How To Lay Garden Patio | Step-By-Step Guide

Patio installation steps: set levels, excavate, add sub-base, lay a mortar bed, place slabs to a fall, then joint and cure.

If you want a tidy outdoor seating area that drains well and stays flat, you’ll need a clear plan and a build-up that doesn’t cut corners. This guide walks you from layout to final jointing with practical specs, worked numbers, and pro tips you can follow at home.

Laying A Garden Patio Step By Step

Start with a tape, string lines, spray paint, and a notepad. Measure the footprint, decide the finished height, and check access for a compactor and slab packs. Pick a weather window with dry days and nights that stay above 5°C so bedding and joints cure as intended.

1) Plan Size, Levels, And Drainage Fall

Choose a finished height that sits below door thresholds and keeps water away from walls. Aim for a gentle slope away from buildings: 1:60 to 1:80 (12–17 mm fall per metre). Mark the high edge with a taut line, then set pins to carry the fall across the full run. Keep the plane flat from side to side; water should move in one direction, not toward corners.

2) Mark Out And Excavate

Square up the outline using the 3-4-5 rule or a builder’s square. Strip turf and topsoil, then dig deep enough for the compacted sub-base, a 30–40 mm mortar bed, and the slab thickness. Most domestic builds need 150–200 mm of excavation; heavy clay or soft ground may need more. Keep trench sides straight and the formation level; bumps here cost time later.

3) Install And Compact The Sub-Base

Lay Type 1 (MOT) in two layers of around 50 mm each. Compact each layer with a vibrating plate, working in overlapping passes. Domestic patios usually work well with about 100 mm of compacted stone on firm ground. Where the edge meets soil or lawn, add edging or concrete haunching so the build doesn’t creep.

4) Set Guide Rails And Mix Bedding

To hit flat planes and straight joints, set two screed rails parallel to the fall. A straight bit of box section or checked timber works. Mix a workable bed: 1 part cement to 4 parts sharp sand by volume. Add water slowly until the mix holds shape when squeezed without slumping.

5) Lay Slabs On A Full Bed

Prime the back of dense slabs (porcelain especially) with the maker’s primer or a slurry bond. Place each unit onto a 30–40 mm continuous bed and tap down with a rubber mallet to line and level. Keep joint widths steady—5–8 mm for sawn edges, 8–12 mm for riven stone. Hold the fall across the whole field; never use spot bedding.

6) Cut Neatly And Keep Lines Straight

Dry position border pieces, mark with pencil, and cut using a diamond blade and water feed. Support slabs well during cuts. Stagger bonds to avoid long straight lines. Keep string lines in place so joints stay true. Lift any rockers and reset on fresh mortar; don’t try to mask movement with joint compound.

7) Joint, Clean, And Cure

When the bedding has firmed underfoot, brush out dust and joint. For a hand-tooled finish, mix 1 cement to 3–4 parts sharp sand with a touch of plasticiser. Strike joints slightly recessed for clean edges. For a sweep-in compound, follow the tub on moisture and curing. Keep traffic off for 24–48 hours; leave heavy furniture a little longer.

Tools And Materials Checklist

Use this master list to price the job and prevent mid-build delays.

Item What It Does Tips
Type 1 Sub-Base Creates a compact, load-spreading foundation Lay in two 50 mm layers; compact each pass
Sharp Sand & Cement Makes a full bedding layer and joints Common ratio 1:4 for bedding; 1:3–4 for joints
Paving Slabs Concrete, porcelain, or natural stone surface Check thickness and joint width guidance
Edge Restraints Stops sub-base and slabs drifting Use concrete haunching or metal edging
Plate Compactor Consolidates sub-base layers Make slow passes; recheck the fall each time
String Lines & Pins Control height and straight joints Set at both edges to carry the slope
Screed Rails & Level Form a flat, even plane Use sturdy box section or straight timber
Rubber Mallet & Trowels Seat slabs and shape bedding Tap gently; avoid hard hammer blows
Wet-Cut Saw Clean, accurate cuts Use PPE; mark cuts clearly before cutting
Jointing Compound Finishes and seals the surface Match to slab type; follow cure times

Drainage, Rules, And Good Practice

Hard surfaces should drain away from buildings and into soft ground, a soakaway, or a designed channel. Where a door sits close to paving, add a discreet channel drain and discharge to a soakaway or planted bed if water collects. If the work is at the front of a home in England, check the patio and driveway rules for permeable surfacing and permitted development. Dense, non-permeable finishes that shed water to the street may need consent.

Larger projects or sites with heavy runoff benefit from SuDS measures such as permeable layers, soakaways, or rain gardens. See the updated national SuDS standards for design principles that keep water on site safely.

Pick The Right Surface

Choose a finish that matches your base and cleaning plan. Concrete flags give a classic look and are budget-friendly. Natural stone varies in tone and texture and pairs well with wider joints. Porcelain is dense, stain-resistant, and consistent in size, yet needs a primer on the back and careful handling during cuts. Buy from a single batch so colours match across the area.

