DPC and DPM Products Compared: Polythene Gauge, Bituminous, Crystalline and Cavity Systems — Joint Taping and NHBC Standards

Quick Answer: Damp-proof courses (DPC) and damp-proof membranes (DPM) are specified under BS 8215:1991, BS 6515:1984, and Building Regulations Approved Document C. The correct product depends on substrate, exposure, and position: polythene sheet (minimum 300-micron / 1200-gauge) suits floors; bituminous-felt or engineering-brick DPC suits masonry walls; crystalline waterproofing suits below-ground and retrofits. NHBC Standards Chapter 5.1 governs new-build compliance.

Summary

Damp-proof courses and damp-proof membranes are among the most misapplied products in UK construction. The terminology itself causes confusion: a DPC is a linear barrier inserted into a wall or at a junction; a DPM is a sheet or coating applied across a floor or ground-bearing slab. Using the wrong product — or the right product poorly installed — is responsible for a significant proportion of damp-related warranty claims on new-build sites.

The range of products has expanded significantly since traditional blue-engineering-brick and slate DPCs dominated the market. Contractors now choose between polythene sheet, bituminous felt, chemical injection, crystalline coatings, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) cavity systems, and cementitious tanking. Each has a different application envelope, and selecting the cheapest option without considering substrate condition, hydrostatic pressure, or movement risk regularly leads to callbacks.

NHBC Standards (Chapter 5.1 — Substructure) and BS 8102:2022 (Protection of below-ground structures against water from the ground) are the primary compliance references for new-build and conversion work. Building Regulations Approved Document C (Site preparation and resistance to contaminants and moisture) sets the statutory minimum. Where these documents differ, the more stringent requirement applies.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Product Type Standard Typical Location Minimum Spec Joint Treatment
Polythene sheet DPM BS 6515:1984 Ground floors, under slabs 300 micron (1200g) 150 mm lap + tape
Bituminous felt DPC BS 6398:1983 Wall DPC, cavity tray Type B minimum 100 mm lap, fully bedded
HDPE cavity tray NHBC 5.1 Lintels, wall/roof junctions With stop ends Sealed tape joints
Engineering brick DPC BS EN 771-1 Retaining walls, below DPC Class B engineering brick N/A (masonry)
Chemical injection BBA Certificate Retrofit solid wall Silane-based, 120 mm centres N/A
Crystalline coating BS 8102:2022 Basements, tanks 2-coat minimum Coved fillet at junctions
Liquid-applied membrane BS EN 14695 Below-ground concrete 3 mm minimum thickness Full coverage
Slate DPC Historic only Pre-1920 masonry Two courses min Lime mortar bed

Detailed Guidance

Polythene DPM — Gauge Selection and Installation

Polythene DPM is the most common product for ground-bearing floor slabs. The minimum is 300 microns (1200 gauge) but many specifiers now use 500 microns (2000 gauge) as standard, particularly where the sub-base includes angular hardcore that could puncture thinner sheet.

Installation sequence:

  1. Compact sub-base to minimum 150 mm well-graded hardcore or Type 1 granular fill
  2. Lay sand blinding 25–50 mm to protect the membrane
  3. Lay polythene with minimum 150 mm laps at all joints; tape all laps with polythene-compatible self-adhesive tape
  4. Upstand: turn membrane up the inner face of the wall by minimum 150 mm; lap with wall DPC
  5. Pour concrete slab without displacing membrane; protect from operatives' boots with additional sand or boards

For radon-affected zones (Zones 1–3 in England per BRE Report BR 211 mapping), use minimum 300 micron with all laps taped, sealed service entry points, and a passive ventilation void or mechanical extraction depending on risk level.

Bituminous Felt DPC — Types and Bedding

Three types under BS 6398:1983:

Bituminous felt DPC must be:

A common failure is "bridging" — the DPC spans a gap between mortar beds and is not supported, allowing water to track along the upper surface.

HDPE Cavity Tray Systems

Cavity trays are required wherever water could cross from the outer to inner leaf — above all wall openings (lintels), at eaves, at stepped flashings to roof slopes, and wherever the cavity is interrupted.

NHBC Standards Chapter 5.1 requires cavity trays to:

Common site failures:

Chemical Injection DPC for Retrofits

Used in existing solid masonry where a physical DPC cannot be inserted. Most products are silane or siloxane-based, injected under low pressure into holes drilled at 150 mm height above floor level at 120 mm centres.

Limitations:

Under BS 6576:2005 (Installation of chemical DPCs in masonry), the contractor must assess moisture gradient with a carbide meter before and after injection.

Crystalline Waterproofing

Crystalline products (e.g. Xypex, Cementaid, Sika-1) chemically react with free lime in concrete or masonry to form insoluble crystals that block capillary pores. Unlike sheet membranes, they self-seal around minor cracks as they develop.

Applications under BS 8102:2022:

Application requirements:

Joint Taping — Materials Compatibility

The most common specification error with sheet DPC/DPM work is mismatched tapes. Using a general-purpose duct tape on a bituminous membrane, or a bituminous tape on polythene, results in delamination within months.

Membrane Material Correct Tape Do Not Use
Polythene (DPM) Self-adhesive polythene tape Duct tape, bituminous tape
HDPE cavity tray Manufacturer's own tape system Generic foil tape
Bituminous felt Bituminous sealing tape (hot or cold) Polythene tape
Liquid-applied membrane Fabric reinforcing strip + same product Mechanical fixings alone

NHBC inspectors will probe lapped joints during stage inspections. Failure to tape laps is a common reason for a hold at DPC stage.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a DPC and a DPM?

A DPC (damp-proof course) is a linear element — a strip of impermeable material running horizontally through a wall or at a wall/floor junction to prevent moisture rising by capillary action through masonry. A DPM (damp-proof membrane) is a sheet or coating applied across a horizontal surface — usually beneath a floor slab — to prevent moisture migrating upward from the ground. Both are required in virtually all new-build ground-floor construction; they must be physically continuous at the wall/floor junction.

Can I use 250-micron polythene if I have a concrete slab on top?

No. Building Regulations Approved Document C and BS 6515:1984 specify 300 microns (1200 gauge) as the minimum for DPM use in ground-bearing floors. NHBC will reject 250-micron material during inspection regardless of concrete thickness above. Use 300 micron as an absolute minimum and 500 micron where hardcore below could puncture thinner sheet.

How high above ground level must a DPC be?

Approved Document C Clause C2 requires a minimum 150 mm between the DPC and the finished external ground level. In areas with high rainfall or poorly-drained ground, 150 mm should be treated as the minimum, not the target. NHBC Standards state the same figure. Note: paving added after construction often reduces this clearance — advise clients accordingly.

Do I need to tape cavity tray joints?

Yes. Untaped or poorly taped cavity tray laps are one of the most common reasons for warranty claims on new-build properties. NHBC requires laps to be a minimum 100 mm with manufacturer's jointing tape applied to the full width of the lap. Stop ends must also be fitted — a cavity tray without stop ends will allow water to drain laterally back into the wall.

Is chemical injection as good as a new physical DPC?

In existing solid masonry, chemical injection is generally accepted as the best practical solution. However, it only treats the masonry itself — salts and contamination in the plaster must still be addressed by cutting out and replacing with renovating plaster or sand:cement render. Physical DPC insertion (by saw-cutting and new sheet material) is possible but highly disruptive and rarely cost-effective in occupied properties.

Regulations & Standards