Choosing Plywood for Concrete Formwork
Contents
Plywood for concrete formwork should be film-faced for clean release and a good concrete finish, with a weather-resistant (WBP) glue class and a thickness matched to the concrete pressure and support spacing. Quality formwork panels can be reused many times, lowering cost per pour.
What formwork plywood must do
Get the formwork panel right, and clean, accurate concrete becomes the predictable default rather than a hopeful outcome.
The aim of this guide is to help you specify formwork that delivers clean concrete pour after pour, at the lowest sensible cost per use.
Formwork is a deceptively demanding application: the panel shapes a structural element, then must come away cleanly and do it again. Choosing well here pays off in every pour that follows.
Concrete formwork plywood does a demanding job: it shapes wet concrete, withstands its pressure, releases cleanly and ideally does so many times over. Choosing the right panel directly affects both the concrete finish and the cost per pour.
This is a specialised use where surface, glue class and thickness all matter. For the basics, see our what is plywood guide.
This guide explains how to select formwork plywood for clean, economical results.
Why film-faced panels
The quality of the film also influences how many clean pours you get before marks begin to show, so it is worth paying attention to. A better film is often what separates a panel good for a handful of pours from one good for many.
The film does double duty, giving both a clean release and a smooth concrete face, which is why almost all serious formwork uses film-faced panels. A bare panel would bond to the concrete and tear, ruining both surfaces.
Formwork plywood is almost always film-faced. The smooth phenolic film lets the panel release cleanly from set concrete, protects the surface from moisture and wear, and supports repeated use.
A good film also helps produce a smooth concrete surface, reducing finishing work. The surface options are explained in our film-faced vs uncoated guide.
Glue class and moisture
Wet concrete is relentless on a panel, so anything less than a weather-resistant glue class simply will not survive repeated pours. Treating the glue class as fixed, not negotiable, is the foundation of economical formwork.
Wet concrete and site exposure mean formwork plywood must have a weather-resistant (WBP) glue class. An interior-grade panel would absorb water, swell and delaminate, ruining both the panel and the pour.
The glue class is non-negotiable for formwork; see our glue classes guide. Panel standards are published by engineered-wood associations.
Concrete finish quality
Even small surface defects transfer to the concrete, so a disciplined inspection routine between pours protects the quality of every subsequent cast. On visible concrete in particular, this attention to the panel face is what produces a clean result.
Since the panel face is mirrored in the concrete, panel care between pours becomes part of quality control. A few minutes inspecting and protecting the film saves hours of remedial finishing on the structure later.
The panel surface is transferred to the concrete, so a smooth, intact film gives a smooth concrete face. Damaged or worn panels leave marks, increasing finishing and remedial work.
Reuse cycles and economy
Storage and handling between pours matter too, since a panel damaged off the job loses value just as surely as one worn in use. Treating formwork as an asset to maintain, not a consumable to discard, is what keeps cost per pour low.
Thinking in cost-per-pour rather than cost-per-panel reframes the whole purchase: a dearer panel that lasts many cycles is usually the cheaper choice. This life-cycle view is how experienced contractors specify formwork.
A key economic factor is how many times a panel can be reused. Quality film-faced formwork plywood survives many pours, spreading its cost across each use and lowering the cost per pour.
This is why the cheapest panel is rarely the most economical for formwork; durability over many cycles is what counts.
Thickness and pressure
Pour height drives pressure, and pressure drives the thickness needed to hold the form true without bulging. Matching thickness to the tallest planned pour keeps the concrete dimensionally accurate.
Wet concrete exerts significant pressure, so formwork plywood thickness is chosen from that pressure and the support spacing. Too thin a panel bulges or fails; the right thickness holds the form true.
Working from the pour height and support layout gives the correct thickness; see our sizes and thicknesses guide.
Common mistakes
The costliest formwork mistakes are reusing damaged panels and under-specifying thickness, because both show up in the finished concrete. A little discipline on panel condition and thickness protects the whole pour.
Avoid these
- Using interior-glue panels that swell with wet concrete
- Reusing damaged panels that mark the concrete
- Under-specifying thickness for concrete pressure
- Treating quality formwork panels as single-use
Choosing formwork plywood
Tell us roughly how many pours you expect and how visible the concrete will be, and we will help you balance panel cost against finish and reuse.
In short, specify a film-faced, weather-resistant panel of the right thickness, then care for it between pours to maximise reuse. Share your formwork application and we will confirm the right panel and price.
Choose a film-faced panel with a weather-resistant glue class and a thickness matched to the concrete pressure and span. Maintain the panels between pours to maximise reuse and finish quality.
Share your formwork application and we will recommend the right panel and confirm the current price.
Get the right formwork plywood for clean pours
Tell us the pour, pressure and support layout; we will recommend the right film-faced panel and thickness and confirm the current price.
Frequently Asked Questions
A film-faced panel with a weather-resistant (WBP) glue class and a thickness matched to concrete pressure and span gives clean release and a good finish.
The smooth film releases cleanly from concrete, protects against moisture and wear, supports reuse and helps produce a smooth concrete surface.
Quality film-faced formwork panels survive many pours; the exact number depends on care, the film’s condition and the application.