely separate approved documents. Part E covers sound insulation. Part F covers ventilation and air quality. However, they interact: acoustic sealing of separating elements to achieve Part E can conflict with ventilation requirements; sound-attenuating acoustic ventilators may be needed to satisfy both.

Regulations & Standards