Sub-Base Depths And Soil Types

On firm free-draining soil, about 100 mm of compacted Type 1 suits most seating areas. On soft or wet ground, increase depth and use a geotextile to separate the sub-base from fines. Where frost heave is common, stay generous with depth and compaction to limit movement. Edges need restraining so stone and slabs don’t creep over time.

Setting The Fall Without Guesswork

Transfer heights with a laser or water level. Mark a datum on a stake, set your high line, then mark the drop along the run. Sample calc: over 4 m, a 1:60 fall drops around 65–70 mm; a 1:80 fall drops near 50–55 mm. Keep that same plane across the width. If a doorway sits low, add a narrow channel grate to protect thresholds.

Mixes, Bedding, And Joint Options

A full bed supports each unit from edge to edge and stops drumming and cracks. A 1:4 sharp-sand mortar, laid 30–40 mm deep, suits most flags. Dense slabs need priming on the back; check the pack leaflet. For joints, sweep-in compounds are quick on wider gaps; a hand-tooled mortar joint gives a classic finish and works on narrow gaps.

Step-By-Step Bedding Flow

Shovel mortar to form a ridge, place the slab, slide a touch to wet the back, then tap to height. Keep a straight off-cut as a tapping block to protect edges. Check cross-levels to your rail often. Clean as you go; cement haze is far easier to prevent than to cure later.

Safety And Handling

Large flags weigh more than you think. Team lifts and slab lifters cut strain. Keep blades wet while cutting, and wear eye, ear, and dust protection. Manage packs on firm ground, keep the site tidy, and fence off the work zone from children and pets.

Common Mistakes And How To Avoid Them

Flat surface — Water hangs on flat work. Build the fall into every layer. Add a threshold channel near doors if puddles build.

Spot bedding — Dabs leave voids that crack and drum. Use a full, continuous bed so each slab is fully supported.

Thin sub-base — Shallow stone settles and rocks. Build to depth in layers and compact slow and steady.

Poor joint timing — Joint while the bed is still soft and you’ll mark it; leave it too long and dust fills gaps. Aim for firm underfoot, then joint.

Skimped cuts — Rushed cuts spoil edges. Mark twice, support well, and take a calm pass with water cooling.

Design Choices That Help The Build

Borders frame the field and hide small cut pieces. A single-row soldier course is simple and neat. Patterns like stretcher bond or a mixed-size opus set reduce long joint lines. Lighting in low-voltage slots is easy to add before jointing if you run conduit during the dig. Planting gaps between slabs soften edges and give water a place to soak.

Porcelain And Dense Stone Notes

These units need tight tolerances. Prime backs as the maker directs, keep beds even, and use a fine jointing compound. Cuts stay clean with a good quality blade and steady feed rate. Keep rinsing to avoid slurry marks on pale tiles.

Weather And Curing

Rain on fresh beds turns mixes weak and messy. Cover the work overnight with sheets weighed at the edges. Cold nights slow curing; heat can dry joints too fast. Work in steady conditions where you can control moisture.

Mix And Depth Quick Reference

Task Recommended Spec Notes
Fall Across Surface 1:60 to 1:80 away from buildings 12–17 mm drop per metre
Sub-Base Type 1, about 100 mm compacted Increase on soft ground or clay
Bedding Mortar 1 cement : 4 sharp sand, 30–40 mm Full bed, no dabs or spots
Joint Width 5–8 mm sawn, 8–12 mm riven Match maker guidance on porcelain
Edge Restraint Concrete haunch or steel edging Set to final height line
Door Threshold Channel drain or slot drain Discharge to soakaway or planted bed

Cost, Waste, And Ordering Tips

Measure the area in square metres, add 10% for cuts and mishaps, and match joint width to pack sizes so you avoid tiny infills. Order enough Type 1 and sharp sand for the depths listed here, and allow roughly one 25 kg bag of cement per 5–6 m² of bedding as a planning guide. Hire the compactor for the weekend you build the base and bed the first course; you may not need it once you’re laying the field.

Sample Fall Calculation You Can Copy

Patio length 5.0 m, water to run away from the house. Pick a 1:60 fall. Multiply 5.0 by 1000 to get 5000 mm of run. Divide by 60 to get around 83 mm of drop. Set the high line at the house edge, then mark 83 mm lower at the far edge using your string line. Check diagonals so the plane stays flat across the width.

Waste, Reuse, And Site Clean-Up

Topsoil stays handy for levelling borders. Broken off-cuts make solid packers under planters. Keep a skip or bulk bags on site for spoil and packaging. Sweep and rinse the field once the joints have cured; fine dust fades the colour if it sits on the surface.

Where To Learn More

For slope maths in detail, see this trade guide to fall guidance. For bedding thickness and laying practice on flags, this manufacturer guide lays out mixes, full-bed notes, and quality checks.