Which Wall Tie Should You Use? Cavity Width, Exposure, and Remedial Tie Selection

Quick Answer: Wall ties must comply with BS EN 845-1 and be selected to match the cavity width (tie length = cavity width + 50mm embedment in each leaf = cavity + 100mm minimum), the exposure zone (stainless steel A4 grade for severe and very severe coastal exposures; A2 acceptable for moderate and sheltered), and the structural load. Standard new-build ties are installed at 2.5 ties/m² (900mm horizontal, 450mm vertical). BRE Digest 329 defines the corrosion risk zones used for material selection.

Summary

Wall ties are the metal connectors that link the two leaves of a cavity wall, transferring lateral loads (wind pressure) from the outer leaf to the inner leaf while allowing vertical differential movement between them. Without adequate, correctly spaced, and properly corrosion-resistant ties, a cavity wall's outer leaf becomes structurally independent, vulnerable to overturning, bulging, and ultimately collapse in wind loading.

Tie failure due to corrosion was a major problem in UK housing built between approximately 1920 and 1981. Many of these properties used mild steel butterfly ties that have now corroded, expanded, and cracked the mortar joints — a condition known as tie failure or delamination. The prevalence of this problem in the housing stock is the reason that BRE Digest 329 was produced and that stainless steel became the standard material for new ties from the 1980s onward.

Cavity wall tie selection requires the designer or builder to balance several variables: cavity width, which determines the required tie length and load capacity; exposure zone, which determines the corrosion resistance class; structural requirements, which determine the load category (light, standard, or heavy duty); and any special conditions (insulated cavities, walls over 12m high, parapet walls) that require enhanced specifications.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

Spending too long on quotes? squote turns a 2-minute voice recording into a professional quote.

Try squote free →
Exposure Zone Location Examples Minimum Tie Material Notes
Sheltered Inland, built-up areas, low wind A2 stainless (304) Protected from driving rain
Moderate Most UK locations not near coast A2 stainless (304) Standard domestic new-build
Severe Exposed upland, near coast (5–10 km) A2 stainless (304) minimum; consider A4 Consult BRE Digest 329
Very severe Coastal (within 1–2 km of sea), offshore islands A4 stainless (316) Definite requirement for A4
Cavity Width Minimum Tie Length Notes
50mm 150mm Minimum practical cavity; rare in new-build
75mm 175mm Common for older and retrofit work
100mm 200mm Standard new-build full-fill insulation cavity
125mm 225mm Wide cavity with partial fill insulation
150mm 250mm Wide cavity; may require heavy-duty tie
200mm 300mm Very wide cavity; structural calculation required

Detailed Guidance

Tie Selection for New Build

For standard domestic new-build masonry cavity walls, the default specification is:

The tie supplier's technical data sheet should confirm compliance with BS EN 845-1 and state the load category achieved. Ties must be selected to achieve the design lateral loads calculated for the wall panel dimensions.

Insulated cavities: Where the cavity is partially or fully filled with insulation board (rigid PIR or EPS) or mineral wool slab, the tie must be long enough to penetrate through the insulation and achieve the required 50mm embedment in each leaf. In full-fill installations, the insulation is typically fitted in sections between the ties as construction proceeds. Do not use ties that are too short to achieve the embedment requirement after allowing for insulation.

High-rise and exposed locations: For walls above 12m in height and for parapets (which are exposed on both faces), reduce vertical tie spacing to 300mm. This applies to domestic construction where a parapet wall exists, for example on flat-roofed extensions.

Exposure Zone Assessment

BRE Digest 329 (Cavity Wall Ties: Assessment, Installation and Inspection) is the key reference for UK corrosion zone mapping. The zone is determined by:

  1. Location relative to coast: Within approximately 1–2km of the sea (very severe), 2–5km (severe), inland (moderate or sheltered)
  2. Exposure to driving rain: Using METS (Meteorological Exposure by Topographic and Sheltering) assessment or simplified national exposure classification maps
  3. Pollution level: Industrial and urban pollution can increase corrosion risk even inland

For most standard domestic new-build in England outside the coastal zone, A2 stainless is adequate. For coastal locations (Cornwall, Scottish islands, west coast of Ireland), A4 stainless is the correct specification.

Remedial Ties for Existing Buildings

Cavity wall tie failure in buildings constructed between approximately 1920–1981 is widespread. Typical indicators:

Remedial tie installation:

  1. Survey: Identify all tie positions; assess extent of failure; check for localised vs widespread failure
  2. Drill: Drill through outer leaf and into inner leaf at new tie positions; diamond drill bit at correct diameter for the chosen helical tie
  3. Install: Drive helical ties into both masonry leaves; the spiral profile grips the masonry mechanically; some systems use an injected grout for additional bonding
  4. Seal: Seal the drill hole entry in the outer leaf with a matching mortar
  5. Original ties: In most cases, the corroded original ties are left in place (removing them requires cutting out mortar joints over the full elevation, which is very disruptive); they are stabilised by the new tie pattern

Helical tie products are available from suppliers such as Helifix, Rawlplug, and Cintec. Installation contractors must follow the system manufacturer's instructions for drill diameter, embedment depth, and tie density.

Butterfly Tie vs Standard Tie Comparison

Butterfly ties (twisted wire loops) were the standard type in UK domestic construction until approximately the 1960s–1980s. Their performance characteristics:

Standard modern stainless steel flat ties (fishtail or channel section) provide:

Butterfly ties in original condition in pre-1981 buildings are a recognised failure risk, particularly in coastal environments. If a property in an exposed location is being assessed, the tie type and condition should be checked as part of any structural survey.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if the cavity wall ties in an existing house have failed?

Typical signs: horizontal cracking in mortar joints at regular intervals (usually 450mm or 300mm vertical centres); any outward bowing or bulging of the outer masonry leaf; rust staining at mortar joints; visible separation of the outer leaf from the inner leaf at openings. A structural engineer or specialist surveyor should carry out a tie assessment — metal detector survey followed by mortar joint opening for visual inspection — before any major refurbishment or retrofit.

Can I use galvanised ties for new cavity wall construction?

Galvanised ties are not recommended for new-build in current UK practice. The zinc coating on galvanised ties can fail within 15–30 years in moderate to severe exposures, leading to the same tie corrosion and failure problem that has affected hundreds of thousands of pre-1980s properties. Stainless steel (A2 or A4 as appropriate) is the correct specification for all new work.

Do I need to change tie spacing for a 150mm cavity?

The standard 2.5/m² frequency (900mm horizontal, 450mm vertical) generally applies regardless of cavity width, provided the tie length is correct for the cavity and the tie is rated for the required load. For very wide cavities (150mm+), consult a structural engineer, as the slenderness of the outer leaf and the bending moment in the tie both increase with cavity width.

What tie should be used in a timber-frame cavity wall?

Timber-frame construction (structural timber inner leaf, masonry outer leaf) uses different tie types fixed through the sheathing board into the structural studs. Standard horizontal flat ties are not used in the same way. Specialist timber-frame wall ties (screw-in or through-stud types) are used instead. The tie manufacturer and the timber frame designer/engineer should specify the appropriate product, fixing detail, and spacing for the specific panel configuration.

Regulations & Standards