glossary Glossary 2 min read

Dead load

Dead load is the permanent self-weight of a building (roof, walls, floors, finishes, fixed services), a core AS/NZS 1170.1 action combined with live and wind loads.

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Dead load is the permanent (self-weight) load of the building itself: the roof, walls, floors, finishes, and fixed services. It is one of the core design actions under AS/NZS 1170.1 that the engineer combines with live and wind loads to size structural members.

The defining feature is that a dead load is permanent and fixed: it does not change with use, and it acts in the same place all the time. It is the weight of:

  • the structure (framing, slabs, beams),
  • the cladding, roofing, and linings,
  • permanent finishes (tiles, screeds, render), and
  • fixed services (ducts, pipes, hot-water units that stay put).

That is the difference from a live load, which is variable and depends on use (people, furniture, stored goods). Heavy fixed items, a green roof, a stone benchtop, a slab topping, are dead load and have to be allowed for, which is why a late change like “we’ll tile the whole roof terrace” or “swap to a concrete tile roof” can matter structurally.

For a builder the practical point is that the engineer’s design assumes a particular dead load, so do not add permanent weight the design did not allow for. Substituting a heavier roof, adding a screed or topping, or hanging fixed plant off the structure changes the dead load and can overload members or footings. If a permanent material gets heavier than documented, flag it to the engineer rather than assuming there is spare capacity.

Also known as: Permanent load, self-weight.

Category: Structure / Loads.

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Last updated: 2026-06-01. Verified: 2026-06-01. Quarterly review for currency.